Interpretation
Introduction
Interpretion
goes a step further from observation and helps you understand
what the passages really mean. You need to recognise that you
are coming to bible study with a set of beliefs and options. We
all need to let God's word speak for itself and make sure that
what we believe is what the bible says.
The
Context
Its
important as we read the Scriptures that we consider each portion
in light of:
the
surrounding verses
the book
the whole Scriptures
Never
take a portion of Scripture out of its context to make it say
what you want it to say!
Scripture
Never Contradicts Scripture
The Bible took over 1600 years to write.
It was written by kings and ordinary people, doctor and
fishermen, princes and shepherds, poets and labourers, rich and
poor, educated and unlearned.
It has 66 books; 39 in the Old Testament and 27 in the
New Testament.
All the writers combine to give us one complete story -
the story of God's purpose with men.
Though they were divided by class, time, country and disposition,
there is wonderful harmony in all that they wrote.
As these servants of God were all different types of people,
so their writings were designed to be relevant to all.
Don't
base Convictions on Obscure Passages
Don't
base major convictions on isolated passages that are difficult
to understand.
Understand
Different Scripture Literary Styles
Psalms
- Poetic
Proverbs - Proverbial
Matthew - Biographical
Acts - Historical
Romans - Teaching
1 Timothy - Epistle or Letter
Revelation - Prophetic