1 / 58

Hermeneutics

Hermeneutics . And Some Homiletics To Boot!. What Is Our Purpose For Today?. To grow in our understanding and handling of the Word of God both in the Church and home – some meat to chew on

Ava
Télécharger la présentation

Hermeneutics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hermeneutics And Some Homiletics To Boot!

  2. What Is Our Purpose For Today? • To grow in our understanding and handling of the Word of God both in the Church and home – some meat to chew on • 2 Timothy 3:16-17 - All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent (complete, mature), equipped (fitted out) for every good work. • Hunting, sports, camping, etc. all require the proper gear to maximize the experience

  3. Definitions • Hermeneutics - a method or principle of interpretation • A set of norms we go through between the words on the page and us. • Homiletics – The art of preaching/teaching

  4. Hermeneutic principles • Historical-grammatical – is the most common method used – what did the words mean to the author and original hearers, and what grammar is being used • Others - Election, Covenantal, Predictive, Dispensation, Numerical, Symbolic, Allegorical, Ethnic Division – Jews, Gentiles and the Church, etc. etc. etc. • Historical-grammatical uses a general three-fold approach to the text: 1) observation, 2) interpretation, and 3) application.

  5. The Word of God • The Bible is not an English book written for 21st century Americans – Middle Eastern in nature • “We believe that the Bible is the divinely inspired Word of God; that it is inerrant in the original manuscripts and has been supernaturally preserved by God, and that, as such; it is the Supreme authority in all matters of faith and conduct.” Hope - SOF • Our hermeneutic principles determine our understanding/application of the Scripture

  6. The Bible • 66 different books, multiple literature types • Historical narrative, poetry, letters, apocalyptic, prophetic, Gospel, etc. • The Scripture is made up of words, sentences, verses, paragraph, section, book and the entire book covering thousands of years of time • Exegesis - lead the meaning out of the text • Isogesis - bring a meaning into the text • "The best teacher is the one who does not bring his meaning into the Scripture but gets his meaning from the Scripture." Luther

  7. The Bible includes • Narrative – stories of real people • Parables – short stories illustrating one principle truth • Metaphors, figures of speech, similes • Hyperbole – strain a gnat, swallow a camel • Figurative language – stomach like heaps of wheat or much in Revelation • Prophetic language – double fulfillments – both present and future – Messianic • Types and symbols – snake on the pole, sacrificial lambs, Melchizedek

  8. Pop quiz – literature types • Judges – • Psalms – • Song of Solomon - • Daniel – • Mark – • Acts – • 1 Timothy – • Revelation - • Historical Narrative • Wisdom/Poetry • Wisdom/Poetry • Historical/prophetic • Historical/Gospel • Historical Narrative • Letter • Apocalyptic

  9. Our English Bible • 1535 AD: Myles Coverdale's Bible; The First Complete Bible printed in the English Language (80 Books: O.T. & N.T. & Apocrypha).1537 AD: Tyndale-Matthews Bible; The Second Complete Bible printed in English. Done by John "Thomas Matthew" Rogers (80 Books).1539 AD: The "Great Bible" Printed; The First English Language Bible Authorized for Public Use (80 Books).1560 AD: The Geneva Bible Printed; The First English Language Bible to add Numbered Verses to Each Chapter (80 Books).1568 AD: The Bishops Bible Printed; The Bible of which the King James was a Revision (80 Books).1609 AD: The Douay Old Testament is added to the Rheims New Testament (of 1582) Making the First Complete English Catholic Bible; Translated from the Latin Vulgate (80 Books).1611 AD: The King James Bible Printed; Originally with All 80 Books. The Apocrypha was Officially Removed in 1885 Leaving Only 66 Books.1782 AD: Robert Aitken's Bible; The First English Language Bible (KJV) Printed in America.1791 AD: Isaac Collins and Isaiah Thomas Respectively Produce the First Family Bible and First Illustrated Bible Printed in America. Both were King James Versions, with All 80 Books.1808 AD: Jane Aitken's Bible (Daughter of Robert Aitken); The First Bible to be Printed by a Woman.1833 AD: Noah Webster's Bible; After Producing his Famous Dictionary, Webster Printed his Own Revision of the King James Bible.1841 AD: English Hexapla New Testament; an Early Textual Comparison showing the Greek and 6 Famous English Translations in Parallel Columns.1846 AD: The Illuminated Bible; The Most Lavishly Illustrated Bible printed in America. A King James Version, with All 80 Books.1885 AD: The "English Revised Version" Bible; The First Major English Revision of the KJV.1901 AD: The "American Standard Version"; The First Major American Revision of the KJV.1971 AD: The "New American Standard Bible" (NASB) is Published as a "Modern and Accurate Word for Word English Translation" of the Bible.1973 AD: The "New International Version" (NIV) is Published as a "Modern and Accurate Phrase for Phrase English Translation" of the Bible.1982 AD: The "New King James Version" (NKJV) is Published as a "Modern English Version Maintaining the Original Style of the King James."2002 AD: The English Standard Version (ESV) is Published as a translation to bridge the gap between the accuracy of the NASB and the readability of the NIV.

  10. Translation is the art of equivalence • All English Bibles are a translation • Read the Translation Philosophy in the front • Basically 3 types: • Literal word for word (impossible) – KJV, NASB, ESV (essentially literal) • Dynamic Equivalence or thought for thought – NIV, HCSB, NRSV • Paraphrase or rephrasing – The Message, Living Bible, Good News, Amplified (Multiple Choice Bible)

  11. John 3:3 • KJV -Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. • NIV - In reply Jesus declared, "I tell you the truth, no-one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again." • NASB - Jesus answered and said to him, "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.“ • MSG - Jesus said, "You're absolutely right. Take it from me: Unless a person is born from above, it's not possible to see what I'm pointing to--to God's kingdom."

  12. Amplified • Jesus answered him, I assure you, most solemnly I tell you, that unless a person is born again (anew, from above), he cannot ever see (know, be acquainted with, and experience) the kingdom of God. • Interlinear Greek-English – Answered Jesus and said to him truly truly I tell thee except anyone is born from above he cannot to see the kingdom of God • Let’s not even go to Russian or Chinese 

  13. Four broad Norms of hermeneutics

  14. 1. The Holy spirit illuminates • 2 Corinthians 4:3-4 - And even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled only to those who are perishing. In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God. • 1 Corinthians 2:13-14 - And we impart this in words not taught by human wisdom but taught by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual truths to those who are spiritual. The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.

  15. 1. The Holy spirit illuminates • The Word of God is God-breathed and the Holy Spirit is required to understand the truths contained within. • John 14:16-17 - And I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees Him nor knows Him. You know Him, for He dwells with you and will be in you. • We need to pray for wisdom, understanding, and revelation when we read the Word – the Bible is not a secret Book for God wants to speak to His children

  16. 2. The Old testament is viewed through the New testament • Progressive Revelation – God revealed Himself in the Old Testament differently than in the New – Jesus is the final revelation – If you have seen Me you have seen the Father! • Types/shadows, simpler in form focusing primarily on a people group – Israel • Everything revealed moved along toward the conclusion in Christ – all shadows give way in the Light of Jesus! • Law was a tutor to bring us to Christ -Galatians 3:24

  17. 2. The Old testament is viewed through the New testament • “you have heard it said…but I say” • Jesus fulfilled the Law – Matthew 5:17 • Types/shadows are fulfilled in Christ – Tabernacle/Temple, animal sacrifice, Adam, • Beware of allegory - adding deeper meanings, hidden truths, be clear on what is clear • Distinguish between what the Bible records and commands or approves – making doctrine from historical narrative is dangerous!

  18. 3. The literal interpretation is basic • Assume literal unless context forbids it • But, we must understand what type of literature we are reading - Song of Solomon, Revelation, Daniel, etc. literal can get weird • “Today” in Hebrews most likely means now, not some mystic code word. Jesus wept means? • Jesus saying “Eat my body” is not literal • Anthropomorphisms are in the Scripture • Assigning human emotions and body parts to God – the Bible is an accommodating Book – God to humans – infinite to finite beings

  19. 4. Scripture Interprets Scripture • "Obscure passages in Scripture must give way to clear passages.“ • Be clear on what is very clear • Interpretation is one, basic meaning, application can be diverse and many. • Scripture will not contradict Scripture – if your understanding of a passage is violating some other verse – you are mistaken • If you know the exact date of Christ’s return you are violating this principle of Hermeneutics

  20. 4. Scripture Interprets Scripture • We are different than Jesus and the New Testament writers • They often brought the Old Testament into a new light in the New Testament – we are not them so be careful • 1 Timothy 5:18 – “do not muzzle the ox” is equated with paying a pastor • But where they did, we are safe to go there – Acts 2 – Peter said this is what Joel meant! • Gospels, Hebrews, Epistles – are full of expounded OT quotes

  21. Some Cautions • The Bible is not full of secret codes and meanings beneath the meaning – shun allegory methods and secret interpretations • Be careful using the Bible as a promise book – We must consider if the promise is universal, personal, conditional, for the present or future • The Bible is not a magic book - let if fall open and poof, there is truth. “Go and hang yourself”

  22. Some good tools • Concordance – shows every place a particular word is used in Scripture • Lexicon – list of the words and typically includes the definition • Handbook –an overview of manners, customs, background material • Commentaries – someone’s interpretation of what the Scripture says and means • Greek/Hebrew to English dictionaries – helps you make your own conclusions about the meaning of the words

  23. Summarize Part one • What did the text/letter mean to the original recipients? It was not primarily written to us • What type of literature am I reading? Do I understand what the words meant to the author? • Have I read the other places where this/these words are used? • Have I read this verse or section in several different versions to glean insight? • Consult commentaries/handbooks carefully – know who wrote it and why – they all have bias and agendas.

  24. What are the Four broad Norms of hermeneutics?

  25. Pop Quiz How do I deal with these? • Must I keep the Sabbath or the Big 10? • I can not eat pig, the Scripture forbids it • Let’s place a fleece out or cast lots to decide • Job brought on his problems by fear and a bad confession • God wants you rich and faith is the key • Should my wife wear a head covering? • Acts shows the early church patterns for __________ • Revelation, Daniel, and Zechariah clearly teach _____________

  26. Questions?

  27. Homiletics – the art of preaching • “The art of moving men from a lower life to a higher life.” – Beecher • “The communication of truth through personality.” – Anonymous • “Preaching is divine truth voiced by a chosen personality to meet human need.” A. W. Blackwood • The clothing of ideas in words - Longino

  28. Preaching • Declaring God’s Word as recorded in the Bible • It is not about man’s ideas of God, but what God has done for man. • The uniqueness of a Biblical sermon (as opposed to a speech) is due to the subject matter, the material used, and the results promised!

  29. The Word • God is the God that speaks – not a lifeless idol, but One that communicates • From the beginning God has spoken to man through other men • OT prophets preached, Ezra and Nehemiah taught detailed messages, Early Church typically would reason together, Early Church Fathers and Reformers wrote, etc. • Today, just about every method is used • As long as Christ is preached…

  30. Some trends and terms • Higher Criticism – attempts to investigate the origins of a text, especially the text of the Bible. Higher criticism, in particular, focuses on the sources of a document and tries to determine the authorship, date and place of composition of the text. • Lower Criticism, known as textual criticism, which is the endeavor to establish the original version of a text. • Since the 1800’s modernism/evolution (devalue the supernatural) has been an issue • In our day a trend to be relevant to our society rules

  31. On to the practical • Spontaneous vs. being prepared –comfort comes from being well prepared • We need to be current in our walk with God • We should consider our audience – home vs. congregation vs. young, etc

  32. What do I preach/teach • The Scripture – read and explain • Personal experiences either victory or defeat tied back to the Word • It is ok to share books and such in your family devotions…but if in the pulpit, the Word should be the focus. – “It is the foolishness of preaching that brings results” 1 Corinthians 1:20-22 • The Word produces life – Isaiah 55:10-11 the Word will not return empty or void

  33. The attitude of the Teacher • Reverence of the Scripture carefully handling the Word of God – we will be held accountable for the words spoken for God • Humility – we do not have all the answers, nor have we arrived in any arena • Our message should match our life – no one is perfect, but preaching against immorality whilst living in it, is worthy of great judgment • Jesus was not kind to the religious folks that lived differently than what they preached

  34. Types of sermons • Three basic types – topical, textual and expository • Topical – Parenting, love, joy, end times, sin • Easiest to keep unity of the message and easily grasped by the audience • Great latitude in selecting ideas and topics • Allows a wide range of Scriptures to be used • Easy to get into a rut – water baptism, family • Easier to get into error since context is not the primary issue

  35. Textual sermons • A shorter unit of verses than an entire book or chapter • 2 Peter 1:3-9 – His divine power has granted… • Basically same advantages and disadvantages as topical • 2 Chronicles 27:2 – He did not enter the temple as his father had done…context should rule

  36. Expository – prince of sermons • Expository – An entire book, a chapter, etc • Forces the teacher to deal with topics not normally addressed • Helps keep verses in their context • What does it say and what does it mean? • Helps limit “proof texting”

  37. Disadvantages • Can lose focus over long periods of time • Can limit ability to deal with current issues if you refuse to break lose • Get lost in the details and potential for unlimited rabbit trails • Still, my favorite because it keeps the speaker close to the text – limits error and pet peeves • Good Material!

  38. Many ways to skin a sermon • Point to point – a progressive line of thought • Twin – conflicting or contrasting points or positive vs. negative • Interrogative with the text – Journalist questions – who, what, where, why, when, and how. • Jewel – turning the verse around and around looking at all sides of it – not cinnamon roll • Thematic – It’s Friday, but Sunday’s coming” or “better to be a live dog than a dead lion”

  39. Sermon types • Rebuttal – to correct false teaching – a qualification of an elder • Life-situation – marriage, finances, dispair • Word studies – chase a word through the Bible • Character studies – life of David or Paul • Drama, poetry, music – the point is to preach Christ! • However if someone comes in Sunday late with a gun…please stop them for me 

  40. Which one is the right one? • How long should a piece of rope be? • Depends on the need, leading of the Holy Spirit, and the audience • It’s not a matter of right and wrong, but right and left and obedience to the Lord’s leading • I prefer textual or expository of large sections of Scripture • Easier to stay closer to the context and get the full picture and limit tangents and error, however I also teach topical at times

  41. Our Point must be to communicate truth • Text – what does it say, what does it mean? • Context – what else is being said, the paragraph and chapter and book all add information and clarification • Illustrations – other texts, word pictures, graphics, etc. • Illustrations should illustrate not dominate • Use carefully – circumcision – think it through – how many of us remember commercials, but not the product they advertised?

  42. Doctrine • The Scripture teaches us how to live • Doctrine is made up of many texts, not one • If a doctrine is central to Christianity it will surface everywhere – Gospels, Paul, Peter, James, and John – Cross, love one another, the Resurrection, Lordship of Jesus, etc. • Beware of doctrines based on limited texts • Major on what is major and minor on what is minor, if it is important it will surface often • Know history, creeds, and councils – if your understanding doesn’t fit these, question it

  43. What do I do first? • Whether at home or asked to share… • Remember one task of the teacher is the clothing of ideas in words… • Pray and seek the Lord • Choose your passage(s) depending on length of time and audience making sure you pick something appropriate

  44. Think through the objective • What type of sermon are your going to give – topical, textual or expository • Study your text asking the Holy Spirit to assist your understanding

  45. Study, study, study • Read your text in as many translations as possible – why? • Consult resource materials – dictionaries, lexicons, concordances, word studies, etc • Consult commentaries - use a variety and understand the underlying presuppositions – Calvinist, Armenian, liberal, anti-Catholic, fundamentalist, Charismatic or not –they are all written by men with a particular bent

  46. Don’t forget herman • Answer the journalist questions for each verse – what is he talking about here? What did he say about this elsewhere in his writings? What did others say about it in the Scripture? • What type of literature am I reading? Parable, poetry, proverb, narrative, letter? • Get your thoughts organized and outlined • All your points should connect and make sense • Sub points divide main points – not an excuse to ramble

More Related