Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.32862/k.11.1.3
Lessons from the Early Church for Today’s Evangelical Christianity
Ervin Budiselić
orcid.org/0000-0003-1743-4203
; Biblijski institut, Zagreb
Abstract
Presuming that within Evangelical Christianity there is a crisis of biblical
interpretation, this article seeks to address the issue, especially since Evangelicals view the existence of the church as closely connected to the proclamation of the Truth. Starting with a position that Evangelical hermeneutics is not born in a vacuum, but is the result of a historical process, the first part of the article introduces the problem of sola and solo scriptura, pointing out some problematic issues that need to be addressed. In the second part, the article discusses patristic hermeneutics, especially: a) the relationship between Scripture and tradition embodied in regula fidei and; b) theological presuppositions which gave birth to allegorical and literal interpretations of Scripture in Alexandria and Antioch. In the last part of the article, based on lessons from the patristic era, certain revisions of the Evangelical practice of
the interpretation of Scripture are suggested. Particularly, Evangelicals may continue to hold the Bible as the single infallible source for Christian doctrine, continue to develop the historical-grammatical method particularly in respect to the issue of the analogy of faith in exegetical process, but also must recognize that the Bible cannot in toto play the role of the rule of faith or the analogy of faith. Something else must also come into play, and that “something” would definitely be the recovery of the patristic period “as a kind of doctrinal canon.”
Keywords
hermeneutics; rule of faith; Evangelical Christianity; patristic era; tradition; sola scriptura; solo scriptura
Hrčak ID:
215593
URI
Publication date:
10.7.2017.
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