BIBLE INSIGHT

Be diligent to present yourself approved to God,
a worker who does not need to be ashamed,
rightly dividing the word of truth.
(2 Tim. 2:15)

Volume 7, Number 12, March 21, 2004

Some Keys to Reading and Understanding the Epistles
(Adapted from How to Read the Bible for All It's Worth, Fee and Stuart, pp.45-77)

The Nature of the Epistles
All the New Testament except the four Gospels, Acts, and Revelation are considered as some form of Epistle. While some of these books take on the form of personal letters (Philemon for example), others were intended to be read before entire congregations of Christians (the Corinthian letters). The form of the ancient letter is often exemplified in the New Testament epistles:
1. name of the writer (e.g., Paul)
2. name of the recipient (e.g., to the church at Corinth)
3. greeting (e.g., grace and peace to you from God our Father…)
4. prayer wish or thanksgiving (e.g., I always thank God for you…)
5. body
6. final greeting and farewell (e.g., The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with you…)

While not every epistle contains all of these elements, enough of them do to tell us that the New Testament writers were lead by the Spirit to generally conform to the style of the day.

Two things that the epistles share in common is that: 1)- they were written for a specific occasion and 2)- they were penned in the first century. The occasion for most of the epistles is something that was happening with the reader; usually some type of behavior that needed correcting, a doctrinal error that needed to be set right, or a misunderstanding that needed to be clarified. We then are privy to only one side of the dialogue and sometimes find it hard to figure out what questions elicited the responses given by the letter writer.

We must be careful not to expect each epistle to be a complete statement of God's will for us. God has left them for us as a body of material for a reason; that reason being that each epistle does not necessarily stand alone theologically. It is important as always to be aware of the context of the epistle.

The Historical Context
When approaching any of the epistles we must first determine just what situation caused the Holy Spirit to inspire the writer. What was going on in the church that called for a letter? How did the writer come to learn of the situation? What previous relationship did the writer have with the recipients? What attitudes are displayed by the writer and inferred to the readers? How do we begin to answer these questions?
1. Consult a Bible dictionary or introduction to a reliable commentary to find out as much as possible about the recipients of the letter. What is known of their environs, their government, and their religious background?
2. Read the whole letter in one sitting. You'll need an hour or less to do this. This how a letter (including a Bible letter) is designed to be read. As you read through the letter jot down some notes relating to the big picture such as: who were the recipients, what were the writer's attitudes, specifics of the occasion that prompted the letter, and the natural divisions of the letter.
3. Attempt to outline the letter yourself. This can be refined as you study the letter further, perhaps taking some hints from the commentators as you go. However, you must agree to the divisions and not just take a scholar's word for it.
4. Now begin to refine your outline further by studying the divisions of you outline separately. Look for repeated keys words and phrases.

The Literary Context
Once you have a handle on the problem being addressed by the writer, begin to follow his argument paragraph by paragraph, jotting down phrases as you go. Try to answer the "what" and "why" of each paragraph in your notes.
1. Try to understand the point of the letter within the text of the letter.
2. Look for anything in the text that does not seem to fit the problem as you have perceived it.
3. Does your thinking make perfectly good sense compared to the text?

Breaking Down "Problem Passages"
After much personal study you may be perplexed that you cannot find the meaning of a passage. Here are guidelines for further study:
1. What God wants us to know He has told us. There are some things we just might not be able to discover and we have to be content with that.
2. Just because we do not have all the details does not mean we cannot glean the point of the passage.
3. Concentrate on the certainties of the passage.
4. Here is where a reliable commentary can help. The good commentators give you the variety of interpretations to choose from when it comes to the difficult passages of scripture. Note that when there are over four viable options as to how to view a certain passage, even the scholars are guessing.

Making the Application Today
What part of the Epistle applies to us today and what part is to be left in the first century? When was Paul just talking to Timothy and when was he saying things that also apply to us? What preconceived notions are we bringing to our study in regards to our theological heritage, our religious traditions, our cultural norms, and our existential concerns? All of these play a part in our coming to an understanding of what a passage means to us today.

Guidelines for Application
1. The Basic Rule: A text cannot mean what it never could have meant to its author or its readers. While this rule does not always lead us to what a passage means, it does verify what it cannot mean.
2. Rule Two: Whenever we share our similar specific life situations with the first-century setting, God's word to us is the same as God's word to them.

Problems of Modern Application

Problem of Extending the Application
Changing God's intent of His word is dangerous. Applying passages meant for the church to individuals or passages meant for individuals to the church have caused all types of division within so-called Christian denominations as well as within the Lord's church itself. Once again we return to the context and the clear teachings of other bible passages to clarify whether our extended applications hold water or not.

Problem of Particulars That Are Not Comparable
Will we be asked to join our pagan neighbors in partaking of a feast of meat offered to their idols? Can an apostleship be called into question today? Are we likely to buy meat at the market that has been sacrificed to idols? Paul addresses all these questions in 1 Cor. 8-10. These problems do not really exist in the Protestant western culture, with the exception of an occasional "David Koresh" type character claiming equal apostleship with Paul and the Twelve or the Pope standing in apostolic succession.

Other highly improbable happenings: getting drunk at the Lord's Supper or forced circumcision. We can apply some things from these passages if:
1. A principle is stated or implied that transcends the time-span between the first-century and now.
2. This principle can only be applied to genuinely compatible situations.

How do we distinguish things are matters of indifference?
1. It appears that all regulations regarding food, drink (with the possible exception of alcohol), and observance of days are matters of indifference.
2. These matters of indifference are cultural as opposed to moral (e.g., circumcision).
3. The sin lists of the Epistles do not contain the things mentioned above (Rom. 1:29,30; 1 Cor. 5:11; 6:9,10; 2 Tim. 3:2-4).

Problem of Cultural Relativity
How do we leave "a little wine for your stomach's sake," women's head coverings, and "the holy kiss" in the first century and bring forward women silent in the church, and "no homosexuality allowed" from the same contexts? How do we pick and choose the items that are culturally relative to us today and still leave the veil in the first century?
1. What is inherently taught as moral in the New Testament and what is not? For example, homosexuality is not condemned on cultural grounds, but on moral grounds; while abstaining from meat sacrificed to idols is discouraged on cultural grounds and not moral ones.
2. Check to see if a uniform teaching of the New Testament exists. This is clear to see on topics such as strife, hatred, murder, homosexuality, drunkenness and sexual immorality.

Problem of Task Theology
We must be careful in applying passages of scripture that were written for an occasion (task) that does not exist today.
1. We must reiterate here that scripture has given us all we need, but not all we want. There are just some things that we might not be able to understand when it comes to the particulars of a certain passage. 1 Cor. 6:2 says that the "saints will judge the world." Do you know exactly what that means?
2. Sometimes our problem with the texts of the Epistles is that we are trying to answer our questions with passages that were designed by God to answer their questions. Let us then be about obeying what we can hear and understand.


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MONTHLY BIBLE READING: Lessons from the death and resurrection, The Epistles.

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BIBLE INSIGHT is published for the members of, and visitors to, the Church of Christ at Beverly Shores, Leesburg, Florida, USA.
Carey Dillinger is the editor. He can be reached at the church address or via e-mail: webmaster@careydillinger.com


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