I am beginning to appreciate
The Word can speak for itself
Far better than the commentaries
That line across our shelf.
We rely on commentators
To expound on the Holy Word
And depending on our preference
We may or may not concur.
Some we hold in high esteem
And we say their names in awe
Often forgetting they are human
And therefore, not without flaw.
Some are particularly brilliant
And that I must admit
But they are not nearly as bright
As the blessed Holy Spirit.
I mean the Spirit in the Word
That came to teach all truth:
The promised alike Jesus Comforter
And Pentecost bears the proof.
The Spirit illumines the Word
And fits it to our understanding
In a way that no commentary can
Regardless of name or branding.
Interpretation is important
But it must not be the primary goal,
Reading is the principal thing
And quite a lot will unfold.
It is what the Bible actually says
And not what someone says it says:
It’s best we begin with the explicit
And let the Spirit guide our way.
I am having a severe struggle
With positions I once held dear
Ever since I began reading the Word
And putting study in second gear.
Often, we are inclined to believe
The Word doesn’t mean what it says
And so, we put our spin on it
And hence, our interpretive ways.
If the literal literally makes sense
Then that’s good enough for me,
No need for someone’s interpretation
To tell me what I did not see.
Now commentaries have their place
Please don’t get me wrong,
But they are not the be all and end all:
No human is that strong.
So, read before interpreting:
The explicit before the implicit,
The who, the what, the when, the where
Defines a good investigative habit.
Be careful with denominations,
Subject them to the litmus test
Which of course is what the Word says:
This approach is always best.
Let Scripture interpret Scripture:
The difficult in light of the simple
And read and read and read again!
Until you solve the puzzle.
A good concordance is key
It’s more instructive than a commentary,
Trace a word right through the Word
And see what its meaning be.
Context always before pretext
Exegesis and never eisegesis,
Don’t let denomination get in the way
And from the Bible never drift.
Keep the nature of God in mind
And remember, Jesus is the Word,
The Holy Spirit is the Comforter
So, to these three defer.
Stewart Russell © August 18, 2021
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