Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

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obeys the essential nature of speaking: it says.” 16 This speculative element

obtains both in language where hermeneutic experience happens, and as

language acting upon the hermeneutic agent.

Language is not an object “but instead comprehends everything that

can be an object” ( TM , 404). For Gadamer this means “all that is and can

be for us is language.” 17 One accesses the world of things in, through,

and by language. Words manifest the being of the things about which

they speak. 18 Language, then, is a medium but not a mere conduit; it

is the space and time in and during which Being happens. To this end,

language performs an “advance work” ( TM , 430–431). 19 Present speech

is grounded in prior speech that is always already dependent upon and is

an outgrowth of speech—and all this happens in language, or is an event

of language as the medium of one’s being-in-the-world. Thus, human

being-in-the-world is “primordially linguistic” ( TM , 443). World presents

itself in language; world is not mediated by language as though coming

from somewhere outside language and leading toward somewhere else

outside language ( TM , 452). Rather, world presents itself , is made present

in language; language is the medium and also the site where world hap-

pens. Language provides a clearing where world comes to expression in

language. World, then, is not objectifi ed in language but has its being and

existence as world in language. “Whoever has language ‘has’ the world”

( TM , 453).

That which comes through language in tradition announces itself

personally ( TM , 358). 20 “Whatever says something to us is like a person

who says something ... It is this way with all speech. Not only does it say

something, but someone says something to someone else.” 21 Hermeneutic

encounters are possible “only because the word that has come down to

us as tradition and to which we are to listen really encounters us and does

so as if it addressed us and is concerned with us” ( TM , 461). In this way,

the interpreter becomes the interpreted; the one who questions tradition

is now questioned by it. Wright highlights the personal character of this

interplay: “Language, as conversation, is the medium ( Mitte ) that joins

the I to the Thou and the Thou to the I as a we.” 22 Tradition addresses

one who lives within it as a Thou who speaks and makes a claim upon the

I who listens.

Gadamer’s perspective yields the following ontological fruit: fi rst, every

human experience is dependent upon as happening within language–

one cannot get around, behind, before, or beyond language. Second,

experiences in language are not under the control of those who endure

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