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The Chicago Statement On Hermeneutics
With commentary by Norman L. Geisler
Reproduced from Explaining Hermeneutics: A Commentary on the
Chicago Statement on Biblical Hermeneutics. Oakland, California:
International Council on Biblical Inerrancy, 1983.
Preface
Summit I of the International Council on Biblical Inerrancy took
place in Chicago on October 26-28, 1978 for the purpose of affirming afresh the
doctrine of the inerrancy of Scripture, making clear the understanding of it and
warning against its denial. In the years that have passed since Summit I, God
has blessed that effort in ways surpassing most anticipations. A gratifying flow
of helpful literature on the doctrine of inerrancy as well as a growing
commitment to its value give cause to pour forth praise to our great God.
The work of Summit I had hardly been completed when it became
evident that there was yet another major task to be tackled. While we recognize
that belief in the inerrancy of Scripture is basic to maintaining its authority,
the values of that commitment are only as real as one's understanding of the
meaning of Scripture. Thus, the need for Summit II. For two years plans were
laid and papers were written on themes relating to hermeneutical principles and
practices. The culmination of this effort has been a meeting in Chicago on
November 10-13, 1982 at which we, the undersigned, have participated.
In similar fashion to the Chicago Statement of 1978, we herewith
present these affirmations and denials as an expression of the results of our
labors to clarify hermeneutical issues and principles. We do not claim
completeness or systematic treatment of the entire subject, but these
affirmations and denials represent a consensus of the approximately one hundred
participants and observers gathered at this conference. It has been a broadening
experience to engage in dialogue, and it is our prayer that God will use the
product of our diligent efforts to enable us and others to more correctly handle
the word of truth (2 Tim. 2:15).
Article I
WE AFFIRM that the normative
authority of Holy Scripture is the authority of God Himself, and is attested by
Jesus Christ, the Lord of the Church.
WE DENY the legitimacy of separating
the authority of Christ from the authority of Scripture, or of opposing the one
to the other.
Article II
WE AFFIRM that as Christ is God and
Man in One Person, so Scripture is, indivisibly, God's Word in human
language.
WE DENY that the humble, human form
of Scripture entails errancy any more than the humanity of Christ, even in His
humiliation, entails sin.
Article III
WE AFFIRM that the Person and work of
Jesus Christ are the central focus of the entire Bible.
WE DENY that any method of
interpretation which rejects or obscures the Christ-centeredness of Scripture is
correct.
Article IV
WE AFFIRM that the Holy Spirit who
inspired Scripture acts through it today to work faith in its message.
WE DENY that the Holy Spirit ever
teaches to any one anything which is contrary to the teaching of Scripture.
Article V
WE AFFIRM that the Holy Spirit
enables believers to appropriate and apply Scripture to their lives.
WE DENY that the natural man is able
to discern spiritually the biblical message apart from the Holy Spirit.
Article VI
WE AFFIRM that the Bible expresses
God's truth in propositional statements, and we declare that biblical truth is
both objective and absolute. We further affirm that a statement is true if it
represents matters as they actually are, but is an error if it misrepresents the
facts.
WE DENY that, while Scripture is able
to make us wise unto salvation, biblical truth should be defined in terms of
this function. We further deny that error should be defined as that which
willfully deceives.
Article VII
WE AFFIRM that the meaning expressed
in each biblical text is single, definite and fixed.
WE DENY that the recognition of this
single meaning eliminates the variety of its application.
Article VIII
WE AFFIRM that the Bible contains
teachings and mandates which apply to all cultural and situational contexts and
other mandates which the Bible itself shows apply only to particular
situations.
WE DENY that the distinctions between
the universal and particular mandates of Scripture can be determined by cultural
and situational factors. We further deny that universal mandates may ever be
treated as culturally or situationally relative.
Article IX
WE AFFIRM that the term hermeneutics,
which historically signified the rules of exegesis, may properly be extended to
cover all that is involved in the process of perceiving what the biblical
revelation means and how it bears on our lives.
WE DENY that the message of Scripture
derives from, or is dictated by, the interpreter's understanding. Thus we deny
that the "horizons" of the biblical writer and the interpreter may rightly
"fuse" in such a way that what the text communicates to the interpreter is not
ultimately controlled by the expressed meaning of the Scripture.
Article X
WE AFFIRM that Scripture communicates
God's truth to us verbally through a wide variety of literary forms.
WE DENY that any of the limits of
human language render Scripture inadequate to convey God's message.
Article XI
WE AFFIRM that translations of the
text of Scripture can communicate knowledge of God across all temporal and
cultural boundaries.
WE DENY that the meaning of biblical
texts is so tied to the culture out of which they came that understanding of the
same meaning in other cultures is impossible.
Article XII
WE AFFIRM that in the task of
translating the Bible and teaching it in the context of each culture, only those
functional equivalents which are faithful to the content of biblical teaching
should be employed.
WE DENY the legitimacy of methods
which either are insensitive to the demands of cross-cultural communication or
distort biblical meaning in the process.
Article XIII
WE AFFIRM that awareness of the
literary categories, formal and stylistic, of the various parts of Scripture is
essential for proper exegesis, and hence we value genre criticism as one of the
many disciplines of biblical study.
WE DENY that generic categories which
negate historicity may rightly be imposed on biblical narratives which present
themselves as factual.
Article XIV
WE AFFIRM that the biblical record of
events, discourses and sayings, though presented in a variety of appropriate
literary forms, corresponds to historical fact.
WE DENY that any event, discourse or
saying reported in Scripture was invented by the biblical writers or by the
traditions they incorporated.
Article XV
WE AFFIRM the necessity of
interpreting the Bible according to its literal, or normal, sense. The literal
sense is the grammatical-historical sense, that is, the meaning which the writer
expressed. Interpretation according to the literal sense will take account of
all figures of speech and literary forms found in the text.
WE DENY the legitimacy of any
approach to Scripture that attributes to it meaning which the literal sense does
not support.
Article XVI
WE AFFIRM that legitimate critical
techniques should be used in determining the canonical text and its meaning.
WE DENY the legitimacy of allowing
any method of biblical criticism to question the truth or integrity of the
writer's expressed meaning, or of any other scriptural teaching.
Article XVII
WE AFFIRM the unity, harmony and
consistency of Scripture and declare that it is its own best interpreter.
WE DENY that Scripture may be
interpreted in such a way as to suggest that one passage corrects or militates
against another. We deny that later writers of Scripture misinterpreted earlier
passages of Scripture when quoting from or referring to them.
Article XVIII
WE AFFIRM that the Bible's own
interpretation of itself is always correct, never deviating from, but rather
elucidating, the single meaning of the inspired text. The single meaning of a
prophet's words includes, but is not restricted to, the understanding of those
words by the prophet and necessarily involves the intention of God evidenced in
the fulfillment of those words.
WE DENY that the writers of Scripture
always understood the full implications of their own words.
Article XIX
WE AFFIRM that any preunderstandings
which the interpreter brings to Scripture should be in harmony with scriptural
teaching and subject to correction by it.
WE DENY that Scripture should be
required to fit alien preunderstandings, inconsistent with itself, such as
naturalism, evolutionism, scientism, secular humanism, and relativism.
Article XX
WE AFFIRM that since God is the
author of all truth, all truths, biblical and extrabiblical, are consistent and
cohere, and that the Bible speaks truth when it touches on matters pertaining to
nature, history, or anything else. We further affirm that in some cases
extra-biblical data have value for clarifying what Scripture teaches, and for
prompting correction of faulty interpretations.
WE DENY that extrabiblical views ever
disprove the teaching of Scripture or hold priority over it.
Article XXI
WE AFFIRM the harmony of special with
general revelation and therefore of biblical teaching with the facts of
nature.
WE DENY that any genuine scientific
facts are inconsistent with the true meaning of any passage of Scripture.
Article XXII
WE AFFIRM that Genesis 1-11 is
factual, as is the rest of the book.
WE DENY that the teachings of Genesis
1-11 are mythical and that scientific hypotheses about earth history or the
origin of humanity may be invoked to overthrow what Scripture teaches about
creation.
Article XXIII
WE AFFIRM the clarity of Scripture
and specifically of its message about salvation from sin.
WE DENY that all passages of
Scripture are equally clear or have equal bearing on the message of
redemption.
Article XXIV
WE AFFIRM that a person is not
dependent for understanding of Scripture on the expertise of biblical
scholars.
WE DENY that a person should ignore
the fruits of the technical study of Scripture by biblical scholars.
Article XXV
WE AFFIRM that the only type of
preaching which sufficiently conveys the divine revelation and its proper
application to life is that which faithfully expounds the text of Scripture as
the Word of God.
WE DENY that the preacher has any
message from God apart from the text of Scripture.
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