Chain Letter

and all the brethren who are with me, to the churches of Galatia: Galatians 1:2

Churches – When you read the Bible, do you pay attention to the proper context, culture and historical circumstances behind the text? Or do you read the Bible as if it was written for you yesterday? This is not a trivial question. I wrote about this on April 16, but it is worth repeating many times. Nothing is more important for understanding God’s Word!

One of the biggest problems in Christian practice is the lack of a proper understanding of Biblical exegesis. More theological mistakes occur due to a lack of proper exegesis than any other methodological errors. Why? Because a great number of believers treat the Bible as though it has no cultural bias and was written in its entirety last week. Neither of these assumptions is true. Just like any other document, the Bible comes to us in a cultural context (in fact, in several cultural contexts) and it is the progressive revelation of God over the course of thousands of years. These facts must become part of any attempt to interpret the text.

Imagine trying to understand the meaning of The Iliad without any reference to Greek history, mythology or culture. Imagine reading The Iliad as if it were written last week, applying it to today’s issues without any attempt to understand what the original audience received. That would be equivalent to how most Christians treat the Bible. We have this tendency to pull a verse from some book, make a direct application to our lives and act as though God’s Word was written for us and no one else. This is the “God spoke to me” variety of exegesis. This is naïve and dangerous (just ask any woman of God who has been told that Scriptures teach she cannot preach or teach men).

Walter Kaiser emphasizes one other critical point about proper exegesis. The Scriptures are progressive revelation. That means they were not all available at the same time. The fact that we have all the books now doesn’t mean the authors had all the books available when they wrote their volumes. Kaiser’s point is that if we are going to understand the writing of any particular author, we cannot use material written after the passages we want to interpret. We can’t use Revelation to help us understand what John was thinking when he wrote his gospel because Revelation didn’t exist when he wrote the gospel. But we can use Psalms, Deuteronomy, Genesis, etc. because those works were available to John when he wrote his gospel. This might seem like an obvious point until we consider the chronology of authorship in the New Testament (in Hebrew the Ketuvim Netzarim). The order of the books in our New Testament is not an authorship chronology. In fact, the order is completely arbitrary, established by some church council without any regard to events or authors. Why does this matter? Well, when we look at authorship chronology, we discover Galatians was written before any other Pauline letter. Therefore, what Paul (Rabbi Sha’ul) writes in Galatians cannot be interpreted according to what he later writes in Romans or Thessalonians. Galatians is the foundation for the rest, not the result of a long process of theological reflection from the rest. The letter to the Romans does not come first.

We know that Paul wrote Galatians with the intention of having the letter circulated among the churches in that province. And we know he wrote it after the Jerusalem council (Acts 15). We know the real issue among assemblies in Galatia is the relationship between law and grace. But what we can’t do in order to understand Sha’ul’s thinking in Galatians is to run to Romans 6-8 and use that to explain Galatians.

For a fuller discussion of this issue, go here.  But even if you don’t look at the rest of the picture, start treating Scripture as if it were a screen play. Take it in the order that it was written. Your exegesis will improve. You will be able to see the relationship between historical events and the words of Scripture. Things will make a lot more sense. And you won’t make so many mistakes when it comes to understanding the context before the application.

Topical Index: exegesis, Galatians 1:2, church, history

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carl roberts

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“Holiness is not the way to Christ.. Christ is the way to holiness”.

Jesus saith unto him, I am the way.. (John 14:6)

The Highway of Holiness-

Have we seen and understood?-

• God’s revelation is progressive

• God’s education is progressive

• God’s sanctification is progressive

• the will of God is progressive

• the Word of God is progressive

• the wisdom of God is progressive

• the work of God is progressive

“But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To Him be glory- both now – and for ever. Amen 2 Peter 3:18

yes, there is growth and there is movement in our Christian “walk”. We are making “aliyah” to our heavenly home. I can say with full assurance- today, I am not who I was. G-d is working on me and G-d is working in me to conform me to the image of the Son. I am fully convicted,convinced and assured also- “the best is yet to come”. How do I know this? Like everything else- “it is written”. The answers are (sometimes) buried within a book. This book is not the book of the month. It is the book of the ages. It claims to be G-d breathed. Wriltten by men, inspired by G-d. When Yeshua taught in the temples, how was He able to teach with such authority? (helpful hint..- He wrote the book!).

Yolanda

Incredible understanding of the culture comes from reading the ARAMAIC ENGLISH NEW TESTAMENT. Netzari Press ISBN 978-1-934916-26-1 (1-934916-26-9) Study it for yourself and see. You will be amazed, challenged and rocked.

Charles

Shalom Aleichem

Might I be so bold as to suggest there is a grave and immediate necessity to read the SCRIPTURES and think scripturally and do scriptural exegesis [Hebraic mindset] and set aside and turn away from reading the ‘bible’ and thinking ‘biblically’ and doing ‘biblical’ exegesis [greco-roman mindset].

Yahweh’s Word is the SCRIPTURES …. and man’s word is the bible… my view.

Might I also suggest a sincere ‘re-think’ of the term ‘church’ [greco-roman] and think and act in terms of COMMUNITY and congregation and assembly [hebraic mindset]

How can one progress when outdated and incorrect terminology makes up ones vocabulary?

Drew

Shalom Charles,

1) Yes you might be so bold …. there are “things happening” and many share similar inklings. Thanks for adding to my list of brethren who are on this same page!

2) Regarding “community” or “assembly” or “witnesses” or “people” …. Skip posted some excellent commentaries on this topic: 03/09/08 – 04/29/08! In these commentaries the nuances of “Kahal” and “HaEdah” …. diverse Hebraic concepts, were briefly exposed.

Anyway … your declaration Charles regarding “community” from a Hebraic mindset begs the question …. What does this mean?

To begin …. What Skip produces is easily synthesized into a broader framework if the pieces are simply woven together. For instance there have been recent discussions around “Torah” and “purpose”, “community”, “division/unity” and ironically the “small vs. big picture” – (trees vs. the forest).

If I might be forward please let me tie some of these together. The purpose of the “ekklesia” is to be the community … the assembly … the witnesses – and of course there is the issue of purpose! On the other hand Skip has time and time again pointed out that purpose in a Hebraic perspective is aligned to Torah … which in turn represents the standards/constitution of the Kingdom …. when applied shines the light to this world on the Character of ELOHIM drawing people back to HIM!

When these various components are pieced together we should see that the glue is The Word (HaDabar – Torah – Yeshua) … it represents not just the Character of Yeshua but the standards by which we are commanded to live to. It represents the way/path (HaDerech) and mode of our travels. It represents the unifying fabric of our families and communities and serves as the means for fulfilling our purpose. Frankly without applying The Word in both an individual and communal perspective there really is no tactical unity and there is no way of completely fulfilling the purposes we are called for which is to spread the Kingdom.

Skip points out on occasion that the goal is to “get there together”! Well how is this possible if we first can not agree on where we are going, the path that needs to be taken, how we are to walk or even our basic purpose? We do need community but the community needs to work as designed by The Word … not by our own ideas as to what community is supposed to be. As it stands today we have too many versions of what it means to abide in Jesus!

I am not sure Charles if this is the idea of community that you had in mind but without further details I took the liberty of answering the question which might be on other readers’ minds.

Feel free anyone to chime in if there are differing views as to what “community” from a Hebraic perspective means! 🙂

Drew

Skip … as always the exegetical methods you point out are indeed important! 🙂

I have at times wondered … given the chronology of the Pauline corpus, how Sha’ul in the letter to the Romans seems to work diligently to expand upon and clarify the already revealed truths within Galatians.

As Peter points out …. Sha’ul can be difficult to understand and is misrepresented by those who are unlearned and unstable (We should view this as meaning those who do not know Torah or Hebraic methods .. yes?). It would seem that we often fail to recognize the “cause” for the writings …. we fail to explore why the specific content of the letters is necessary because we love to focus on the glory of the revelation … in our own context. (And indeed the revelation is full of His glory!)

My point is that it is apparent Sha’ul’s inspired treatment of “grace and law” within the CONTEXT of Galatians vs. Romans is different. In simplistic terms …. In Galatians Sha’ul simply clarifies that the law does not justify and forcing circumcision on Gentiles does not bring them into the “seed of faith”. Whereas in Romans Sha’ul reveals how the law is upheld through faith and remains good and perfect forever.

Ultimately the treatment of a similar topic must be recognized to be influenced by the needs and the context which drove its generation. If we think that the writings were simply for the benefit of theological development instead of addressing specific and necessary issues …. we surely will lose much of the meaning.

When this approach is taken it is not difficult to realize that Sha’ul was clarifying a host of misunderstandings relative to the role of the law …. from a principle perspective and from a daily application perspective. To me at least it seems in Romans that Sha’ul is making it real clear that “grace” has not removed the “law” from our lives … only its curse for those operating in faith and under the grace of ELOHIM!

Nice commentary Skip! Always appreciate the reminders to exercise caution!

matt

I would agree and say this was a great article and reminder. This is something we have been teaching as a community for months. As a new community that formed after hurricane Katrina God has been bringing many young and passionate people into our community of faith. Teaching these principles, exegesis, and Hebraic mindset is mind blowing to some and almost offensive to others. This article came at the perfect timing as i have been discussing this with a few new passionate men struggling with what they had learned and now what we are teaching. Thank you for sending this out. It was a great boost and reminder of why we do what we do.
(BTW Yolanda i would also recommend the Jewish New Testament by David Stern)

Drew

Shalom Matt …. sounds awesome brother! I understand all too well … mind blowing, frightening, challenging and yes … offensive to the entrenched! Yet the revelation from such an approach just downright makes ya giddy and over-joyed does it not! 🙂

b/t/w/ You might also find the CJB (Complete Jewish Bible) also by Stern to be useful … it is good!

You may also want to go the this site … http://www.afii.org/ and get an electronic version of the Orthodox Jewish Bible (Tanakh and B’rit Chadasha) … it is beautiful and provides thousands of key transliterated Hebrew words within the text. As well it is hard to go wrong with the JPS TANAKH as well (just for accurate translation on the whole) …. this is of course if you already do not have access to these materials.

Yolanda

Already have it. Thanks.

Michael

For those of you who would like to understand the Bible better from an academic perspective, I would recommend The Oxford Companion to the Bible, Edited by Bruce M Metzger and Michael D Coogan.

It is easy to read and is full of very useful information.

As Sargent Joe Friday used to say: “Just the facts.”

John Schnabl

Skip,
About your message yesterday in Gal. 1:2
What is a good resource to have to get all the books of the Bible in Chronological order?
I want to have one so I can “screen play” the Bible as you tought for better exegetical understanding.
Thanks,
John from Lake Geneva WI