This short lesson is deceptively simple, and yet many arguments about what the Bible means only happen because people lose sight of these simple principles.
In the Bible, the word doxa or "glory" can mean many things. For instance...
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| Some Other Examples | |||
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| DESIRE |
Longing Lke 22:15 |
Covetousness Rom 7:7 |
Lusts 1Pe 4:3 |
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| SPIRIT |
Wind Jhn 3:8 |
Soul Lke 23:46 |
Character Lke 1:17 |
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| SABBATH |
Rest Heb 4:9 |
Sabbath day Mark 3:2 |
Week Mrk 16:2 |
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| GRACE |
Thanks 2Tm 1:3 |
Kindness Tit 2:11 |
Goodwill Acts 2:47 |
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When we interpret the Bible, we must remember that a word may be used in different senses
In Lewis Carrol’s stories about Alice’s adventures, Alice holds a strange conversation with Humpty Dumpty. He made a fine argument in favor of
Whilst a word can mean many things, each of those things must be sensible with regard to that word. That’s why, for example, Peter used the word "defense" in
When we interpret the Bible, we must not attribute a meaning of our own choosing to a word.
Seldom does one intentionally use a word in an ambiguous manner so that it has a double meaning. Normally a word means only one thing at one time.
As an example, the word 'word' itself is used in the sentence, "For the kingdom of God does not consist in word, but in power"
In another place we have, "those who gladly received his word were baptized"
You can see that 'word' cannot, in one place, mean both 'the message of Christ' and 'the prattlings of men' . Only one of those meanings can exist in one place. For instance, Paul could not mean that the kingdom of God does not consist in the message of Christ but in power, for he claims that the message of Christ is the power
When we interpret the Bible we must remember that a word can mean but one thing in one place and we cannot accommodate two conflicting meanings.
Each time a word is used, its meaning is fixed in that instance, and it is the user who has fixed that meaning. The hearer is not free to put his own meaning on it. Rather, he must gather what the user meant by it.
For example, when Jesus used the word 'temple' in one instance, people were wrong to put a meaning upon that word which Jesus had not intended. He meant the temple of his body, not the grand place of worship in Jerusalem
When we interpret the Bible we must strive to gather what the user meant by what he said, and not put our own interpretation on the words thus to misunderstand and misrepresent them.