Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

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backing. The question is thus put as to how one could legitimately locate

hermeneutic signifi cance at such a point. Can something so unreal that it

exists only as a defi nition form the basis for a “theory of meaning”? My

argument at this point recalls Sextus Empiricus’s suit against the Stoic

claim that expressions “separate from the signifying voice” have existence

in themselves (see Against the Logicians 2.75–76). 32 Hirsch made much

the same point when he wrote that there “is no magic land of meanings

outside human consciousness.” 33

If my argument holds, then it is obvious that any position that includes

textual meaning as a part of the object of hermeneutics has to answer for

an unnecessary multiplication of entities. How does one justify treating

textual meaning as an object of hermeneutics when there is no reason

to regard textual meaning as real? Following on this line of questioning,

some might think that any and all schemes that confi ne themselves to

authorial intention and readerly understanding are justifi ed in their her-

meneutic approaches. But that is not the case. Any approach that views

Meaning as a combination of what the author intended and what the

reader understood faces the same problems, as the notion of combining

authorial intention with anything else does not really identify Meaning

with the author’s intention but rather looks upon it as a semantic dupli-

cate of that intention—a Doppelganger of sorts. Those propounding the

schemes I have in mind do not really believe that the author’s intention

loses its own identity qua intention, to become a new substance (like

H 2 O). Nor do they suppose that the reader’s understanding loses its iden-

tity qua understanding. Rather, they seem to think of the product of the

supposed combination of intention and understanding as a sort of tertium

quid standing over against intention and understanding. Thus we are back

to the problem of multiplying entities unnecessarily. 34 If the hermeneut

objects and says that he or she does think that intention and understand-

ing lose their identity ( qua intention and understanding) in the process

of interpretation—which would be a very odd claim—we then would be

faced with a curious understanding of what intention is.

In short, I do not think it would be a case of “interpretive gerryman-

dering” to privilege those hermeneutical schemes that keep their distance

from unrealities , and I have tried to show that the only schemes that meet

this criterion are those that identify Meaning exclusively with authorial

intention, on the one hand, and those that identify it exclusively with

readerly understanding, on the other hand. 35 Left with those two choices,

the decision, I think, is an easy one. As Félix Martínez Bonati asks, “If we

do not direct ourselves to searching for the original meaning, why should

THERE IS NOTHING OUTSIDE THE INTENTION: ADDRESSING “MEANING”... 75
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