Put another way, continuity and discontinuity in a given area should be a post-exegetical conclusion, not a pre-exegetical assumption. Otherwise, the one who looks at Scripture through the lens of continuity will tend to deny legitimate points of discontinuity, and the one who looks through the lens of discontinuity will tend to deny legitimate points of continuity.
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
The Hermeneutics of Continuity and Discontinuity
Read in context and not with a hermeneutical assumption: The Hermeneutics of Continuity and Discontinuity « Expository Thoughts:
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