Biblical interpretation is a rational and spiritual process that attempts to understand an ancient inspired writer in such a way that the message from God may be understood and applied in our day.
We must be consistent and fair to the text and not be influenced by our personal or denominational biases. We are all historically conditioned. None of us are objective, neutral interpreters. This seminar offers a careful rational process containing four interpretive principles structured to help us overcome our biases.
First Principle
The first principle is to note the historical setting in which a biblical book was written and the particular historical occasion for its authorship (or when it was edited). The original author had a purpose and a message to communicate. The text cannot mean something to us that it never meant to the original, ancient, inspired author. His intent—not our historical, emotional, cultural, personal or denominational need—is the key.
Second Principle
The second principle is to identify the literary units. Every biblical book is a unified document. Interpreters have no right to isolate one aspect of truth by excluding others. Therefore, we must strive to understand the purpose of the whole biblical book before we interpret the individual literary units. The individual parts—chapters, paragraphs, or verses—cannot mean what the whole unit does not mean.
Third Principle
The third principle is to read the Bible in different translations in order to grasp the widest possible range of meaning (semantic field) that biblical words or phrases may have. Often a phrase or word can be understood in several ways.
Fourth Principle
The fourth principle is to note the literary genre. Original inspired authors chose to record their messages in different forms (e.g., historical narrative, historical drama, poetry, prophecy, gospel [parable], letter, apocalyptic). These different forms have special keys to interpretation (see Gordon Fee and Doug Stuart, How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth, D. Brent Sandy and Ronald L. Giese, Jr., Cracking Old Testament Codes, or Robert Stein, Playing by the Rules).
Through the years I have video taped my Seminar on Biblical Interpretation in several formats for different groups and purposes.
- A brief introduction to the Historical/Grammatical method, often called "the common sense" method:
- The original videos of the seminar (1987) to fulfill my doctrinal work at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Deerfield, Illinois:
- The Seminar designed to function as a quarterly Sunday School class or Bible Study (2010, Lakeside Baptist Church, Dallas, TX):
- The Seminar in a weekend version for a local church (5 lessons, Bridgeway Church in Copper Canyon, TX, 2022):
Click here for Videos. - An audio version of III (above) to help those who missed a video class to keep up with the lecture series:
Click here for Sound Files. - A full version of the Seminar reflecting Bob's hermeneutics class at ETBU. It is provided to function as a university or seminary class. It was created in 2023 via Zoom for pastors in Mexico City.