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Hi:
Grant Osborne's, The Heremeneutical Spiral is the classic text.
Blessings,
-CH
I found Berkhof's Principles of Biblical Interpretation very useful.
Amazon.com: Principles of Biblical Interpretation: Louis Berkhof: Books
Bahnsen has a wonderful series on the subject.
You might find this one of interest:
Milton S. Terry, Biblical Hermeneutics: A Treatise on the Interpretation of the Old and New Testaments (Zondervan, 1974).
Terry has some problem areas, but it is all in all a fine work on the principles and history of interpretation.
Hi:
Grant Osborne's, The Heremeneutical Spiral is the classic text.
Blessings,
-CH
I've never read it, but have been concerned about it given the fact that he's a firmly-committed Arminian...
I always reccomend "How to Read the Bible For All It's Worth" Fee/Stuart as a starter. Fee is Charismatic but the book is very helpful. "Exegetical Fallacies" Carson is also a must read.
We do not have "full view" in the UK.
I always reccomend "How to Read the Bible For All It's Worth" Fee/Stuart as a starter. Fee is Charismatic but the book is very helpful. "Exegetical Fallacies" Carson is also a must read.
A couple of years ago Al Mohler recommended "How to Read the Bible" on his radio program. The very next day he withdrew his recommendation after learning of the new edition. I've read the new one but never the first. From what I gather, the first is the best. The new one is a little too much of a case for Biblical Feminism for me.
Hi:
Grant Osborne's, The Heremeneutical Spiral is the classic text.
Blessings,
-CH
I've never read it, but have been concerned about it given the fact that he's a firmly-committed Arminian...
I know lots of Calvinists who like "Heremeneutical Spiral". I own a copy and have poked around in it some. The author doesn't give the reader a mode of interpretation so much as he equips the reader, regardless of what the reader believes, to reexamine some presuppositions about Scripture, and God for that matter.
I am currently reading Amazon.com: Meaning and Understanding: The Philosophical Framework for Biblical Interpretation (Foundations of Contemporary Interpretation): Royce Gordon Gruenler: Books and loving it!
You might find this one of interest:
Milton S. Terry, Biblical Hermeneutics: A Treatise on the Interpretation of the Old and New Testaments (Zondervan, 1974).
Terry has some problem areas, but it is all in all a fine work on the principles and history of interpretation.
What are Terry's 'problems'? (I am currently reading it)
It cannot be expected that all our interpretations will command unqualified approval, but our choice of more difficult Scriptures for examples of exposition will enhance the volume of the work, and save it from the danger, too common in such treatises, of running into lifeless platitudes. With ample illustrations of this kind before him, the student comes by a natural process to grasp hermeneutical principles, and learns by practice and example rather than by abstract precept.
I think that the Foundations of Contemporary Interpretation, edited by Moises Silva, is absolutely superb.
Augustine's little book, On Christian Doctrine (De Doctrina Christiana) is about hermeneutics as well as sermon delivery. In that work he mentions the rules of Tichonius (the 2nd rule is really great), and those seven can be found here.
I found Berkhof, as Mr. McFadden said, uninspiring; Ramm was dull and weak, and How to Read the Bible for All It's Worth seemed like it should rather be entitled, How to Read the Bible for 12% Of What It's Worth.
I have very much benefitted from what I've been able to read so far of Patrick Fairbairn, and almost every hermeneutical book I've ever encountered has referenced Milton Terry, so I was very glad to pick him up recently. He seems like the older standard. G.K. Beale has edited (or co-edited) a couple of volumes which could be helpful. One is The Right Doctrine From the Wrong Text? which is a collection of essays on hermeneutics by authors from varying standpoints; the other (co-edited with D.A. Carson) is Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament, which is a very new volume, but which I think is very good.
J.I Packer has an article on the puritans as interpreters of Scripture in v.2 of the Puritan Papers series. I summarized it and added some reflexions on it here.
I have sometimes wondered if a better way of learning hermeneutics isn't by analyzing what a great exegete does. It is not that reading the theory isn't helpful, but sometimes seeing it in action actually makes it clearer: and when you ferret the principle out for yourself by asking, \"How did the Westminster Assembly (or Calvin or Owen, Gill or Hutcheson, Edersheim or Morris) arrive at that conclusion from this verse\" and then you have to identify their presuppositions and follow the reasoning, I think it can make things more vivid.
You might find this one of interest:
Milton S. Terry, Biblical Hermeneutics: A Treatise on the Interpretation of the Old and New Testaments (Zondervan, 1974).