Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

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of the fourth gospel, the second gospel, and 1 Corinthians are relatively

clear and their testimonies establish the boundaries of orthodoxy. In this

sense, Scripture functions somewhat like an elaborate creed.

Creeds fascinate me because of the special requirements of their genre.

They must be clear enough to say important things and to exclude beliefs

considered unacceptable. But they also cannot be too precise. They can-

not defi ne a pinpoint. To do so would require them to exclude too much

(too many people really). A well-written creed allows for a measure of

breadth, but also establishes boundaries. I am suggesting that Scripture,

although written in multiple genres, should be read in a similar way. That

is the point of canonization, which brings a limited number of texts into a

special relationship. The canonical principle does not subvert the impor-

tance of authorial intent when interpreting a particular text, but it adds

that author’s authentic voice to the collection of voices that cumulatively

guide and anchor the Church.

However, it is also important to qualify this general principle in a cou-

ple of ways. First, it is unacceptable to pit one author against another when

more complementary approaches are available. For instance, within liberal

Protestantism, there has been a long tradition of pitting Paul against Jesus

as he is portrayed in the gospels. 35 Jesus is presented as the great critic of

religious hypocrisy, legalism, and the bigotry of the devout against those

who are less scrupulous. Paul, in contrast, is then portrayed as himself

being rigid, devout, and a Christianized version of Jesus’ opponents. To

put it in a nutshell, for liberal Protestants who think along these lines, Paul

becomes an object lesson for contemporary readers of what not to become

rather than an exemplar to imitate.

Of course one interpreter’s “Listen to every New Testament voice!” is

another’s “pitting one author against another.” How are the Scylla of the

fi rst principle and the Charybdis of the second both to be navigated? And

why is the Pentecostal plea to give the author of Luke-Acts his due not

simply pitting Luke against Paul? The answer is simply this: Pentecostals

could properly be accused of this if they did not give both authors their

due. Pentecostals might conceivably assert that when Paul says in Rom.

8:9, “If anyone does not have the Spirit of God, this person does not

belong to him,” he is simply wrong, since Acts 8 and 19 suggest a person

can be a believer in Christ without having received the Spirit. But this

would be unacceptable, since it fails to give Paul his due. And this is not

what the vast majority of Pentecostals claim. Rather, they identify two

experiences of the Spirit: the fi rst occurring at conversion when the Spirit

96 G.W. MENZIES

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