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All Bible Readers Are
Interpreters
Excerpted from
"How
We Read the Bible"
© May
22, 2001
By Bernie L. Gillespie All Rights Reserved.
Why is it that Christians around the world have basically the same
Bibles, but come up with so many different understandings of what it says?
Obviously, it is because they "read" the Bible differently. Why do
Christians read the Bible differently? Well, that is a very involved
subject, but I would like to try in the next pages to give a few helpful
insights and answers. Let me say first that the issue of this paper is not
the inspiration of Scripture. That is a given. Nor is the issue the
importance of the Bible as our sole authority. That is a given also. We
should not question what the Bible says. We should question how we read
it. The issue is: "How do we read the Bible?" What is the interpretive
grid that we bring to Scripture, that shapes our conclusions about what it
says? This is the question.
As one studies the various denominations, one can better understand a
denomination’s theology by recognizing the way it "reads" or interprets
the Bible. Many assume they use a purely literal reading of Scripture.1
They don’t believe they "interpret" the Bible so much as they take it at
face value. They mean by literal that the meaning of every verse of
Scripture is apparent to all reasonable literate people. But when at least
two Christians, who claim to use the literal approach, come up with
different understandings of the same passage, it shows that not everyone
interprets the Bible the same way even by taking a "literal" approach.
Logically, two opposite interpretations cannot be right (though it is
possible one of them is). Various groups, movements and denominations
multiply the method of "naive literalism" through their different
interpretations. All the differences in interpretation prove that all
Christians do not read the Bible the same way. That is not to say that the
real or true interpretation of Scripture does not exist. It does. It is to
say that people who think they are taking Scripture "literally" can and do
make many wrong interpretations. And we need to know how to identify these
interpretations.
We must establish one important truth at the beginning: All readers
interpret. Again, it is not to say that a true reading of Scripture
does not exist. God forbid! What it does mean is that we can misunderstand
the true reading because of the assumptions we bring to the Bible. Just
claiming a literal reading of Scripture does not make it so. One of the
greatest hindrances to understanding a passage is the assumption that one
already knows what it says. Often an air of infallibility creeps into the
thinking of those who claim unflinchingly to have the final word on a part
of Scripture. None can assume they read Scripture with infallible eyes.
That would be arrogant and dangerously naive:
The first reason one needs to learn how to interpret is that,
whether one likes it or not, every reader is at the same time an
interpreter. That is, most of us assume as we read that we also
understand what we read. We also tend to think that our understanding
is the same thing as the Holy Spirit’s intent. However, we
invariably bring to the text all that we are, with all of our
experiences, culture, and prior understandings of words and ideas.
Sometimes what we bring to the text, unintentionally to be sure, leads
us astray, or else causes us to read all kinds of foreign ideas into the
text.2
Exegesis
When we read the Bible and come to understand the original intent we
call it exegesis. This word simply means that the message or
meaning comes out from the text, as opposed to coming out of us into the
text. Many Charismatic-Pentecostals can miss this, because they usually
conceive of the Holy Spirit’s work as that which takes place only
within them. Therefore, they view the inspiration of Scripture as
taking place within them, rather than through the literal words of
Scripture itself. This leads many to mistakenly believe the meaning comes
from the Holy Spirit within them, rather than by the Holy Spirit, through
the words of the Bible outside of them. The Holy Spirit speaks to us
through the words and through the meaning of the original author’s
intent. Many Pentecostals do not fully appreciate what the Reformers
really meant when they said the Bible is the Word of God. They were not
only standing against the extra-biblical writings of the councils and the
Pope, but they were also standing against the mystics and those of the
"inner light." They meant that the words on the pages of the Bible were
objectively the Word of God. They did not simply reject the idea that the
Bible became the Word of God when outside authorities recognized it, but
also when mystics claimed to receive a "word" by the inner unfolding of
the Spirit. It was because they believed the words of the Bible are
the Word of God!
Eisegesis
In laymen’s terms, exegesis means to allow the Bible to speak for
itself on its own terms. When we read our ideas or assumptions into the
text, it is call eisegesis. This occurs when the reader "sees" his
or her ideas in the text because they are filtering the text through their
personal paradigm or culture. Often this "reading in" of the meaning
occurs unconsciously influenced by that which the readers brings to
Scripture:
Reading involves using both the information that is present on the
written page, as well as the information we already have in our minds.
The reader does not come as a blank slate.3
All readers come to the Bible with a worldview. It is a way of seeing
the world shaped by the person’s previous thinking and learning. This
worldview forms a paradigm for reading. I mean it forms a structured map
or a way of seeing the information through which we process our world. The
map isn’t reality itself. It is a way of perceiving or of explaining
reality. For example, a road map is not the real road, but it symbolizes
the real road in a way that enables us to navigate foreign territory.
Each of us has many, many maps in our head, which can be divided into
two main categories: maps of the way things are, or realities,
and maps of the way things should be, or values. We
interpret everything we experience through these mental maps. We seldom
question their accuracy; we’re usually even unaware that we have them.
We simply assume that the way we see things is the way they really are
or the way they should be. And our attitudes and behaviors grow out of
those assumptions. The way we see things is the source of the way we
think and the way we act.4
The problem comes when you use the map for Minneapolis to drive in
Pittsburgh. Then you’re lost. This is what happens when we use the wrong
map or set of assumptions for interpreting the Bible. You get lost. What
is worst is if you try to deny the problem and continue to believe that
Pittsburgh is Minneapolis even when the map doesn’t work. This is the
deadliest form of eisegesis. You’re lost, you don’t know it, and
you are constantly fighting with reality, trying to force it to fit your
flawed belief system.
The first goal of any reader of Scripture is to recognize how one’s
prejudices and assumptions may influence one’s reading of Scripture. Then
one needs to realize how those assumptions may control or direct one’s
interpretations. In essence, eisegesis is a distortion of the
original meaning to fit it to the reader’s (or his group’s) preconceived
ideas. Eisegesis is a serious problem and all of us are vulnerable to it.
The best way to protect against it is to first recognize it, and then deal
with one’s own prejudices through the help of others. Many wise teachers
of the church have attempted to safeguard us against this by sharing sound
principles of interpretation based on the objective authority of Scripture
itself. (Cp.
http://207.115.43.158/GenRuleBible.htm)
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I do not intend to express
that it is wrong to look for the literal meaning of Scripture. Nor do I
mean that Scripture is generally too difficult for the average reader to
understand it. What I refer to is the idea that one does not need to
exercise their mind in the work of interpretation, but rather simply
takes the surface meaning that comes to their mind, assuming that is all
a particular passage means. Included in this is the mistake of taking
the style and form of all Scripture as literal where it is figurative.
For example, making the Antichrist a literal beast with literal seven
horns. My overall point is that it is naive to think one can obtain the
meaning of Scripture without the process of wise and skilled
interpretation.
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Gordon D. Fee & Douglas
Stuart, How To Read the Bible For All Its Worth, (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1982), p. 16.
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Kenneth J. Archer,
"Pentecostal Story as the Hermeneutical Filter," Collected Papers:
Teaching to Make Disciples: Education for Pentecostal-Charismatic
Spirituality and Life, at the 30th Annual Meeting of the Society for
Pentecostal Studies, March 8-10, 2001, Oral Roberts University, Tulsa,
OK, p. 79.
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Stephen R. Covey, The 7
Habits of Highly Effective People, (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1989), p. 24.
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