Rule - Self examination: Difference between revisions
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:[[Jer 17:9]] The heart [is] deceitful above all [things], and desperately wicked: who can know it? | :[[Jer 17:9]] The heart [is] deceitful above all [things], and desperately wicked: who can know it? | ||
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'''Consequence of not doing self-examination:''': The measure of truth becomes the individual and the standard changes to meet your own goals. | '''Consequence of not doing self-examination:''': The measure of truth becomes the individual and the standard changes to meet your own goals. | ||
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[[Category: Hermeneutics]] | [[Category: Hermeneutics]] |
Latest revision as of 12:32, 28 May 2022
Our assumptions about scripture and the rules we use to guide our interpretation effect the ultimate meaning that we get from scripture. It is important to evaluate those assumptions and rules to ensure that they permit the scriptures to speak for themselves rather than permitting us to impose our own meaning upon them. My assumptions and convictions are these:
The rules are discerned using the same methods as discerning the mystery, so it should be expected that those practicing literal methods may disagree with how the rules are determined. That doesn't matter. The mystery needs to be evaluated to see if it is self-consistent as well as if it produces verifiable, meaningful, and orthodox [6] results. Consequence of not doing self-examination:: The measure of truth becomes the individual and the standard changes to meet your own goals. |
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