Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

(Barry) #1
To explain how the same words can be bearers of different speech acts

when addressed to different people in different circumstances, Wolterstorff

uses the following example. A child in despair that Christmas will never

come is comforted by her mother, who says, “Only two more days till

Christmas.” 27 To her husband, however, the message is something like

“Get off your duff and fi nish the Christmas shopping you promised to

do.” 28 The same words, but two different speech acts, one of comfort,

another of exhortation.

It is useful to compare the situation in which Mom knows that Dad

will overhear her from the one in which he does so without her knowing.

In the former case, we can say that she intends both speech acts. In the

second case, she intends only the speech act of comfort, and the word of

exhortation transcends the immediate world of her and her child. I think

it is fair to say that in Wolterstorff ’s double hermeneutic, God is in the

fi rst situation, knowing who subsequent readers will be and what their

situations will be. The meaning of Scripture doesn’t go beyond the inten-

tions of God as author. The human authors of the Bible, by contrast, are

in the second situation, not knowing what subsequent readers will rightly

fi nd in their texts. This means that subsequent readers might rightly hear,

on the basis of the text, a speech act not intended by the human author,

which is what we discover by grammatico-historical exegesis. Of course,

Dad would be misinterpreting Mom if he took her to be saying, “Since

there are two more days before Christmas, you don’t need to worry about

your shopping until late tomorrow evening.” He has no “anything goes”

license.

I think a good example of this double hermeneutic is found in the

apostle Paul on slavery. It would be a real stretch (or worse) to suggest

that when Paul spoke about slavery in Galatians and Philemon, he meant

and his intended readers would have understood that it was their Christian

duty to oppose the institution of slavery and work for its abolition. Yet

later Christians came to believe on the basis of their biblical faith that they

should do just that. Rather than accuse them of an “anything goes” rela-

tivism because they heard God saying to them through Scripture what

none of the biblical writers or their original audience anticipated, we are

more likely to think that on the basis of our biblical faith we should work

to abolish those forms of slavery, economic and sexual, that continue

today. Former President Jimmy Carter’s book A Call to Action: Women,

Religion, Violence, and Power makes just such a claim. 29

26 M. WESTPHAL

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