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(Note to the reader: Please also see Post #12 of this thread)
I'm posting this for two reasons. I'm hoping it will be instructional for others, and because I am working through some differences I'm having a problem defining, with a few other members, as to what is and what is not a proper hermeneutic.
For those who don't know these terms, I will quote outside sources for definitions relating to this discussion, then proceed with the situation in which I find myself.
HERMENEUTICS (American Heritage Dictionary via AI)
adjective (American Heritage Dictionary via AI)
EXEGESIS (per GotQuestions.org)
EISEGESIS (per Wiktionary)
TEMPORAL (Dictionary.com)
adjective
There will also be other words that may be unfamiliar to some of us, as we proceed with this matter.
A few notes:
1. I have not defined Eternal here, because not all of us are agreed here, that the eternal is not temporal in nature; i.e. some think of it as time without end or beginning. But, I think, for the purposes of this argument, the participants so far are agreed that it is not quite of the same nature as the temporal in which we find ourselves subject to time as a principle in both our experience and, generally, as governing our thinking.
2. In these threads, we have spoken and agreed upon what we called, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3 etc concepts. @John Bauer please correct me if I'm misrepresenting what we agree on here: Tier 1 is the actual statements of Scripture. Tier 2 is our use of those statements, our conclusions, if properly exegeted and by use of valid hermeneutics. Also in Tier 2, and, in fact, perhaps at the head of it, are the statement of creeds and confessions and Reformed Orthodoxy. Tier 3 is conclusions drawn from 1 and 2. It is necessarily admitted that Tier 2 can have some degree of
mis-statement and worse, of mistake or speculation; Tier 3, moreso.
INTRODUCTION:
Most of this discussion revolves around my disagreement with two or more members' use of several specific passages that are plainly written in Scripture, which writing we all agree is valid and inspired, although temporal in delivery or expression. That is, the temporal understanding of it is valid; but, in what context? Valid to the exclusion of other considerations? (@John Bauer or @Arial , if you have anything to add here—maybe a better way to state what I just said— please do so.)
The subject at hand is two-fold in its application: In the first, there was a thread on the opposition of Annihilationism (theory) over against Eternal Conscious Torment (theory) of Perdition. The second, if I remember right, was a spin-off of the question, "Where is Hell?" in which the question came up, of what is the experience of the dead in what appears in scripture as an intermediate state before resurrection.
But the purpose of this thread is not to debate or pursue those questions, but to explore the use of Scripture in arriving at conclusions, and how to weight those conclusions as to reliability, finality and so on.
So: To start off, I will next rejoin one of those threads with a quote from @John Bauer, written in response to one of my posts (Makesends).
I'm posting this for two reasons. I'm hoping it will be instructional for others, and because I am working through some differences I'm having a problem defining, with a few other members, as to what is and what is not a proper hermeneutic.
For those who don't know these terms, I will quote outside sources for definitions relating to this discussion, then proceed with the situation in which I find myself.
HERMENEUTICS (American Heritage Dictionary via AI)
- The theory and methodology of interpretation, especially of scriptural text.
- The science of interpretation and explanation; exegesis; esp., that branch of theology which defines the laws whereby the meaning of the Scriptures is to be ascertained.
Similar: exegesis - The study or theory of the methodical interpretation of text, especially holy texts
adjective (American Heritage Dictionary via AI)
1. Interpretive; explanatory.
2. Unfolding the signification; of or pertaining to interpretation; exegetical; explanatory.
"hermeneutic theology, or the art of expounding the Scriptures; a hermeneutic phrase."
Similar: exegetical explanatory
3. That explains, interprets, illustrates or elucidates
lexical noun (derived from adjective) (per AI)1. A method, theory, or system of interpretation, especially of texts (literary, religious, legal, or philosophical).
2. An interpretive framework or set of principles used to explain meaning and context.
3. (More broadly) the practice or art of interpretation itself.
EXEGESIS (per GotQuestions.org)
Exegesis is the exposition or explanation of a text based on a careful, objective analysis.
EISEGESIS (per Wiktionary)
1. An interpretation, especially of Scripture, that reflects the personal ideas or viewpoint of the interpreter; reading something into a text that isn't there. Compare exegesis.
2. Personal interpretation of a text (especially of the Bible) using your own ideas.
TEMPORAL (Dictionary.com)
adjective
1. of or relating to time.
2. pertaining to or concerned with the present life or this world
3. (Makesends, my addition here: related to time as opposed to the eternal
There will also be other words that may be unfamiliar to some of us, as we proceed with this matter.
A few notes:
1. I have not defined Eternal here, because not all of us are agreed here, that the eternal is not temporal in nature; i.e. some think of it as time without end or beginning. But, I think, for the purposes of this argument, the participants so far are agreed that it is not quite of the same nature as the temporal in which we find ourselves subject to time as a principle in both our experience and, generally, as governing our thinking.
2. In these threads, we have spoken and agreed upon what we called, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3 etc concepts. @John Bauer please correct me if I'm misrepresenting what we agree on here: Tier 1 is the actual statements of Scripture. Tier 2 is our use of those statements, our conclusions, if properly exegeted and by use of valid hermeneutics. Also in Tier 2, and, in fact, perhaps at the head of it, are the statement of creeds and confessions and Reformed Orthodoxy. Tier 3 is conclusions drawn from 1 and 2. It is necessarily admitted that Tier 2 can have some degree of
mis-statement and worse, of mistake or speculation; Tier 3, moreso.
INTRODUCTION:
Most of this discussion revolves around my disagreement with two or more members' use of several specific passages that are plainly written in Scripture, which writing we all agree is valid and inspired, although temporal in delivery or expression. That is, the temporal understanding of it is valid; but, in what context? Valid to the exclusion of other considerations? (@John Bauer or @Arial , if you have anything to add here—maybe a better way to state what I just said— please do so.)
The subject at hand is two-fold in its application: In the first, there was a thread on the opposition of Annihilationism (theory) over against Eternal Conscious Torment (theory) of Perdition. The second, if I remember right, was a spin-off of the question, "Where is Hell?" in which the question came up, of what is the experience of the dead in what appears in scripture as an intermediate state before resurrection.
But the purpose of this thread is not to debate or pursue those questions, but to explore the use of Scripture in arriving at conclusions, and how to weight those conclusions as to reliability, finality and so on.
So: To start off, I will next rejoin one of those threads with a quote from @John Bauer, written in response to one of my posts (Makesends).
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