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A SIMPLE, FACE
VALUE UNDERSTANDING OF PROPHETIC SCRIPTURES
The conclusions one reaches when
studying the Word of God are based on the type of interpretive process employed. Because
this study of Revelation uses a particular and consistent interpretive process, the
following explanation of the method of Bible study is presented for the reader to
consider.
To have validity, our method of
interpretation (i.e., our hermeneutic) must be consistent and without contradiction, and
it must never be governed by a preconceived theological school of thought. In other words,
if our hermeneutic is controlled by our preconceived theology, then the Bible can be
twisted to say whatever our theology would have it say - which, of course, is what often
happens in the study of the end times.
One's method of interpretation will
have a far-reaching effect on his theological conclusions. Thus, it is axiomatic that
those who use differing methods of interpretation (i.e., a different hermeneutic) will end
up with different theological conclusions. How important it is, then, that we be very
clear about what our hermeneutic is and, even more importantly, that we are in fact using
the right principles of interpretation in order to properly extract the truth of God's
Word.
Before one attempts to apply the
principles of biblical interpretation to the biblical text, he or she must decide his/her
convictions about two important issues. First, one must form a conviction about scriptural
contradictions. The very nature of Scripture precludes contradictions. The writers of
Scripture declared it to be inspired of God (II Tim. 3:16, II Pet. 1:20), and to be true
(Ps. 119:160). Therefore, contradictory conclusions must be pursued until a common
denominator is found.
The second conviction the
interpreter must have concerns the use of an English translation. In our discussion of
biblical interpretation, we are limiting our discussion to the English translation of the
Old and New Testament. In the New American Standard Translation, the translators worked
very hard to give the reader a reliable translation of the original Greek and Hebrew
manuscripts. We understand that each translation reflects the interpretive skills of the
translators. The translators have already made all-important interpretive decisions.
Therefore, we who are not able to work with the original languages must trust the
translation. This also demands care when interpreting the Bible using an English text
only. However, while having the skills necessary to work with the original Greek or Hebrew
will give the interpreter depth in understanding the original meaning, much can be gained
from using a good translation. We simply ask that you exercise caution and compare
Scripture with Scripture to avoid careless error.
One last issue must be touched upon
before we look at some of the actual principles of interpretation. A face value
hermeneutic seeks the intended meaning of the text, not the simple sense. We must
recognize that certain verses taken in a simple sense may convey a meaning foreign to the
author's intended meaning. An excellent example of this is John 6:53 which states,
"
Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and
drink His blood, you have no life in yourselves." It is clear that Jesus' audience
thought they must literally eat of His flesh. That's the simple sense. In reality, Jesus
intended his audience to understand their need for faith (John 6:47).
To help the interpreter achieve
success in the process of interpreting the Bible, we offer the following overview. The
following principles of interpretation, none of them unique to us, but all of them held by
careful students of Scripture throughout history, have been and will be followed as
honestly and consistently as possible.
(1) The first principle is that the
interpreter must seek to discover the original author's intended meaning. We understand
that Paul, Peter, James and John as well as other writers of Scripture determined the
meaning of the text at the time it was written. Therefore, our job as modern interpreters
is to discover that original meaning. To discover the original meaning, all Scripture must
be understood in its most normal, natural, and customary (i.e., literal or face value)
sense.
Biblical words and phrases had a
particular meaning during biblical times. Thus, we must discover what those words and
phrases meant and how they combine to communicate specific meanings. This allows, of
course, for obvious figures of speech (which are frequently explained further in the same
passage or elsewhere in Scripture, i.e., Gen. 3:1, cf. Rev. 12:9). Chances are that if the
plain sense makes sense, you have the right sense.
Martin Luther called this principle
of literal interpretation, sensus literalis. Many of the greatest advances in biblical
scholarship during the Reformation resulted from the application of this single principle.
In its simplest meaning and application, this principle means that we read and interpret
Scripture with the same normal understanding of words that we read any other serious book
or carry on any serious conversation.
This principle has special
relevance in the study of prophecy, and in fact, finds strong confirmation in the way Old
Testament prophecy was fulfilled in the life of Christ. For example, the Old Testament
contains several hundred prophecies concerning the first coming of Christ. Although many
of those prophecies are virtual duplicates, at least fifty distinct facets of Christ's
life and ministry were predicted, and without exception, were literally fulfilled, at face
value. It is not only a matter of faith but of biblical principle to expect the many
prophecies of Christ's Second Coming to be fulfilled with equal literalness and
completeness.
Prophecy that is not fulfilled
literally is not true prophecy at all, and it proves itself to be simply misguided human
speculation. A biblical argument that speaks directly to how prophecy should be understood
is found in Deuteronomy 18:20-22. Here the Israelites were told how to determine if what a
prophet was telling them was truly prophecy from God or mere human speculation. The
conclusion of this passage is that "when a prophet speaks in the name of the Lord, if
the thing does not come about or come true, that is the thing which the Lord has not
spoken."
Earlier in verse 20, God told His
people that when this man's prophecy does not come true, "that prophet shall
die." Only a literal, face-value understanding of what is being prophesied could ever
be put to that test, and the prophecies concerning Christ's first coming bear witness to
this.
When we use this principle of
taking Scripture at face value, the Bible suddenly comes alive in a new way. We have a
renewed confidence in the reliability of God's Word - that it is literally true, that it
is something anyone can understand. The events described in its pages really will happen
according to God's sovereign time and plan. No longer do we approach the Bible looking for
an obscure spiritualized meaning, but rather for the literal understanding of events that
have actually occurred or will happen sometime in the future.
(2) The second principle has to do
with the context in which a word, phrase, or larger passage is being presented. Sometimes
that involves careful understanding of the complete biblical book being studied,
meticulously interpreting a given idea or principle in light of the overall thrust and
nature of the book as well as in light of its immediate context. The context involves the
persons being addressed in the passage, the historical setting, and the situation in which
the passage is given. A simple dictum is: "A text taken out of context is no more
than a pretext."
(3) The third principle, equally
important as the first two, is that of comparing Scripture with Scripture. A word, phrase,
or concept should first be studied in the context of the passage under consideration and
then in light of its use in other passages of Scripture. When a given text is not explicit
about a truth, no conclusion should be drawn about that truth until all relevant passages
have been studied.
Of course, some passages are not as
clear as others and some truths are more implicit than explicit. When this is the case,
those truths that are more implicit always need to be understood in light of those that
are more explicit, never the reverse. Likewise, the more important a truth is, the more
carefully related truths should be compared and examined. Because Scripture is always its
own best interpreter, careful comparison always adds depth and clarity to our
understanding.
(4) The fourth principle concerns
figures of speech. The importance of this principle cannot be overstated. Prophetic and
apocalyptic literature utilizes figures of speech to a great degree. A student of
Scripture must be thoroughly familiar with this special category of hermeneutics. Figures
of speech employ language that is highly suggestive, but have a literal reference. The
interpreter must determine the literal reference. A figure of speech is "any
deviation either in thought or expression, from the ordinary and simple method of
speaking
form of speech artfully varied from common usage." [fn. 1] A figure of
speech will normally employ a comparison, a substitution, or amplification as a means of
"artfully varying" from what we think of as common use, to better clarify the
passage.
The Lord declared, "I am the
good shepherd
" (John 10:11). This is obviously a figure of speech. The Lord
never dealt with literal sheep. Left without clarification, the Lord would intend for the
reader to understand that everything a shepherd is to sheep, He is to those who follow
Him. However, in John 10:11, the Lord adds the following sentence, "the good shepherd
lays down His life for the sheep." Now we understand the literal reference. Jesus is
the good shepherd because He "la[id] down His life for" people. This is the
meaning of the figure of speech. Each time a figure of speech is encountered, it must be
dealt with in this fashion. First, determine what type of figure of speech is used.
Second, determine the significance of such usage. Third, identify the intended meaning for
the particular passage under study.
(5) A fifth and final principle,
which relates to prophetic and apocalyptic literature specifically is to recognize that
many prophetic predictions, in both Testaments, have a unique characteristic--both near
and far implications and applications. In other words, prophecy can operate on multiple
levels of fulfillment. On one level, there is a divinely revealed "near"
prediction relating to a soon-coming event. However, there can be corresponding
"far" aspects that will be fulfilled later, or in the events of the end times.
This particular characteristic of
the prophetic Scriptures has been called by several names. W. J. Beecher calls it generic
fulfillment. He writes,
A generic prediction is one which
regards an event as occurring in a series of parts, separated by intervals, and expresses
itself in language that may apply indifferently to the nearest part, or to the remoter
parts or to the wholein other words, a prediction which, in applying to the whole of
a complex event, also applies to some of its parts. [fn. 2]
D. L. Bock, in referring to this
same matter, uses typological prophetic fulfillment to describe this phenomenon. He
states that typological prophetic fulfillment
refers to a pattern and promise
present in an Old Testament text so that a short-term event pictures and mirrors an
ultimate and unique fulfillment in the New Testament. [fn. 3]
The failure to recognize and apply
this principle has caused immeasurable confusion among even the most godly and scholarly
students of Scripture. Obviously, misuse of this principle, as with any other, will also
cause confusion and misunderstanding. For a near/far interpretation to be valid, it must
clearly be allowed by the context and by the specific wording of the text itself, as well
as be consistent with the rest of Scripture speaking to the same issue. Whenever such
prophecies are dealt with in this commentary, their near/far aspects will be established
as carefully and as fully as possible.
Several general comments on the
basic issue of hermeneutics need to be made. In relation to a given prophetic event or
issue, careful study of various texts in the Old and New Testaments will reveal that the
different terminology and styles of the writers will describe the same event or issue with
equal and consistent truthfulness, though often not in the same detail or from the same
perspective as the other. Many examples will be seen in our study of end-time events as
Scripture is compared with Scripture. One needs only to look at the first coming of Christ
to see the principle in operation.
Psalm 22, written by David, gives
the reader one perspective of the crucifixion of Christ; Isaiah 53 gives another
perspective of exactly the same event; while Daniel 9:26 simply says, "Messiah will
be cut off and have nothing."
Either the context or the
similarity of the events described must be present for the student of prophecy to make the
connection between the passages in question. But where a genuine connection exists, the
different perspectives found in various passages bring a more complete understanding of
the same event.
Our understanding of the end times
will increase as history continues to unfold and verify biblical prophecy. Many of the
prophetic passages of the Old Testament were unclear to those who first heard or read
them. God's people were not certain whether a given prophetic message related to their own
times or to the future. As with near/far prophecies, the biblical language clarified some
of the uncertainties. In regard to many passages, the modern student of prophecy has the
great advantage of looking back and learning from the fulfillment of Old Testament
prophecy, as revealed in the New Testament or as recognized in subsequent history.
Daniel was told to "conceal
these words and seal up the book until the end of time . . . for these words are concealed
and sealed up until the end time" (Dan. 12:4, 9). When the end times actually do
come, the church will have had a long historical base from which to gain understanding of
the many prophetic passages that hitherto were a mystery. History has been, and will
continue to be, a source of prophetic insight for those who carefully study God's Word.
Since Israel gained possession and control of her homeland in 1948, for instance, we have
a perspective on prophecy that could only have been understood after that momentous event
occurred.
In summary, when clear biblical
truth is found, as A.W. Tozer would say, "never do we dare to stand in judgment of
that truth; rather, that truth always stands in judgment of us!" There can be no
exceptions, no spiritualizing, no allegorizing, and no rationalizing. God says what He
means and means what He says! Our only response should be to bow in acceptance of His
truth, however reassuring or unsettling we may find it to be.
fn. 1 - Instit. Orat. IX, I. 11,
cited by Edward P.J. Corbett, Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student (New York:
Oxford Press, 1971), 640.
fn. 2 - W.J. Beecher, The
Prophets and the Promise (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1975), 130.
fn. 3 - D.L. Bock, Proclamation
from Prophecy and Pattern (awaiting publisher information), 49-50.
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