Like the Athenians of Paul's day, many
religious people throughout time, and some Christians recently, have
been fascinated "to tell or hear some new thing" (Acts 17:21), as
if that new thing were better or truer than the old things. For example,
from the 3rd through the 6th centuries A.D., there was NeoPlatonism.
Later among the denominations there have been such movements as New
Divinity, NeoThomism, NeoOrthodoxy, NeoPentecostalism, NeoEvangelicalism,
New Morality (Situation Ethics) and New Age. In my lifetime there have
been several new religious trends among certain brethren such as
NeoCalvinism, the New Unity Movement, and now, the New Hermeneutic.
"New" is not wrong if it comes as a result
of God's planning (Rom.6:4; 2 Cor.5:17; Heb. 8:8; Rev. 21:1, 2).
There is a time and place for new things in God's plan. "New" is wrong,
however, if it comes as a result of man's planning. Someone has said,
"If it is new, it is not true. If it is true, it is not new." The
apostle Paul said the same thing in other words long ago (Gal.1:6-10).
"Old" is not always bad as some brethren today would have us believe,
especially if the "old" is the "old paths" of God's word (Jer.6:16).
Background to the New
Hermeneutic Issue
The New Hermeneutic (hereafter, "NH") that
is discussed in this article is the NH advanced by some of our brethren
in churches of Christ. There is another NH among the denominations.
There are, however, similarities between the two, especially in the area
of existential thought. The NH problem is prominent among the
"institutional" churches of Christ, but it has affected some
"non-institutional" churches as well (for example, Charles Holt's group
and The Examiner); and for this reason we need to learn about it and
combat it.
Certain "institutional" brethren (preachers,
and Bible professors at some schools operated by brethren) who claim
that they are part of a "Scholarship Movement," began calling for a NH
in the late 1980s, and they continue that call at the present. They
continue the process of tearing down the "Old Hermeneutic" - a process
which began in the late 1960s with Thomas H. Olbricht, Restoration
Quarterly, and Mission Journal. Much of the writing of these brethren
has parroted the earlier works of Olbricht (Bible professor at
Pepperdine University), and the more recent works of C. Leonard Allen
(Bible professor at Abilene Christian University). According to the so
called "Scholarship Movement," our current hermeneutic (the "Old
Hermeneutic" of command, example, and necessary inference) must be
abandoned and replaced with a NH because they claim our current
hermeneutic is a manmade tradition taken from the 19th century. The NH
advocates have not reached a consensus as to what the NH ought to be,
but they are all in agreement that the "Old Hermeneutic" must go. "Out
with the old and in with the new" is the cry of the NH.
A brief critique of the NH position is in
order here. First, the NH advocates make several presuppositions; their
main presupposition being the dating of what they call the "Old
Hermeneutic." They assume that the "Old Hermeneutic" is a manmade
tradition given to us by Alexander Campbell that dates back to the last
century. This date, however, is far too late. The use of command,
example and necessary inference to establish Bible authority was not
given to us by Alexander Campbell in the 19th century, but by Jesus, the
apostles and NT evangelists in the 1st century. What the NH advocates
want to abandon are in fact principles that are clearly established in
Scripture and were used by Jesus and the 1st century church. Second, the
principles of inductive reasoning that we use to interpret the
Scriptures were not given to us by Alexander Campbell as the NH
advocates assume, but by God.
Why a New Hermeneutic?
Some of our brethren have a "hidden agenda."
They have developed a NH so they don't have to be limited in their
religious practices. They have changed their hermeneutic in order to
support their change in practice.
For example, some of our brethren want all
marriages and divorces to be right and they allow polygamy. They want
"grace only salvation." They believe baptism to be nonessential for
salvation and baptism can include sprinkling and pouring. They want the
unimmersed to be recognized as "Christians." They want to have
instrumental music, women preachers and women elders. They want a more
emotional worship service in the assembly with "spontaneous" worship and
celebration (this includes solos and choirs, "special music," written
prayers, shouting, dancing, applause, cheering, personal testimonials or
"witnessing," "sin confessing," "children's church" or "junior worship,"
and theatrical performances). They allow only one elder over a local
church. They want to leave off the practice of taking the Lord's supper
every Sunday. They want to change the elements of the Lord's supper from
the fruit of the vine and unleavened bread to something else. They want
to use the local church treasury to support literacy programs, soup
kitchens, drug rehabilitation programs, homes for the homeless and
prison outreach programs. They want to stop identifying the church of
God with the kingdom of God; the church is now, the kingdom is yet
future, they say. Other NH brethren defend homosexuality, promote the
A.D. 70 theory (Jesus' second coming was in A.D. 70), and deny that the
wicked will suffer endless torment in a place called Hell.
Some of the NH brethren want unity and
fellowship with other religious bodies (unity with all professing
"Christians" or "believers" in the denominations). Others want to meet
what they call the needs and problems of Christians in the 20th century.
They also want to prepare the church to meet the so called needs and
problems of Christians in the 21st century. These needs and problems are
in reality wants, and their NH allows them to have what they want. "Will
worship" (Col. 2:23), or worshipping the way you want, is running
rampant among the NH brethren. They want change; not just in the area of
expediencies, but change in what the Bible teaches.
The NH is soul damning. It needs to be
exposed, rebuked and rejected! The NH is simply old modernism. It
undermines Bible authority, making the Bible little more than a book of
suggestions. More and more members of the church are losing their
confidence in the reliability, accuracy and authority of the Bible. A
few brethren today now hold to the theory of Theistic Evolution, the
Documentary Hypothesis, and various types of Form Criticism. The virgin
birth of Christ is even questioned by some.
Rush Limbaugh said, "Any time you see the
adjective `new' employed - be it in politics, religion, or commerce -
assume that the label is mere smoke and mirrors, calculated to obscure
the fact that there is nothing `new' about what is being described.
Rather, it is the same old stuff simply repackaged" (See, I Told You So,
34). (This quote was brought to my attention by Forrest D. Moyer, `New'
- But the Same Old Stuff," Gospel Anchor, March,1994.) What Rush
Limbaugh said about politics, religion and commerce is certainly true
about what is talking place among some churches of Christ. We are
hearing a lot these days about a "new" hermeneutic. But there is nothing
"new" about the NH. The NH is simply the old rejection of divine
authority contained in the Scriptures repackaged in order to introduce
what man wants today. The NH is no more than a smoke screen for
unauthorized practices.
Hermeneutics Defined
Our English word "hermeneutics" means "the
science of interpretation" (Webster, 680). According to D.R. Dungan,
hermeneutics "is derived from the Greek Hermes, the messenger of the
gods and the interpreter of Jupiter .. . Sacred hermeneutics is the
science of interpreting the Scriptures" (1). Biblical hermeneutics,
therefore, is the process of interpreting the Scriptures in such a way
as to find the original meaning of the text. The goal of hermeneutics is
to remove the distance or differences between the author (of Bible
times) and the reader (in the 20th century). G.H. Schodde said, "The
moment the Bible student has in his own mind what was in the mind of the
author or authors of Biblical books when these were written, he has
interpreted the thought of Scripture" (1489). Biblical hermeneutics
deals with the way we interpret (understand) and apply the Scripture.
What, then, is the NH? A new method of interpreting and applying the
Scriptures. What the new method or methods should be has not been agreed
upon by the NH advocates.
What Is the Issue Over
Hermeneutics?
The issue is not "Do we need a hermeneutic?"
We know that the Scriptures must be interpreted. God communicated his
will to us in words (Heb. 1:12; 1 Cor. 2:12f; Eph. 3:1 f). The
understanding of these words is possible only by the interpretation of
those words. Interpreting the Scriptures is a Bible practice (Neh.
8:8; Lk. 4:1721; Matt. 9:13; Lk. 24:1335,44f; Acts 8:30f).
Interpreting the Scriptures is necessary for the understanding of the
Scriptures, and the understanding of the Scriptures is necessary for our
salvation.
The issue is "Which hermeneutic will we
use?" The one set forth by Jesus, the apostles and NT evangelists, or
the various ones set forth by some of our brethren in recent years?
Instead of looking to a so called "Restoration Movement Hermeneutic"
(another name for the "Old Hermeneutic") or a "New Hermeneutic" for an
answer, why not let the NT solve the issue? What does the Bible say
concerning the proper interpretation of Scripture? Let the NT determine
how we ought to interpret the Scriptures.
Some Practices That
Must Be Abandoned According the New Hermeneutic Advocates
Since the "Old Hermeneutic" is believed by
the NH advocates to be a faulty, manmade tradition of the 19th century,
they feel it must be abandoned. What are some of' the practices that we
must leave behind according to the NH position?
I. Using the NT as a pattern or
blueprint. According to some NH advocates the NT is not a pattern or
blueprint that must be followed. C. Leonard Allen writes:
First, there is the simple and observable
fact that, throughout Churches of Christ, many people are questioning
and sometimes rejecting the traditional doctrinal system that for
several generations gave Churches of Christ their distinctive identity.
Acts and the Epistles as architectural "blueprint," as a rigid
"pattern," as a collection of case law - these images and the
interpretive method they support are steadily declining (The Cruciform
Church, 19).
2. Establishing Bible authority by the
use of apostolic examples or necessary inference. According to some
NH advocates, the NT does not teach us by apostolic examples or
necessary inferences. Christ alone is our model for teaching. Rubel
Shelly and Randall J. Harris write:
Our hermeneutic is therefore theological and
Christocentric. . . Our beginning point is the general principle of
Christ centeredness, Christ centricity (The Second Incarnation, 28).
Remember that everything about the church must pass the "Jesus test" to
be trustworthy ... (Ibid., 232).
3. Making the silence of God prohibitive.
According to some NH advocates, when God is silent, that does not mean
we cannot act, it means we can go ahead and do what we want. Woody
Woodrow writes:
If the thesis of this paper is correct,
namely, that the New Testament is not an exclusive pattern, or does not
contain an exhaustive number of ways one may worship and serve God, then
items which are not mentioned in this regard (expressions about which
the Scripture is "silent") are not necessarily excluded. . . In short,
the silence of Scripture has no different function from silence in
normal human discourse and should not be assigned prohibitive force
solely on the basis of a presupposed exhaustive blueprint (The Silence
of the Scriptures and Restoration Movement, 3839).
Possibly the most widely accepted view among
certain frontrunners in Dallas, Fort Worth, Abilene, Nashville, San
Antonio, and Searcy is that the scripture is not a constitution or code
book, as envisioned by the old hermeneutic, but is a love letter from
God. There is much merit in both the rejection of the former model, and
the parameters of the new (Hermeneutics: The Beginning Point, 6).
4. Using the NT as a book of case law.
According to some NH advocates we should not view the NT as a book of
case law, or a constitution, but rather as a collection of "love
letters." Thomas H. Olbricht said:
5. Using reason and logic (or "inductive
reasoning") when trying to learn God's will. According to some NH
advocates, we are not to use deductive reasoning and logic to learn
God's will (that is, we are not to look for Bible "facts") because the
use of such is a manmade tradition which came to us from the Age of
Enlightenment and the Restoration preachers. C. Leonard Allen writes:
The Enlightenment also exerted a profound
influence on our understanding of the Bible. Many members of Churches of
Christ today, while certainly viewing the Bible as divinely inspired,
still think the Bible essentially a book of good common sense or even
sound psychological theory. . . What is the source for this peculiar
understanding of the Bible? Again, we turn to the early age of
Enlightenment. Our forefathers in the faith - men like Campbell, Tolbert
Fanning, Moses Lard, and J.W. McGarvey - adopted a way of reading the
Bible called the "inductive method" ... The Bible in this view, was a
grand collection of individual "facts" . . . With such a method, its
proponents thought, the Bible required little interpretation. One simply
gathered and set forth the "facts" ... This way of reading the Bible
became a powerful tradition among Churches of Christ ... Today many in
Churches of Christ have moved away from this way of reading the Bible
(The Worldly Church, 6063).
6. Claiming to know the truth.
According to some NH advocates we should not claim to know the truth.
Richard T. Hughes said:
... truth in its fullness and wholeness lies
always beyond the grasp of the human mind. The search for truth,
therefore, is a continuous, never-ending search, and becomes the urgent
task of each new generation. Faith, therefore, is not knowledge at all,
but rather trust in God in spite of our lack of knowledge. . . The word
of God ... was far too large to be encapsulated by the wisdom of men
(The Idea of a Christian University, 67; quoted by H.A. Dobbs, "What's
Wrong? - Part 4," Firm Foundation, April, 1991).
New Hermeneutic
Proposals
Let us turn our attention now to some of the
many NH proposals that have been made in recent years. NH advocates are
in agreement that the "Old Hermeneutic" must go, but they have not
reached a consensus as to what is to be offered in its place. Thomas
Olbricht said, "The proposals by scholars are legion, but no consensus
has emerged" (Hermeneutics: The Beginning Point, 7). Most of the NH
proposals that have been made in recent years have come from the annual
Christian Scholars Conference hosted by universities operated by our
brethren. NH proposals have also been made by C. Leonard Allen in The
Cruciform Church, and Rubel Shelly and Randall J. Harris in The Second
Incarnation. Various ones writing in Restoration Quarterly, Image and
Wineskins have also made NH proposals in recent years. The NH proposals,
and there are many, arise from what some scholars feel is needed among
the brotherhood. The NH proposals are supposed to meet these needs. What
are some of the needs and proposals of the NH advocates?
1.The need for a greater focus on God,
Christ and the Holy Spirit. According to some NH advocates the "Old
Hermeneutic" does not cause us to focus on God, Christ and Holy Spirit
like we should do. Thomas H. Olbricht said:
The command example necessary inference
hermeneutic focuses on the rules (that is, rules of logic), and the
results, rather than on the actions of God. It gets the cart before the
horse. We are committed to the book of God, but not for its own sake,
but to the God of the book. The old hermeneutic may help us discover
what Christ did, or what we should do in the concrete. But why not begin
with the actions of God, Christ and the Holy Spirit. . . The action of
God through Christ and the Holy Spirit is the center of the Scriptures.
. . A Biblical hermeneutic therefore starts from God, Christ and the
Holy Spirit, and ends up by setting forth guidelines by which scripture
provides humankind with the manner of acting within specific contexts so
as to be Godlike (Hermeneutics: The Beginning Point, 1112).
2. The need to view Scripture as
narrative. According to some NH advocates the "Old Hermeneutic" does
not cause us to view Scripture as narrative as we should do. Michael
Casey said:
Narrative is also an important literary form
found in scripture. It occurs more often than commands. As the most
prominent literary form of scripture, it then should be appropriate to
propose the metaphor of scripture is story and the Church as a story
formed community as the basis of a new hermeneutic for the restoration
tradition (Scripture As Narrative and The Church A Story Form Community:
A Proposal For a New Restoration Hermeneutic, 15).
3. The need to maintain our theological
identity. According to some NH advocates the "Old Hermeneutic" does
not cause us to focus on our theological identity, namely the Lord's
supper, as we should do. Allan J. McNicol said:
In this paper we have concentrated on . . .
the Lord's Supper. We have shown how Paul used the tradition about it
operative in the early church as a hermeneutical tool to address
problems in the local church. We should do the same (Theological Method
On the Bible Among Churches of Christ: A Proposal, 2122).
4. The need to read the Bible like Jesus.
According to some NH advocates the "Old Hermeneutic" does not cause us
to read the Bible like Jesus as we should do. Gary Collier said:
So, not only is Jesus the authoritative
interpreter for his church, his church is to follow his lead! ... Jesus
draws us to interpret the instructions of God in the brighter light of
the desires of God's heart: justice, mercy, faith, righteousness, love.
The argument here is not that Jesus provides us with a new (or old)
method of interpretation, but rather a perspective from which to view
people in relation to God's law . . . in Matt.12:114, Jesus shows that
the real issue of Biblical hermeneutics goes beyond mere methods in
deciphering a book, to an understanding of the desire of God for people.
. . This is the starting point from which we must discuss specific
methods (Bringing the Word to Life - Part II: The Scholarship Movement,
2627).
Evaluation of the New
Hermeneutic
What about what the NH advocates want to
abandon? It is obvious that our NH brethren do the very things they
condemn. They practice the same things they want us to abandon. For
example, they want us to abandon the NT pattern, apostolic examples,
necessary inference, reason and logic, but they use patterns, examples,
inferences, reason and logic to build their NH. The NH brethren remind
me of the Jews of Paul's day: "Thou therefore that teachest another,
teachest thou not thyself?" (Rom.2:21) What do the NH advocates
offer in return? Many of them are offering pluralism, subjectivism,
existentialism, agnosticism, relativism, ecumenism, antinomianism,
humanism and traditionalism. "Change" and "freedom" are two words that
summarize the beliefs of the NH. What the NH brethren are offering is
very attractive to some, but destructive to the soul. They remind me of
the false teachers of Paul's day: "promising them liberty, while they
themselves are bondservants of corruption. . ." (2 Pet.2: 19).
The NH offers a "hidden agenda." Beware of anyone who wants to use the
Scriptures in some way other than the way Jesus, the apostles and NT
evangelists used the Scriptures. Their interest is not so much with a
proper use of Scripture, as it is with promoting and defending their
current practices. They need to promote their practices in a respectable
way in order that the brotherhood won't be alarmed, so they invent a NH
which will give them the sophisticated, Biblical (?) sanction they need.
They know that the hermeneutic of Jesus, the apostles and NT evangelists
will not support their current practices, so they have abandoned it for
a NH. Let us be content to use the Scriptures in the way Jesus, the
apostles and NT evangelists used them. We do not need a NH. We need the
hermeneutic of Jesus, the apostles and NT evangelists. Let us not
abandon what is clearly established in God's word. Let us hold fast the
pattern of sound words as Paul directed, allow God to teach us the way
he wants to teach us (via direct statements, examples, and
implications), remain silent when God is silent, obey the law of Christ,
reason from the Scriptures as Paul and others did, and let us know the
truth and obey the truth.
What about the many NH proposals? While some
of what the NH advocates are saying about Bible study is good and worthy
of our attention, much of what they are saying about Bible
interpretation (hermeneutics) is absolutely false. The NH proposals are
not the result of thorough Bible study; rather they are the result of:
(1) a reactionary attitude toward certain Bible principles which are
clearly established in Scripture; (2) reading the scholarly works of
liberal theologians; and (3) an overreaction to certain abuses of Bible
study among brethren. The NH proposals sound good to the ear. They
contain some Scripture but the Scriptures used are either taken out of
context, or singled out and separated from the rest of Scripture to
establish a particular point. Who gives these men the authority to have
these needs and make these proposals? Are we to accept these needs and
proposals just because the men who offer them are church of Christ
scholars? No. If these needs and proposals are based upon the text of
Scripture then we must accept them; if not, then we must reject them. We
are not obligated to accept them just because they are offered by
scholars. The NH is simply old modernism. These men cast doubt upon the
Scriptures and do not define their terms. They are modernist sin the
making, and they have only begun to deny the Scriptures. If a NH is
needed today to properly understand and apply God's message, then
everyone who has lived before and died without the NH, died without
properly understanding and applying God's message.
Do we need a so called "Restoration
Hermeneutic"? No. Do we need the contemporary NH proposals of the
"Scholarship Movement"? No. We need the hermeneutic of Jesus, the
apostles and NT evangelists. I appeal to all brethren to follow the
example of Jesus, the apostles and NT evangelists, as they seek to
handle accurately the word of truth today.
Works Cited
Allen, C. Leonard. The Cruciform Church.
Abilene, TX: ACU Press, 1990.
. The Worldly Church. Abilene, TX: ACU
Press, 1991.
Casey, Michael. "Scripture As Narrative and
the Church a Story Form Community: A Proposal For a New Restoration
Hermeneutic." Christian Scholars Conference, Pepperdine University,
1989.
Collier, Gary. "Bringing the Word to Life -
Part II: The Scholarship Movement." Christian Scholars Conference,
Pepperdine University, 1988.
Dungan, D.R. Hermeneutics: A Textbook.
Delight, AR: Gospel Light Publishing Co., n.d.
Hughes, Richard T. "The Idea of a Christian
University." Christian Scholars Conference, Pepperdine University, 1986.
Limbaugh, Rush. See, I Told You So. New
York, NY: Pocket Books, 1993.
McNicol, Allan J. "Theological Method on the
Bible Among Churches of Christ: A Proposal." Christian Scholars
Conference, Pepperdine University, 1989.
Olbricht, Thomas H. "Hermeneutics: The
Beginning Point." Christian Scholars Conference, Pepperdine University,
1989.
Schodde, G.H. "Interpretation." The
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Grand Rapids, MI: William B.
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1939.
Shelly, Rubel and Randall J. Harris. The
Second Incarnation: A Theology for the 21st Century Church. West Monroe,
LA: Howard Publishing Co., 1992.
Webster's New World Dictionary of the
American Language.
New York, NY: The World Publishing Co.,
1963.
Woodrow, Woody. "The Silence of the
Scriptures and Restoration Movement." Restoration Quarterly, Vol.28,
No.1, 1986.
(Note: This material was taken from a larger
outline entitled Out With the Old and In With the New: The Cry of the
New Hermeneutic by the same author. This thirty page outline has many
useful quotes and references about the New Hermeneutic, a refutation of
each of the main points of the New Hermeneutic and a large bibliography)
Guardian of Truth - October 6, 1994
Other Articles
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Character Portrait of Moses
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It's Not
About You
Whose
Fault is It?
- Caffin,
B.C. (1950), II Peter – Pulpit Commentary, H.D.M. Spence
and Joseph Exell, eds. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans).
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