The Bible isn't 
		such a complex document that it requires years of formal 
		education before you can begin to comprehend it. I've always believed 
		the Bible was meant to be understood by any believer who can read and 
		has a serious interest in knowing what it says. 
		I  say this because I 
		believe the Bible is best approached by relying on the power of the Holy 
		Spirit rather than one's own intellect. 
		James 1:5 says that any of us who lacks wisdom need only 
		ask God who gives generously to all without finding fault. Conversely 
		the man without the Spirit can not accept the things that come from the 
		Spirit of God regardless of his mental prowess. (1 Cor. 2:14) 
		This is why we hear of people who tried to read the Bible as 
		non-believers and found they couldn't figure it out, but as soon as they 
		were born again it began to make sense. They didn't suddenly become more 
		intelligent, they simply gained the supernatural insight of the Holy 
		Spirit who teaches us all things. (John 14:26) 
		
		Over the 25 years or so I've been studying the 
		Bible I've picked up a handful of principles that have also given me a 
		better understand what it says. They help keep me honest so I know it's 
		the Holy Spirit teaching me, and not just my sin infested intellect 
		coming to its own conclusion. 
		From time to time I get asked about these principles, having 
		mentioned them in answers to various questions, so here they are. 
		
		
		                  
		The Golden Rule of Interpretation
		“When the plain sense of scripture makes common 
		sense, seek no other sense; therefore, take every word at its primary, 
		ordinary, usual, literal meaning unless the facts of the immediate 
		context, 
		studied in the light of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental 
		truths, indicate clearly otherwise.” 
		Dr. D.L. Cooper  
		This hasn't become known as the Golden Rule of 
		Interpretation for nothing.  
		If you ignore all the others and only follow this one rule you will 
		avoid almost all the mistakes people make in reading the Bible.  
		And the next one is like it, sort of an expanded version of the 
		first.               
		
		
		
		                  
		Literal, Historical, Grammatical, 
		Contextual 
		These could be called the most important words in 
		Biblical Hermeneutics, which is the science of 
		properly interpreting the Bible. 
		
		Literal means that each word is given the same 
		exact basic meaning it would have in normal, ordinary, customary usage, 
		whether employed in writing, speaking or thinking. Unless it's clearly 
		indicated otherwise, we're to assume the Bible means exactly what it 
		says.  Examples of passages 
		that are not intended to be taken literally are parables, dreams, and 
		visions.  These are all 
		identified as such, alerting us to the fact that they're meant to be 
		understood symbolically.  
		
		
		Historical means that each passage is put into its 
		proper historical setting and surrounded with the thoughts, attitudes, 
		and feelings prevalent at the time of its writing. In Biblical times the 
		Jewish view of the Messiah was one of a charismatic leader like King 
		David.  In other words, a 
		man, not God in human form. Knowing that helps us understand how they 
		failed to recognize Him, and why they accused Him of blasphemy when He 
		claimed to be God. 
		
		Grammatical means that words are given meanings 
		consistent with their common understanding in the original language at 
		the time of writing.  
		Grammatical interpretation also includes following recognized 
		rules of grammar and in its more advanced form, applying the 
		nuances of the Hebrew and Greek languages to the understanding of a 
		passage. 
		
		A good example showing the importance of following 
		the rules of grammar can found in Daniel 9:27 where the subject 
		of the first sentence in the verse is a personal pronoun. 
		“He will confirm a covenant with (the) many.” 
		 The rule of grammar regarding 
		personal pronouns is that they refer to the closest preceding personal 
		noun. In this case it's “the ruler who will come” in verse 26 indicating 
		that the person who will confirm the covenant with Israel is the 
		anti-Christ, not the Lord as some commentators assert.   
		
		
		 Contextual 
		interpretation involves always taking the surrounding context of a 
		verse/passage into consideration when trying to determine its meaning. 
		The Holy Spirit has usually prompted the Bible's writers to place 
		indicators in the text surrounding a passage to guide you in 
		interpreting it.  In 1 
		Cor. 9:24-27 Paul compares our life to that of an athlete, training 
		and competing for crowns. The mention of crowns tells us the passage is 
		not about salvation, which is a free gift, but rewards believers can win 
		after being saved.  (In this 
		case it's the crown of victory, awarded to those who overcome the ways 
		of the flesh by getting rid of selfish desires, bad habits and 
		attitudes, etc.)  
		
		When you stop to think about it, reading the Bible 
		this way actually makes perfect sense. 
		If you received a letter from a friend you wouldn't have to be 
		reminded to apply these principles. 
		You would naturally assume that your friend was using words that 
		meant the same thing to both of you. 
		You would understand them within the parameters of your shared 
		history, you would assume that the rules of grammar you had both been 
		taught applied, and you would interpret what was written 
		within the context of your relationship. 
		You would expect your friend to alert you if any of these 
		assumptions were not going to apply, and explain the reason for it. 
		
		
		The only difference with the Bible is that it was 
		written over a long period of time, during which the meanings of some 
		words changed, and society is generally different now than it was when 
		the Bible was written.  This 
		makes books on Bible history and a good concordance valuable additions 
		to your library.      
		
		
		
		                  
		Expositional Constancy 
		This is a fancy term to remind us that symbolism in 
		scripture tends to be consistent. 
		For example, through out the Bible leaven, or yeast, is used 
		symbolically to stand for sin. Therefore there's no justification for 
		claiming that in the Parable of the Yeast (Matt. 13:33) and there 
		alone, it stands for the Gospel. Expositional Constancy only applies to 
		words that are used symbolically, so be careful. 
		Peter's statement in 2 Peter 3:9 that with the Lord a day 
		is like 1000 years and 1000 years is like a day does not justify 
		substituting 1000 years for a day every time it comes up. 
		Peter was simply explaining that the Lord's concept of time is 
		way different from ours.
		
		
		                  
		Internal Consistency
		The Bible, being the word of God, cannot contradict 
		itself.  The Lord is just and 
		righteous so He can't say something in one place and something different 
		in another.  He knows the end 
		from the beginning so He can't change His mind or take back something 
		He's given.  Everything He 
		says has to agree with everything else He says. 
		For example, if the Bible says it's God who makes us stand firm 
		in Christ, that He anointed us, set His seal of ownership on us and put 
		His Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee of what's to come ( 2 Cor. 
		1:21-22), then it can't say that we can walk away from our salvation 
		or have it taken away from us someplace else.     
		
		
		
		                  
		Principle Of First Mention
		Often when an important concept is mentioned for 
		the first time there is elevated significance in the context of the 
		passage in which it appears.  
		The first mention of the Church is in Matt.16:18 where Peter 
		declared that Jesus is the Messiah, son of the living God. 
		Jesus said that this truth would be the foundation upon which He 
		would build His Church. Notice who's going to be doing the building and 
		whose Church it is.  Studying 
		the passage where an important concept first appears can be very helpful 
		in interpreting subsequent passages on the same subject. 
		
		
		 Use Clear Passages To Interpret Obscure 
		Ones 
		Some passages of Scripture are more difficult to 
		interpret correctly than others. 
		When confronting one of these, it's best to locate the clearest 
		verses on the subject and use them to help interpret the difficult one. 
		A classic example is Hebrews 6:4-6 which, when taken 
		alone, seems to say that we can fall away and lose our salvation, and if 
		that should happen we can never get it back. 
		But the clearest verses on salvation are Ephesians 1:13-14 
		and 2 Cor. 1:21-22, and they plainly state the opposite. 
		The Ephesians passage says we were included in Christ when we 
		first heard and believed the gospel.  
		Having believed we were sealed with the Holy Spirit, a deposit 
		that guarantees our inheritance. 
		In 2 Corinthians Paul went even further saying that God himself 
		has accepted responsibility for making us stand firm in Christ and has 
		set His seal of ownership on us, like a rancher brands his cattle.
		Applying the principles above we must conclude that 
		the writer to Hebrews had to be talking about something else. 
		When we look at the context of the letter, we find that it was 
		written to Jewish believers who were being lured back into the Levitical 
		system, which used the sacrifice of a lamb to atone for sins. 
		For the Church, the Lord's death fulfilled what the sacrifice 
		only symbolized, so going back to this was tantamount to sacrificing Him 
		all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace, because by their 
		actions they were saying that His death was not sufficient to atone for 
		their sins.  
		And as if that wasn't bad enough, going back to the 
		sacrifice was no longer acceptable to God because the Law was only a 
		shadow of the good things that are coming, not the realities themselves. 
		For that reason it could never make perfect those who draw near 
		to worship no matter how many times they repeated it. (Hebr. 10:1) 
		But when the Lord  
		offered His sacrifice once for all time, He made perfect forever those 
		who are being made holy (Hebr. 10:12-14) 
		During the Church Age all we have to do after sinning is confess 
		our sins to receive forgiveness, be brought back to repentance, and be 
		purified from all unrighteousness. (1 John 1:9) 
		Now Hebrews 6:4-6 makes sense because it conforms to the 
		internal consistency of God's Word. 
		There are lots of other rules and principles man has 
		developed for application to God's word, but in my opinion if we just 
		apply the ones I've listed above we'll stand a good chance of avoiding 
		the errors and misinterpretations that seem to be so common these days.
		The Bible is quite simply the most incredible book 
		ever written. Some parts of it were written at least 4000 years ago, and 
		by 95AD its most recent chapters were finished.  
		But according to Paul it was written 
		to teach us, upon whom the end of the age has come. (Romans 
		15:4, 1 Cor. 10:11) If we'll just read it the way we would any other 
		document, as if it means what it says, the Holy Spirit will reveal 
		wondrous truths from within its pages. Truths that will give us an 
		anchor against the storms of deceit and controversy that have become so 
		common in our time.  Maybe 
		that's why it was written primarily to us. Selah 11-14-09