The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 4b

At the close of the last post I wrote: I do not know of any Christian who thinks that God will renege on the Noahic Covenant (cf. Isa. 54:9-10).  As far as this covenant at least is concerned, no spiritualizing, no symbolic hermeneutics, no typologizing or allegorizing is allowed to derail the literal meaning of God’s covenant promise.  What God says is what God means! As I continue with this fourth personal rule I want to build on that crucial

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The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 4a

The Parameters of Meaning: Introduction The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 1 The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 2 The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 3 This personal rule to help decipher the meaning of a Bible text is too lengthy for a single post.  As it is so crucial to my outlook I shall have to break it into two parts. Now we come to Rule four.  This “rule” is, for me, of preeminent importance. Parameters of Meaning – Rule 4: Any

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Let God Be True…And Say What He Means

Disingenuousness and the Problem of the Obvious Disingenuousness and “Expansion” Language A Disingenuous God? (1) A Disingenuous God? (2) A Disingenuous God (3) Do We Need The New Testament To Understand The Old? Review Hitherto in this set of posts I have called our attention to several issues tied together with the word “disingenuous.”  To be disingenuous is to lack candor or sincerity.  To be less than forthcoming.  I have applied this term to those who, for whatever reason, will

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Do We Need The New Testament To Understand The Old?

It is a common feature of discussions with some fellow believers to hear them say that the New Testament interprets the Old.  This maxim, which is almost a cliché in some circles, is seldom explained.  It is usually taken for granted.  “Surely,” we are told, “you understand how the NT throws light on passages in the OT?”  “Surely you see how NT authors point to fulfillments of OT promises?” Naturally, we are not commending a program of hermeneutics which totally

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A Disingenuous God? (3)

Disingenuousness and the Problem of the Obvious Disingenuousness and “Expansion” Language A Disingenuous God? (1) A Disingenuous God? (2) I said at the end of the last post that we would be thinking about what God thinks of those who enter into covenants and fail to perform the words of those covenants.  But I find am going to put that subject off until next time, until I am satisfied that I have driven home my point about the disingenuous god

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A Disingenuous God? (2)

Previous Posts: Here, Here, and Here. I’ve mentioned analogies in this series, so let me give one of my own. Suppose someone made you a promise concerning something of great importance to you.  This person then went a step further and, to show his intent to make good his promise, entered in to some solemn ritual involving a self-maledictory oath.  You could surely trust the promise right? But wait.  Suppose you knew that this same individual had made many promises

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Disingenuousness and the Problem of the Obvious

1. One of the things I tell my students at TELOS Institute is that “God means what He says, and so should we!”  I mean that we should never give in to the temptation to paper over problems in our theology, still less to pretend certain “problem texts” aren’t there and then talk as if they weren’t there!  We must go to work on the texts, not shut them out by spinning theological yarns.  We don’t want to be disingenuous with

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The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 3

The Parameters of Meaning: Introduction The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 1 The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 2 Parameters of Meaning – Rule 3: Avoid importing foreign hermeneutical grids which dictate beforehand how one is going to interpret a passage.  This distorts exegesis. This criterion is straightforward.  Do not come to the text of Scripture with your mind already made up with a theology which every text must be fitted to.  Again, we all tend to do this, so we must

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The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 2

‎ While in this article I talk about “induction,” “deduction,” and “abduction,” please understand that I use these terms quite carefully.  Although not common in the literature, these terms may help the reader of Scripture become more aware of how he is reading and interpreting the text – at least at a basic (though important) level.  I should say that these twelve “rules” are designed to identify meanings which can be confidently seen in the wording of the biblical text,

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The Parameters of Meaning: Rule 1

This is the second in a series of articles on what I call ‘the parameters of meaning.’  The first post, which is a rundown of the Twelve “Rules”, is here.  Basically, what I have in mind is that texts can only suffer certain interpretations as viable.  As an example of this; If a person says to me that they are a postmillennialist, I am obliged not to interpret them as meaning that they hold that Christ will return and then

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