History, Story, And Testimony  Locating Truth In A Pentecostal Hermeneutic

History, Story, And Testimony Locating Truth In A Pentecostal Hermeneutic

Locating

History, Story,

and

Testimony:

Truth in a Pentecostal Hermeneutic

Scott A. Ellington

Introduction

Commitment to the Bible as the

inspired

Word of God is axiomatic in Pentecostal hermeneutics. ‘ And because the Bible is understood to be God’s Word to God’s

people,

it has an absolute and foundational

authority against which all other truth-claims about life in general and the Christian faith in particular

are measured. Pentecostals

have, however,

never been content merely

to affirm the “truthfulness” of biblical accounts of God and God’s faith

community,

but have maintained from the earliest

days

of the move- ment that encounter with God within the faith

community

in ways similar to those recorded in the

Bible,

is both

possible

and desirable for

every Christian. That is, the truth-claims made

by

the Bible are not

only concep- tual but also

experiential

in nature. Pentecostals have

always placed

a par- ticular

emphasis

on the direct

experiencing

of God and on application when practicing

biblical

interpretation.

The basic claim that God can be

experienced today

as in the

pages

of the Bible

has, however,

become

problematic

to

say

the least. The world- view(s)

of the biblical writers is so

fundamentally

different from our own that

any pretense

of

simply uncritically adopting

their worldview into our own modem

setting

or moving freely and easily between the two is an exer- cise in self-deception. Truth-claims

simply

do not transfer from a pre-scien- tific to a scientific to a postmodern worldview without substantial

interpre- tation. Thus, the task of hermeneutics has become of paramount

importance for Pentecostals. Because Pentecostals claim an

experience

of God and a model of truth that is less at home in a modem and still

heavily

rationalist world than that claimed

by many

other Christians, the task of bridging the gap

between the ages and worldviews is even more difficult.

The

purpose

of this

present study

is to consider some different under- standings

of biblical

truth, evaluating

their

adequacies

and

shortcomings when

applied

to a Pentecostal

setting

in hermeneutics.

Should,

for instance,

1 1 share with a number of my colleagues a sense of reservation in speaking of a distinctive and

different Pentecostal hermeneutic. I will, therefore, use the term in this paper to refer

qualitatively

to points of emphasis and special concern that are common in the practice of hermeneutics only

among Pentecostals and not to setting up a separate enterprise that can in every be

point clearly distinguished from the hermeneutical practices of other Christian traditions.

245

1

the Bible be understood to be a perfectly accurate

history,

so that

questions of inspiration and authority become

inseparably

tied to our ability to defend and demonstrate that

historicity?

Or do the fundamental truth-claims of the Bible reside in the

story-world

that the text

presents,

so that we are invited to enter into and believe the

story

without reference to “what

really hap- pened” ?

That

is, is the truth-claim of the Bible on our lives unconnected

to historical reference?2 Is the Bible a testimony to truth that cannot be verified through

historical and scientific method and that must, therefore, be evalu- ated and

accepted

or rejected on its internal merit alone? Or does the truth- fulness of that

testimony depend

in any

way

on “what

happened”

and,

if it does, how

is that different from a claim of historical

accuracy? Finally,

how can the “truthfulness” of the truth-claims of Scripture best be evaluated in a way

that is in harmony with Pentecostal

approaches

to and

understandings of Scripture? In short, where does and where should Pentecostal hermeneu- tics locate biblical truth? The thesis that this present study will pursue is that, for Pentecostals, the truth-claims of the Bible are best understood as testi- monies

that,

while interested in “what

really happened,”

are more concerned with how God interacts with

people. Furthermore,

I intend to draw a model for the offering and evaluating of testimony from the prayers of Israel found in the Psalms. I propose that a prominent feature of the book of Psalms is a process

of

testing

in which the received

testimony

about God’s words and acts are

repeatedly

tested

against

the lived

experiences

of the

community that wrote and prayed the Psalms. But first, I will examine a number of dif- ferent

ways

in which Christians have located truth within the

Scriptures.

The Problem

of Equating

Truth with

History

The

early

distrust on the

part

of

many

Pentecostals toward education generally

and a critical

approach

to the Bible in particular meant that initial- ly the truth-claims

of the Bible were

simply

asserted without

being

critical- ly examined.

It was

naively

assumed that

meaning

was self-evident. This approach, however,

has

gradually given way

to

approaches

more at home with the modem, rationalist worldview.3

Initially

this

foray

into an histori- cal-critical

approach

to

Scripture sought

out aid and

companionship

from those

groups

of conservative Christians who shared with Pentecostals the a

2 The parable form, for instance, makes its claim on and calls for a response from the reader, regardless

of whether it refers to 4n historical happening or a literary invention.

3

Karkkainen offers an excellent of this movement. Veli-Matti Karkkainen, “Pentecostal Hermeneutics in the summary

Making: On the Way From Fundamentalism to Postmodernism,” Jourrtal of the European Pentecostal Theological Association 18 ( 1998), 76- 115.

246

2

priori assumption

that the Bible is the inspired

and, therefore, perfect Word of God. The choice of Pentecostals to enter into the modem biblical discus- sion

through

the doorway of conservative

Evangelicalism

has

not, however, always

been harmonious and trouble free.

Mark McLean has

pointed

out the fundamental conflict of views that separates

Pentecostal

approaches

to Scripture from those

typical

of conser- vative

Evangelicalism:

.

,

On the conservative side we have a set of exegetical and hermeneutical principles

which, when vigorously followed, a dif- ferent mode of God’s presence in and

posit fundamentally

among the faithful during the formative

period of the canon and today… From the other side of the comes

evangelical spectrum

the seductive call of a revived neo-ortho- doxy…Essentially,. Gilkey publically admitted to himself and his col- in the Biblical

leagues Theology movement, that ed the “liberal insistence on the

causal continuum of having already accept- space-time experi- ence,” the use of such biblical language as “God said,” and “God acted” no longer had any real semantic value because the subject of such es had no referent in

phras-

reality.4

Early

Pentecostal

scholarship

has either followed the more conservative track of dispensationalism or the more liberal

path

of rationalism. Both are responses

to the same basic difficulties

presented by a rationalist worldview, in particular the problematic of a God who acts and

speaks

in human histo- ry and who may

be directly experienced

today.

Yet, the direct

experiencing

of God, both

internally through experiences of encounter and

externally through

the manifestation of God’s miraculous speech

and action, is foundational to a Pentecostal

understanding

of the knowledge

of God. As McLean

puts

it:

We as Pentecostals assert that we have experienced the divine person directly acting in our lives, not only by internal renewal, but external

. experiences

such as healings, not merely “religiously sensitive reflec- tions,” but an infilling of the Holy Spirit.5 5

…,

McLean maintains

correctly

that those differences of approach which

sepa- rate Pentecostals from

Evangelicals

have their basis in “an

ontologically

dif- ferent mode of God’s

presence

and

activity

in biblical times as opposed to

4 Mark D. McLean, “Toward a Pentecostal Hermeneutics,” Pneuma: The Journal

Pentecostal Theology 6:2

of the Society for ( 1984), 39.

5 Ibid., 45.

247

3

the here and now.”6

The difference in epistemological approaches to God has its basis in the fact that Fundamentalism in

particular

and conservative

Evangelicalism more

generally

are reactions to nineteenth-century liberalism and have elect- ed to operate within the worldview to which

they

are reacting. Conservative Christian

scholarship generally

has

adopted

the basic

presuppositions

of a scientific worldview and has assumed

that,

because truth about God is his- torical in nature, it must be possible to establish or at least to defend the full historicity

of Scripture. Put another

way, if God has chosen to reveal eternal truth in history, the historical

integrity

of the narrative information contained in Scripture becomes

paramount.7

The

methodology

of historiography places severe restrictions,

however, on biblical

interpretations.

Modem

historiography

is

only possible

if an unbroken chain of cause-and-effect can be established and maintained. Thus such

things

as reports of the miraculous and direct interventions of God in human

history,

while

they may

be affirmed as “true”

by

biblical

scholars, must be excluded from

any attempt

to establish biblical truth

through

exter- nal, historical

means.

The result

among many Evangelical

scholars has

been, as Langdon Gilkey correctly perceived, that,

As modern men perusing the Scriptures, we have rejected as invalid all the innumerable cases of God’s acting and speaking; but as neo-orthodox men looking for a word from the Bible, we have induced from all these cases the theological generalization that God is he who acts and This

speaks.

general truth about God we then assert while denying all the partic- ular cases on the basis of which the generalization was first made.8

The

pursuit

of

scholarship

and the affirmation of

personal

faith result for some in a kind of

linguistic schizophrenia

in which conservative scholars “continue to use the biblical and orthodox

theological language

of divine activity

and

speech,

but

they

have

dispensed

with the wonders and voices that gave univocal

meaning,

and thus content, to the theological words ‘God

6 Ibid., 47. See also Karkkainen, “Pentecostal Hermeneutics in the Making,” 76-115. 7 As part of the move into a postmodem world, the idea that

be and

any history-producing enterprise, modem or otherwise, is or even intends to objective flawlessly accurate has been all but abandoned. Two excellent studies on this as it on the of the Old Testament are Leo G. Perdue, The

topic impacts study

Collapse of History: Reconstructing Old Testament Theology (Minneapolis:

Fortress Press, 1994) and, on a much more provocative note, Philip R. Davies, 8 Langdon B. Gilkey, “Cosmology, Ontology and the Travail of Biblical Language,” Journal of Religion

41 (L961), 203.

248

4

acts’ and ‘God

speaks.”‘9

Pentecostal scholars have in

many

cases been trained in conservative Evangelical institutions, working

within a

methodology

that is, in some ways, fundamentally

at odds with a Pentecostal worldview and understand- ing of Scripture.

Pentecostals have been educated in settings that emphasize a rationalistic worldview and that often locate biblical truth in questions of historicity.

Timothy Cargal

has

argued

that this alliance of Pentecostal and Evangelical scholarship, together

with a strong grass-roots anti-intellectual- ism and a general suspicion of

higher

education

among many

Pentecostal pastors

and

lay people,

has led to “a

growing divergence

in the

practice

of biblical

interpretation

between Pentecostals

primarily working

in the

parish and those

primarily working

within the academy.”10 Veli-Matti Karkkainen has

argued

that the result of this

dichotomy

has been a moving

away

from an emphasis on the intent of the biblical writers:

Pentecostals within the academy have tended to align themselves with

in their move toward adopting the methods of historical criticism while maintaining a commitment to the reliability of the bibli- Evangelicals

cal narrative. As a result, Pentecostal biblical scholars have emphasized their focus on the intent of the

the historical contexts of biblical narratives and reduced increasingly

‘inspired’ authors. These and other devel- opments have, of course, meant either denying or downplaying the ear- lier emphasis on the immediacy of the text, its multiple meanings and relevance ‘here and now’. This has led to a growing divergence in the practice

of biblical interpretation between Pentecostals in the parish and in the academy, I I

Because the

divergence

between Pentecostals and other conservative Christians is often an

epistemological one, involving

a difference in the ways

in which we know and receive revelation from God, Pentecostals often fail to

adequately appreciate

how their

adopted methodologies directly oppose

or hinder the results of their hermeneutics and the

very

reasons for entering

into the hermeneutical

process

in the first

place, namely,

to know God

,

relationally. 12

2

9 Ibid., 199.

10 Timothy B.

the Fundamental-Modernist Controversy: Pentecostals and

Hermeneutics in a Cargal. Postmodern “Beyond Age,” Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal

Studies 15:2 ( 1993), 170.

11 Karkkainen, “Pentecostal Hermeneutics,” 81-82.

12 For a discussion of the ways in which the adoption of an Evangelical hermeneutic has affect-

ed many Pentecostals’ understanding of the nature and authority of Scripture, see Scott

249

.

5

The

problem

with

locating

truth in history in doing biblical hermeneu- tics is two fold. First, time, distance, and a scarcity of corroborating source materials outside of the Bible have made confirmation and/or reconstruction of the elements of biblical

history

difficult

and, at times,

impossible.

Second, and more

fundamentally, any

direct

participation by

God in the biblical accounts falls outside of the

range

of modem historical

methodology.

God’s speaking, acting,

and revealing are not so much unscientific as they are asci- entific,

that is, such events are

hardly

accessible to examination

using

con- ventional historical methods. So, for example, while it might be possible to demonstrate that the walls of Jericho fell at approximately the time

period assigned

to the Exodus,13 it is not possible to establish that God

was,

in fact, the causative

agent

who knocked down the walls.

Finally,

the historical claims to the

supernatural

in Scripture rest on the testimony

of witnesses.

By definition such events are improbable,

so that the question

becomes whether the

weight

of not-disinterested

eyewitness

testi- mony

can ever be

sufficiently strong

to offset the

weight

of

probability. When it is considered that

many

of the

miracles, theophanies, and revela- tions of God are attested to only by highly biased witnesses, without exter- nal

corroborating evidence,

either

archaeological

or archival, modem his- torical method is obliged to classify such claims as at best unprovable and at worst false

The

inaccessibility

of much of the biblical record to historical and sci- entific examination has led some scholars to fight an increasingly elaborate and,

I believe, unsuccessful

rear-guard

action in which the

shortcomings

of the historical method are shorn

up in an effort to “make all the pieces

fit.” 15 Another

approach

has been to hold on to the rationalist worldview, still iden-

A. Ellington, “Pentecostalism and the Authority of Scripture,” Journal of Pentecostal Theology 9 ( 1996), 16-38.

13 Although archaeological evidence is, at best, divided on this point. See, e.g., Kathleen M. Kenyon, Digging Up

Jericho (New York: Frederick A Praeger, 1957).

14 For a discussion of the limits of testimony in addressing questions of probability see George W. Ramsey, The Quesi for the Historical Israel: Reconstructing Israel’s Early History (London: SCM Press, 1981), 107-115.

15 So, for example, LaSor et al. adopt E. R. Thiele’s

and highly speculative explana- tion that attempts to harmonize the dates of the Northern and Southern complex Kingdom monarchies as

in the books of Kings and Chronicles. William S. LaSor, David A. Hubbard, and Frederic W. Bush, Old Testament Survey: The Message, Form, and

they appear

MI: Wm. B.

Background of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1991 ), 292-297. My point is not that Thiele is, of necessity, wrong, but that he is operating from within a worldview and using a method- ology

that force him into an increasingly speculative defense that is based on a notion of truth- as-history

that is proving increasingly inadequate.

250

6

tifying

truth with

history,

while

abandoning attempts

to establish that truth. So, for example,

French

Arrington

writes that:

While biblical infallibility is an assumption on which Pentecostals build their hermeneutic, they recognize that they have neither the ability nor the responsibility to demonstrate this infallibility. Because the Bible is inspired by

an infallible God, it is infallible. No further demonstration of its infallibility is either necessary or possible.16

Such an

approach correctly recognizes

the limitations of historical method in addressing truth questions in Scripture, and Arrington goes on to note that Pentecostals have

adopted

an

epistemologically

different

approach. “Pentecostals,” says Arrington,

“see

knowledge

not as a cognitive recogni- tion of a set of precepts but as a relationship with the One who has estab- lished the precepts

by which we live.” ‘ Thus,

the epistemological

approach of rationalism, while a valuable foundation for Pentecostal

hermeneutics,

is finally limited by

its

methodology. Truth-as-history

does not

adequately articulate a Pentecostal

understanding

of biblical truth.

Stepping

into a Postmodern World

Cargal

has

argued persuasively

that closer attention should be

paid

to emerging postmodern approaches

to

Scripture

because

postmodernism rejects

the limitation of truth to that which is historically true. From the post- modern

perspective,

truth is located in the

functioning

of the text.1

Cargal does not advocate an

abandoning

of the

gains

of the historical-critical approach

to the

text,

but rather asserts that truth is not located

exclusively (or even primarily?)

in historical truth. The

application

of the historical-crit- ical method to the pages of Scripture has led many scholars to conclude that much of what is recorded therein is not a flawless,

objective,

detached account of “what

actually happened,” any

more than

any

modem historical undertaking

is interested in

simply reporting

“what

happened.” “Postmodernism,” says Cargal, “distinguishes

itself from modernism at the

16 French L.

Arrington, “Hermeneutics, Historical Perspectives on Pentecostal and Charismatic,” in Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements, eds. Stanley M. Burgess

and Gary B. McGee (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1988), 382.

17 Ibid.

18 Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamental-Modernist Controversy,” 185. See also Kenneth J. Archer, “Pentecostal Babbling: The Narrative Hermeneutic of the

to the 27th Annual Conference of the

Marginalized” (paper present

Society for Pentecostal Theology, 1997).

251

7

most fundamental level

by its critique

and rejection of the notion that

‘only what is historical and

objectively

true is meaningful’; meaning is not limted by positivistic

constraints.” 19 Thus, for

Cargal,

“it is still

possible

to assert that there is truth and

meaning

within

scriptural

texts which one

may

have to concede are not

‘historically

true’

according

to the canons of critical his- toriography.”20

He does

not, however, explain

the

relationship

between his- torical truth and postmodem

truth(s)

in his brief article.

While

Cargal

is

quick

to indicate the

points

of contact between Pentecostal and

postmodem approaches

to

Scripture,

he does not address another more basic

assumption

of

postmodemity, namely,

the

rejection

of any privileged place granted

to metanarratives that would set limits on pos- sible

interpretations

of the text and that

might

exclude some

interpretations as false

readings.

To

quote Jean-Frangois Lyotard’s

oft-cited

statement, “Simplifying

in the

extreme,

I define

postmodern

as

incredulity

toward metanarratives.”21 And

yet,

Pentecostals have maintained a view of bibli- cal

inspiration

that insists on a privileged place for the biblical account of reality.

Nor has

Cargal explored

a

primary exegetical approach

of

postmod- ernism, namely, deconstruction,

which

begins

from the stance of skepticism toward claims made within the text by the author,

seeing

such claims as ide- . ologically driven

and, therefore,

as coercive.

So,

in addressing the

question “How does truth function in the text?”, the voice of the author of that text is accounted no privileged place in answering that

question

and indeed his or her

understanding may

be

adjudged “guilty

unless and until

proven

inno- cent.”

Robert Menzies has

critiqued Cargal

as

advocating

a

loosing

of “the meaning

of a text from its historical

moorings.”

It is far from clear, howev- er, that

this is what

Cargal

has advocated. While

acknowledging

the neces- sity

of

moving away

from a “history-as-truth”

epistemology,

Menzies cari- catures

postmodernity

as completely ahistorical and advocates a repair and refitting

of the Evangelical hermeneutic rather than its abandonment.” But if Evangelicalism

remains committed to a truth-as-history

epistemology

and postmodemity

advocates the abandonment of any authority that

changes

or

19 Ibid., 171.

20 Ibid., 178.

21 Jean-Franqois Lyotard, The Postmodem Condition: A

Report

on

Knowledge,

trans. Geoff Bennington

and Brian Massumi (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984), xxiv. 22

Robert P. Menzies, “Jumping Off the Postmodem Bandwagon,” Pneuma: The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Theology 16:1 ( 1994), 1 I S-120.

252

8

even

seriously challenges

the local and immediate

interpretation, Pentecostals seem to be forced into a choice between a commitment to truth- as-history

and an abandonment of the notion of a universally authoritative metanarrative.

The

question,

then, is to what extent Pentecostalism can articulate its understanding

of Scripture from a worldview and

using exegetical

methods so at odds with its own? Given their substantial differences, it is better to conclude with Karkkainen that “between

Postmodernism(s)

and Pentecostalism there is such a wide

gap in terms of presuppositions

that one is wise not to exaggerate apparent similarities.”23

Scripture

as Story

A promising middle

ground

has been

proposed by the

narrative theolo- gy that treats Scripture

as story, that invites the reader into a story-world and that,

from within the worldview of that

story-world,

makes claims

upon

the reader’s

perception

of reality. David Gunn has defined narrative criticism as:

the existing text (in its “tinal form”) in terms of its own Interpreting

primarily

the text by attempting to reconstruct its sources and editorial

story world, seen as replete with meaning, rather than understand- its

ing history,

original setting and audience, and its author’s or editor’s intention in writing. 24

Thus,

narrative criticism

lays

aside

completely

the

question

of

history

and focuses on truth-claims of the text that are

only

visible

(and meaningful?) from within the world of the

story.

In its extreme form, narrative criticism

completely

disconnects the meaning

of the text from

questions

of

history.

Dale Patrick, for

example, understands God to be simply a literary device of the biblical writers:

.

The authors of Scripture employed artistic means to represent a human world in which God is an active participant. It is a sign of their success that the reader is able to enter this world imaginatively to such an extent that it seems utterly natural. Only when we step out of that world and

to question the possibility of miracles and other divine interven- tions does the “constructedness” of the biblical world become apparent. begin

If we can surmount our critical skepticism and arrive at a “post-critical naivete,” we can enter this world again but in full awareness that it is an

23

1

Karkkainen. “Pentecostal Hermeneutics,” 97.

24

David M. Gunn, “Narrative Criticism,” in To Each Its Own Meaning: All Introduction to

Biblical Criticisms and Their Applications, ed. Steven L. McKenzie and Stephen R. Haynes

(Louisville, KY: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1993).

253

9

artistic and intellectual achievement.25

The selection of God as the central character in a biblical narrative and the arrangement

of events of that narrative

seem,

for Patrick,

essentially

arbi- trary.

A more moderate

approach

is offered

by George Stroup,

who

argues that the biblical narrative “is

‘history’

in that it attempts to interpret the past and to explain what is done in the present and

expected

in the future in light of the claims made about the

past.”26 Stroup

claims that the

historicity

of biblical narrative is located not in the

accuracy

of its accounts of what

hap- pened,

but in the faithfulness with which it provides the

believing

commu- nity

with its sense of identity.

Christian narrative is unabashedly historical. It makes claims about the

and its judgments about the present (moral, political, and social) and hopes for the future are finally dependent on this

past,

of those events in the

past.

Christian narrative is “historical” interpretation for two rea- sons. On the one hand, its claims about reality are based on and to certain events in the communal of Israel and the

appeal his-

of of Nazareth.

history

Jesus But

personal tory secondly, Christian narrative is not recit- ed in order to amuse or entertain. There is an explicit kerygmatic under- tow to Christian narrative. It is told for a reason, to make a which of course is that the and salvation of

point,

redemption personal and communal histories is to be found in this Christian

story. Persons and communities cannot be redeemed without their histories, for their identity is insepara- ble from them.27

.

Christian communities do not so much recite histories as selectively remem- ber. That is, such communities are not

merely

interested in what

happened, but in the

ways

in which what is remembered creates,

impacts on, shapes, and recreates

community identity.

“It would not do to

suggest

that a com- munity

is constituted

merely by

a common

past.

It is more accurate to say that a community is constituted

by a common memory

in which the

past

is

25 pale Patrick, The Rendering of God in the Old Testament (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1981 ), 63.

26 George W. Stroup, The Promise of Narrative Theology: Recovering the Gospel in the Church (Atlanta: John Knox Press, 198I ), 92. Stroup’s work provides an excellent introduction into the epistemological perspective and, to a lesser extent, the methodology of the narrative

to

27

approach Scripture.

Ibid., 94-95.

254

10

remembered and

interpreted.”28

What, though,

is the

relationship

between what is remembered and “what

really happened”? Surely

the way in which a story is understood will affect its interpretation and

subsequently

its appropriation. As Menzies

puts it,

“It mattered to Paul whether the resurrection

actually happened ( Cor. 15:12-19).

How can it be different for us?”29 Or to place the affirmation in a more localized context for a Pentecostal, when someone, in response to his or her

reading

of the biblical

narratives, stands

up to lay

hands on and

pray for the

sick,

it matters whether or not stories of Jesus

healing

the sick “real- ly happened.”

The narrative

approach is, I would argue,

a fruitful one that would reward further

exploration. Nevertheless,

it remains for Pentecostal scholars to articulate more

carefully

the

relationship

between the truth- claims of the

story

and “what

really happened.”

It is my contention that the biblical writers neither understood nor were they

interested in writing history in the modern sense of that term. Neither, however, were they simply about writing creative stories without any

refer- ence to “real events.” Where, then, is truth to be located in the biblical nar- rative, and how is it to be accessed and

appropriated

for Pentecostals?

Testimony

as a Model for

Appropriating

Biblical Truth

The

principal

hermeneutical

suggestion

I wish to make in this discus- sion is that one model for

locating

truth is through the

recalling

of

memory and the

offering

of testimony. Such a model, which is presented in the Old Testament,

is useful for

addressing

the

question,

“Where do Pentecostals locate truth in their

understanding

and

interpretation

of

Scripture?”

I will propose building

on a model of truth-as-testimony articulated most

clearly by

Walter

Brueggemann

in his

recently published

Old Testament

theology.

2B Ibid., 135. Van A. Harvey has outlined a somewhat similar process of selective remember creteness and a wider meaning. The more fundamental the meaning, the more the event ing

and identity formation in his definition of myth: A paradigmatic event is one that fuses con- becomes capable of being transformed into where “myth” does not mean a false story but a

highly

selective

story

that is used to structure and myth,

convey the basic self-understanding of a or a

person community. A pattern is abstracted from the event and becomes the formalized ble that is used to

para-

The Morality

interpret larger tracts of

and

Historical

history

and Christian

experience. The Historia/1 and the Believer:

of (London: SCM Press,

257. The

Knowledge Belief

1966), distinction, it seems to me, lies in the specificity of that which is remembered as it relates to application and response. The claim of the for instance, rests on certain foundational events such as the crucifixion and resurrection gospel, and must be appropriated in indi- vidual and very

29

specific ways.

Menzies, “Jumping Off,” I17. Walter Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament: Testimony, Disptste, Advocacy (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997), 1 l8. Ibid., 206.

255

11

Brueggemann

has suggested that the central truth-claims of Israel in the Old Testament is not a declaration of “historical

facts,” but is offered as a testi- mony by witnesses. For Brueggemann,

biblical truth is located not in the his- torical events that

may or may

not lie behind the offered

testimony,

but in the testimony itself.

Note well that in focusing on we tend to bracket out all of We are not

speech, questions

historicity. asking, “What happened?” but “What was said?” To

inquire into the historicity of the text is a but it does

I to the work of Old Testament legitimate enterprise, not,

In like

suggest, belong theology.

manner, we bracket out all questions of ontology; which ask about the “really real.,,30

For

Brueggemann,

we have access

only

to the

testimony

itself in

making theological

constructions from the Old Testament

Scriptures

and

applying them to our own contexts and situations.

What happened, so our “verdict” is, is what these witnesses said

In

hap-

complementary fashion, this means that

tion does not

pened.

behind this witness with

theological interpreta- of

wonder-

“what is real.” What is go

questions ontology,

real, so our “verdict” is, is what these wit- nesses say is real. Nothing more historical or ontological is available. But ing

this mode of “knowing” finds such a claim to be adequate.31 1

_

Accordingly,

“the

authority

of the witness is grounded in nothing more and nothing

less than the

willingness

of the text

community

to credit,

believe, trust,

and take

seriously

this testimony.”32 This

crediting process goes

on in a dialectic, set up and followed within the Old Testament, between the ortho- dox testimonies of who God is and how God

characteristically

acts and the counter-testimonies that

question

that orthodox

picture

of God.

The

primary

mode of appropriation of that truth

by the community

that reads the

Scripture

is not an ascension to the historical truthfulness of the information contained in the biblical narratives, but in the text’s

“capacity

to generate,

evoke, and articulate alternative

images

of

reality, images

that counter what

hegemonic power

and

knowledge

have declared to be

impos-

30 Ibid.

31 Ibid., 68.

32 For a critique of Brueggemann’s assertion that “all we have is the testimony”, see Scott A. Ellington, Reality,

Remembrance, and Response: The Presence and Absence of God in the Psalms of Lament (Ph. D. diss., University of Sheffield, 1999), 174-178.

256

12

sible.”33

Through

the biblical

text, God creates

in our imaginations an alter- native

image

of reality, a new vision of how the world could be.

While

Brueggemann

maintains that it is impossible to “get behind” the testimony

of the biblical witness to what

“really happened,”

he does allow for a circumstance in which that

testimony

can be evaluated

by

external means

through experience.

.

In its deepest vexation, then, Israel makes a distinction between Yahweh and the reality of justice. While we might expect that Yahweh is ultimate and justice penultimate, in some of Israel’s most

matters are inverted. Justice is held as

desperate utterances,

up ultimate, and Yahweh as an agent

of justice is critiqued for failure of justice.34

.

This

“reality

of justice” is a concept mentioned in the

closing pages

of his theological study

that

Brueggemann

does not

go

on to develop, but is one that, I propose,

is a

primary

model for

locating

and

appropriating

biblical truth in the Old Testament.

I have

argued

in my doctoral thesis35 that in the context of the

psalms of lament, Israel was engaged in a process of testing and reappropriating the memories of the nation, thus

validating

and

adding

to a body of narratives that eventually came to be canonized as Scripture. It is my suggestion in this paper

that a

process

of

testing

the stories of the text

against

lived

experi- enced is essential to a Pentecostal ‘

community’s appropriation

of the truth- claims of Scripture.

A Model

of Scripture Appropriation

and a Pentecostal Hermeneutic

Joseph Byrd

has

argued

for an appropriational model of Scripture inter- pretation.

He points out

that,

“while most Pentecostals understand the Bible as

historically literal,

their

preaching generally

demonstrates that

they believe the biblical narratives have a symbolic nature as well as a historical nature.”36

Appealing

to Paul Ricoeur’s hermeneutical model,

Byrd

advo- cates the need for the text to be re-experienced

by the contemporary

hearers in order to

reappropriate

its

meaning. According

to

Byrd,

“The structural analysis

includes

expressing

the

interpreter’s experience

with the referents

33 Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament, 68.

34 Ibid., 740.

35 gllington, “Reality, Remembrance, and Response.”

36 Joseph Byrd, “Paul Ricoeur’s Hermeneutical Theory and Pentecostal Proclamation,” Pentecostal Theology 15:2 ( 1993). 210.

257

13

of the

symbols

in the text and the reflection on that

expression.”37 Appropriation

is only

possible

when an interpretation of the text’s

meaning is evaluated in light of new

experience

so that the interpreter’s

“wager”

as to the

meaning

of the text can be evaluated and confirmed

(or negated).

Chris Thomas has

suggested

a hermeneutical

approach

in which the early

church’s use of

Scripture

becomes a

guide.

In his article

“Women, Pentecostals and the Bible: An

Experiment

in Pentecostal

Hermeneutics,” Thomas uses as a model for

Spirit-guided

hermeneutics the Jerusalem Council of Acts 15. Discussion of a new

question

in the church,

namely,

the stipulations

to be

placed

on converted Gentiles,

begins

first of all with a focus on God’s actions and miracles in the church, then moves to a highly selective

interpretation

of an Old Testament text

(Amos 9:11-12),

while ignoring many

alternative texts that would seem to call for the exclusion of the Gentiles, and finishes with the authoritative decision of the church lead- ership.38

Thomas notes that the council showed a

preference

for the Septuagint’s rendering

of the text over that found in Hebrew versions and did not seem

overly

concerned with the original context and intent of Amos in delivering his prophecy or with a balanced

theological

examination of Old Testament

teachings

on Gentile

participation

in God’s

blessings. Thus, expe- riences of God’s

acting

in the

present

situation

dramatically

influenced the practice

of biblical hermeneutics. Thomas’s

suggested

model

challenges

a number of the bedrock

assumptions

of Evangelical

hermeneutics,

such as a careful consideration of the author’s context and intent, as well as a balanced consideration of the whole of the biblical

teaching

on a given

subject.

John

Goldingay points

out that one of the features of the scriptural story is that it is told more than once and in more than one context. “The implica- tion is that we need to understand the conversation between

story

and con- text in Scripture so as to see how story is being related to context there, and how a new context has the

capacity

to

bring

out new

significance

in events.”39

Retelling

Israel’s

story, argues Goldingay,

is

functionally

moti- vated.

In general, the biblical story is designed to enable us to discover who we are. We do that by telling our own story, but by telling it in the context

37 Ibid.

38 John Christopher Thomas, “Women, Pentecostals and the Bible: An Experiment in Pentecostal Hermeneutics,” Journal of Pentecostal Theology 5 ( 1994), 41-56.

39 John Goldingay, “Biblical Story and the Way it Shapes Our Story,” Journal for

the European

Pentecostal Theological Association 17 ( 1997). 7.

258

14

of the Bible story. We find ourselves by setting ourselves in that other story…

In fact, we all tell our individual stories in the light of a world- view, a “grand narrative.”40

The truth-claims carried

by the biblical stories are, I want to suggest,

select- ed, shaped,

and presented in such a way as to maximize the individual’s abil- ity to appropriate

those stories into their own lives.

My

own

proposal

is that, in the context of the

psalms

of

lament,

the truth-claims of Israel’s central

story

are first tested

against experiences

of God’s

silence, hiddenness,

and abandonment and are

reappropriated

and owned afresh

by

the

praying community only

after a fresh

experience

of God allows those

praying

to affirm that “He has answered us!” I suggest a three-part

movement.

First,

the one praying offers a candid

complaint

result- ing from a new and unexpected experience

of God’s failure to act as expect- ed, according to those expectations that Israel’s stories have created.

Second, the present experience of divine absence or hiddenness is con- trasted with memories of God’s

presence

in the

past

to save from similar crises. The most

striking

feature of this second move is that it does not negate

the

preceding

lament. Affirmation of abandonment and confident expression

of trust in the memories of the community are held

up to God

in a tension with the

complaint

that

only

a fresh

response

from God can revolve.41

These remembrances are not an objective and well-balanced

presenta- tion of “what

happened,”

but are highly selective and are shaped

by the pres- ent needs of those

praying. So,

for example, the three “histories” of God’s salvation of Israel recorded in Psalms 105-107 each

emphasize

and remem- ber different

aspects

of the

grand story

in order to motivate

very

different responses.

Psalm 105 emphasizes God’s salvation in order to motivate obe- dience on the part of the

people

to the divine commands. Psalm 106 under- lines the ceaseless rebelliousness of the

people

and God’s faithfulness to forgive

in order to motivate God to forgive the

people yet again

in a fresh way.

Psalm 107 offers motivation for

public praise

of God in the

assembly

40 Ibid., 8.

41 I have argued elsewhere that, in modern studies of the question of God’s presence and absence, authors almost without exception conclude

into an assured but diffuse or a

by dissolving the any apparent contradiction

presence permanent absence on part of God. Ellington, “Reality, Remembrance, and Response,” 31-41. The one notable exception to this trend is Samuel E. Balentine, The Hidden God: The Hiding of the Face of God in the Old Testament. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983). Balentine, like the lament psalmists, manages to maintain a tension between affirmations of God’s presence and complaints of his absence.

259

15

of the people.

A third element of the

process

is often found in those

psalms

in which God

responds

with either an assurance of salvation or a saving act. A very common

response

to such a fresh

experience

of salvation is public testimo- ny before the great assembly.

The

psalmist goes

before the

community

and both affirms the truthfulness of the

community’s

memories and adds his or her own testimony to that story. Testimony, I have

argued,

is an essential

part of the

process

because it legitimates the

community’s

stories and allows for their

reappropriation.

A brief

example

of this process can be found in Psalm 22. The

psalmist claims abandonment in a time of crisis

(vv. 1-2), remembers God’s salvation of the ancestors because

they

trusted in God

(vv. 3-5),

declares his or her own trust from his or her youth,

together

with the counter-testimony of those who claim that the psalm writer does not trust in God and

is, therefore,

God- forsaken

(vv. 6-11),

and

complains

of his or her

suffering

and calls out for deliverance

(vv. 12-21 ). Upon receiving

that

deliverance,

the

psalm

writer begins

a process of public testimony that starts with the local

assembly

and eventually spreads throughout

the nations,

extending

even to future

genera- tions and

ending

with the affirmation “He has done it!”

(vv. 22-31 ).

This model for evaluating and appropriating

Scripture (albeit, Scripture in its formative

stages)

in

light

of fresh

experience

differs from current Pentecostal

practice

in at least one

prominent way.

Richard Israel has

sug- gested that,”

the text points to a world, the interpreter orients himself or her- self toward the claim of the text and that is where

appropriation

takes place.”42

But I would

suggest

that

something

more is needed for the reader to “orient himself or herself to the claim of the text.” In Pentecostal Bible reading,

serious and sustained

complaint

to God is all but absent. It is my contention that both

complaint

and

testimony

are

necessary

elements for appropriating

the truth-claims of the biblical

story

in the

community.43 When faced with an experience that

challenges

the a

priori

beliefs

arising from the community’s story, those

facing

that

experience

first articulate their experience

of God’s failure to respond as expected, then retell the

story

of God’s

past actions,

and

finally,

if a new

experience

of God is forthcoming, testify

in an act of fresh

traditioning. According

to this

model,

all three ele-

4Z Richard D. Israel, Daniel E. Albrecht, and Randal G. McNally, “Pentecostals and Hermeneutics: Texts, Rituals, Rituals and Pneuma: The Journcal

Pentecostal Theology 15:2 143.

Community,” of the Society for

(1993),

43 See Scott A. Ellington, “The Costly Loss of Testimony,” Journal of Pentecostal 16

Theology (2000), 48-59.

260

16

ments are

necessary

in order to appropnate the truth-claims ot the biblical text. This

suggests

to Pentecostal readers of the text

that, at least for the lament

psalmists, placing

the

story seriously

at risk of negation was an inte- gral part

of its reappropriation in the

community.

If the answer to prayer is never in doubt, but

always guaranteed,

then lament is

merely

a prelude to praise

and the

testimony’s

outcome is assured. As Balentine

puts

it:

To strip the lament of this element of anxiety is not only to change its

whole character, but it is also to miss out one of the

, into how the sense of the hiddenness of

significant insights God was dealt with in the Old

Testament…Without the struggle the

.

would be

questions directed toward God

meaningless, and to interpret all questions as merely prelimi-

nary to confessions of confidence is to be indifferent to the agony of the

struggle

out of which they were born.44 ,

.

Such

triumphalist

assurances of salvation that

deny

the

possibility

of hid- denness on God’s

part,

I suggest, both

deny life-experience

and weaken tes- timony,

thus

hindering

the

appropriation

of the

gospel

in the faith commu- nity.

Conchision

The

purpose

of this

paper

has been to examine the

ways

in which truth is located in a variety of Christian hermeneutical

approaches

and to evaluate the benefits and drawbacks of each

approach

when

speaking

of a Pentecostal reading

of Scripture. I have not sought to propose an overall hermeneutic for Pentecostals, or even to provide a standardized

pattern

for

Scripture reading from a Pentecostal

perspective,

but

simply

to offer one model for

Scripture appropriation

used

by

some biblical writers in order to draw attention to some of the issues that must be considered in order to find a way ahead in a hermeneutical

approach

that

emphasizes

both the

authority

and

inspiration of the Bible and experiences of God.

Having

made this brief

study,

it is now

possible

to make a number of observations:

I ) The

historical-critical

approach,

while

providing

an

indispensa- ble foundation for biblical

interpretation,

cannot

fully

articulate Pentecostal approaches

to hermeneutics because of its foundation in and restriction to a rationalist worldview.

2)

Postmodem hermeneutics, while

offering many

fresh

insights

44 Balentine, The Hidden God, 124.

261

17

into the text that are of use to Pentecostal readers,

operates

out of a world- view in which all truth-claims are local and relative and in which the bibli- cal writers are viewed with a high

degree

of suspicion. Therefore,

postmod- ern

approaches

are also limited in their

applicability

to the

practice

of hermeneutics

by Pentecostals.

3) Understanding

the Bible as story rather than

“pure” history

frees the reader from the need to defend a model of historical truth that seems alien to the biblical writers themselves. Narrative

approaches

to

Scripture are useful in Pentecostal hermeneutics, however,

only

to the extent that

they be

grounded

in the

concern,

common to both the biblical writers and Pentecostal readers, for “what

happened.”

That

connection,

as

Stroup

has suggested,

is to be found in the text’s

ability

to provide the individual and the community with its sense of identity and to create

expectations

for future encounters with God.

4) Truth-as-testimony

offers a promising way in which to under- stand the Bible’s truth-claims.

Testimony

involves selective

remembering and includes the beliefs of the one

testifying, along

with references to the events that are believed to be true. Furthermore, it is at times

possible

to evaluate

testimony

about God

through

the

continuing process

of

bringing together

that

testimony

and fresh

experiences

of God’s

presence

and absence. The common thread that allows the

bringing together

of the world- view(s)

of the biblical writers and the worldview(s) of Pentecostals is a com- monly

held belief that God remains an active

agent (indeed,

the

primary active

agent)

in the biblical stories.

5)

One element

frequently lacking

in Pentecostal

testimony

is a serious

presentation

of complaint,

resulting

from the contradiction at times set

up

between the

testimony

of

Scripture

and the

life-experiences

of the believer. An evaluation of life-experiences that denies the possibility of put- ting

the biblical

story seriously

at risk also lacks the

power

to bring about profound reappropriation

of that

story.

6)

Future work in articulating Pentecostal hermeneutical

practices will need to explore further the

ways

in which the

experiences

of the faith community

interact with the

reading

of the text and will also need to attend to other models drawn from the biblical text that illustrate how Israel and the Christian church

appropriated

the biblical narratives. I have

suggested

that “reality testing”

of testimony in a dialectical

model,

rather than a triumphal-

262

18

istic denial of counter-testimonies that call the biblical stories into question, ! is one essential element in helping the believing

community

transform “the story”

into “our

story.”

263

19


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