Archive for the ‘A Way To Read The Bible’ Category

THE EPISTLES: THE HERMENEUTICAL QUESTIONS (Part 5)

July 22, 2010  |  Rob Berreth

The Basic Rule: When applying exegetical study to the practice of hermeneutics it is imperative to remember that a text cannot mean what it never could have meant to its author or his or her readers. This is why good exegesis is important to do before attempting to discover what the text means to you [...]

THE EPISTLES: LEARNING TO THINK CONTEXTUALLY (Part 4)

July 19, 2010  |  Rob Berreth

The Nature of the Epistles: The Epistles are all of the New Testament except the Four Gospels, Acts, and Revelation. All of the Epistles are referred to as occasional documents, arising out of and intended for a specific occasion. They are also all from the first century. Almost all of the New Testaments letters were [...]

THE BASIC TOOL: A GOOD TRANSLATION (Part 3)

July 15, 2010  |  Rob Berreth

The Science of Translation: There are two choices that a translator has to make; textual and linguistic. The first has to do with the actual wording of the original text. The second has to do with one’s theory of translation. Because translators use a variety of methods for translating a text it has become a [...]

A WAY TO READ THE BIBLE: THE NEED TO INTERPRET (Part 2)

July 12, 2010  |  Rob Berreth

The aim of good interpretation is simple: to get to the plain meaning of the text. We tend to think that our understanding is the same thing as the Holy Spirit’s or human author’s intent. However, because of our backgrounds, knowledge, experiences, it is easy for our interpretations to become skewed from what God originally [...]

A Way To Read The Bible: Preface (Part 1)

July 9, 2010  |  Rob Berreth

Over the next month I will blog through Fee and Stuart’s book, How To Read The Bible For All It’s Worth. My hope is this series gives some foundational understanding in reading our Bibles and prepares us for another blog series in the fall focused on reading the Bible Christotelically. The following content, and the [...]