Constructive Pneumatological Hermeneutics in Pentecostal Christianity

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AFTERWORD: ON THE FUTURE OF PENTECOSTAL HERMENEUTICS 321

not engage this question in a substantive manner. Yet, if the focus is to

articulate a “pneumatic” approach, it would have been helpful to address

the Spirit in the interpretive process. 33 Pentecostal and charismatic tradi-

tions which give shape to Pentecostal and charismatic interpreters should

be concerned about the role of the Spirit in the interpretive process as well

as utilizing proper methodologies in the interpretation of Scripture and

reality. They also should be concerned with their own social location and

the communities that shape them as interpreters.

Methodology is important; therefore, methodologies must be employed

that suit the subject of investigation. Methods are always being utilized by

someone, and methods, even though used according to governing rules

and scientifi c procedures, are not able in and of themselves to resolve all

matters. Surely, the method should have some sense of correctness and

be understood by others so as to repeat the experiment and validate the

interpretation of the data. But should we compartmentalize the scientifi c

methodology say from religious or faith oriented quests? Should we inter-

pret the so-called “book of nature” differently than the so-called “book of

Scripture”? No, because, at a deeper level, the method will be grounded

in a theological hermeneutic and thus a pentecostal–charismatic world-

view will make sense of the methodology and interpretation. Pentecostals

and charismatics would want to ground everything back into their under-

standing of the Gospel, and interpret reality through a theological herme-

neutic relationally grounded in a particular traditioned community. And

yes, because methods do matter, in the sense that written texts require

us to interpret them from a literary perspective, utilizing literary meth-

ods and biology requires the use of empirical methods. Particular meth-

odologies appropriate to the fi eld of study will ultimately make sense in

the worldview of the interpreter who has been shaped by her/his theo-

logical community(s). Therefore, the triadic relationship of community,

Scripture, and Spirit is more conducive to developing a thorough going

theological hermeneutic then a particular interpretive methodology.

For Pentecostals, hermeneutics has primarily been concerned with the

interpretation of Scripture. The scriptures will always hold an honored and

primary place in Pentecostal Christianity. However, we cannot escape

that the understanding of Scripture is always a constructed theologically

interpreted understanding of a body of literature we call the Holy Bible.

Pentecostals must be challenged to consider how our theological herme-

neutic contributes to other disciplines and interpretive methods. We should

interrogate methods as vigorously as we do material reality and our theo-
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