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biblical literature

Other hermeneutical principles

Anagogical interpretation

Anagogical (mystical or spiritual) interpretation seeks to explain biblical events or matters of this world so that they relate to the life to come. Jordan is thus interpreted as the river of death; by crossing it one enters into the heavenly Canaan, the better land, the “rest that remains for the people of God.” “The Jerusalem that now is” points to the new Jerusalem that is above. In Judaism of the closing centuries bc, the Eden of Genesis, the earthly paradise, lent its name to the heavenly paradise mentioned occasionally in the New Testament (Luke 23:43; 2 Corinthians 12:3; Revelation 2:7).

Another form of mystical interpretation is the Mariological (referring to Mary, the mother of Jesus) application of scriptures that have another contextual sense. Thus, Mary is the second Eve, whose offspring bruises the serpent’s head (Genesis 3:15); Mary is the star-crowned woman of Revelation 12, whose son is caught up to the throne of God, and in more popular piety the dark-faced Madonna of the monastery at Montserrat, near Barcelona, Spain, can be identified with the “black but comely” bride of the Song of Solomon.

Parallelism

Parallelism, the interpretation of scripture by means of scripture, is a corollary of the belief in the unity of scripture. But as a hermeneutical principle it must be employed sparingly, since the unity of scripture should be based on comprehensive exegetical study rather than itself provide a basis. Where one or two biblical documents (e.g., the letters to the Romans and to the Galatians) are treated as the norm of biblical doctrine, there is a danger that other parts of the volume (e.g., the Letter to the Hebrews) will be forced to yield the same sense as the “normative” documents; the distinctiveness of certain biblical authors will then be blurred. One naive form of parallelism is the “concordant” method, in which it is axiomatic that a Hebrew or Greek word will always (or nearly always) have the same force wherever it occurs in the Bible, no matter who uses it. There is, again, a harmonistic tradition that smooths out disparities in the biblical text (e.g., as between the gospel narratives or the parallel records of Kings and Chronicles) in a manner that imposes a greater strain on faith than do the disparities themselves.

One exegetical device of the Jewish rabbis (teachers, biblical commentators, and religious leaders) was that of gezera shawa, “equal category,” according to which an obscure passage might be illuminated by reference to another containing the same key term. There are several examples in Paul’s Old Testament exegesis, one of the best known being in Galatians 3:10–14, where the mystery of Christ’s dying the death that incurred the divine curse (Deuteronomy 21:23) is explained by his bearing vicariously the curse incurred by the lawbreaker (Deuteronomy 27:26). One may compare the explanation in Hebrews 4:3–9 of God’s “rest” mentioned in Psalms 95:11 by reference to his resting on the seventh day after creation’s work (Genesis 2:3)—an explanation dependent on the Septuagint, not the Hebrew.

Analogical interpretation

Analogical interpretation traditionally includes not only interpretation according to the analogy of scripture (parallelism, in other words) but also interpretation according to the “analogy of faith”—an expression that misapplies the language of Romans 12:6 in the King James Version of 1611. It has at times been pressed to mean that no biblical interpretation is valid unless it conforms to the established teaching of a religious community, to the verdict of tradition, or to the “unanimous consensus of the fathers.” Where the established teaching is based, in intention, on scripture, then an interpretation of scripture that conflicts with it naturally calls for further scrutiny, but such conflict does not rule out the interpretation beforehand; if the conflict is confirmed, it is the established teaching that requires revision.

Other types

There is an unconscious tendency to conform hermeneutical principles to the climate of opinion in and around the community concerned and to change the hermeneutic pattern as the climate of opinion changes. It is not surprising that in the circles where Pseudo-Dionysius (early 6th-century writings attributed to Dionysius, a convert of St. Paul) was revered as a teacher, scripture was interpreted in Neoplatonic (idealistic and mystical) categories, and if in the latter half of the 20th century there is an influential and persuasive school of existential hermeneutics, this may be as much due to a widespread contemporary outlook on life as was the liberal hermeneutic of the preceding generations.

At a far different level contemporary movements continue to influence biblical interpretation. The interpretation of prophecy and the apocalyptic in terms of events of the interpreter’s day, which has ancient precedent, is still avidly pursued. Just as in the 16th century the apocalyptic beast of Revelation was interpreted to be the papacy or Martin Luther (in accordance with the interpreter’s viewpoint), so also today in some nonacademic circles the ten kings denoted by the beast’s horns in Revelation are identified with the European Economic Community in its ultimate development, or the threat to “destroy the tongue of the sea of Egypt” (Isaiah 11:15) is believed to be fulfilled in the condition of the Suez Canal in the years following 1967. Whatever critical exegetes think of such aberrations, historians of exegesis will take note of them and recognize the doctrine of scripture that underlies them.

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