Tuesday, March 10, 2026

How Should Scripture be Interpreted

A Philosophical Map of Biblical Hermeneutics

Few questions in theology have produced more disagreement than the question of how Scripture should be interpreted. Contemporary discussion presents a crowded and often bewildering field of approaches: historical-critical analysis, literary and narrative readings, canonical interpretation, theological interpretation, and a wide range of postmodern strategies that stress the instability of meaning and the contingency of interpretation. Each approach brings its own method, vocabulary, and assumptions about what the interpreter is actually doing when reading the biblical text. The result is not simply a diversity of exegetical practices but a deeper conflict over the very nature of interpretation itself.

Yet debates over interpretive method often begin too late. Arguments about procedure usually assume more basic judgments that have already been made, whether explicitly or not. Hermeneutical strategies do not arise in a philosophical vacuum. Every account of interpretation rests upon prior assumptions about language, meaning, history, truth, and the conditions under which understanding becomes possible. To privilege authorial intention, narrative coherence, readerly response, communal reception, or historical reconstruction is already to adopt a set of philosophical commitments about how texts signify and how human beings come to know what they mean.

For that reason, interpreting Scripture cannot be reduced to the application of a neutral technique. Interpretation is never simply a matter of choosing the correct method and applying it with sufficient rigor. It always takes place within a broader intellectual horizon that governs—often beneath the surface—the relation between language and reality, text and meaning, history and truth. What appears at first to be a disagreement about exegetical procedure is often, at a deeper level, a disagreement about metaphysics and epistemology. Hermeneutics is therefore never merely methodological. It is unavoidably philosophical.

Modern biblical scholarship has sometimes obscured this point. Hermeneutics is frequently treated as a specialized technical discipline concerned mainly with the rules by which texts are analyzed. On this view, interpretation becomes a series of operations performed on a textual object: sources are identified, genres classified, redactional layers reconstructed, literary patterns traced, and historical contexts described. Such work is important, but it does not exhaust the task of interpretation. Nor does it answer the more basic question of what Scripture is and what kind of understanding is demanded by a text the church confesses to be divine speech.

Historically, the interpretation of Scripture belonged to a much larger intellectual and theological enterprise. It was inseparable from reflection on God, revelation, language, and reality. To interpret Scripture was not merely to analyze a text but to ask how divine truth can be communicated through human words, how language can bear meaning that exceeds immediate historical intention without collapsing into arbitrariness, and how the reader stands before a text that addresses not only the intellect but the whole life of faith. In this older vision, hermeneutics was not a discipline standing alongside theology; it was an integral dimension of theology itself.

The fragmentation of modern hermeneutics cannot therefore be understood apart from the larger intellectual history that produced it. Changes in biblical interpretation were closely tied to changes in philosophical outlook. The shift from the classical and medieval synthesis to the epistemological anxieties of modernity, the rise of Enlightenment criticism, the development of nineteenth-century historicism, the emergence of phenomenology and existentialism, and the later turn toward language, subjectivity, and postmodern suspicion all reshaped the conditions under which Scripture could be read. What counted as meaning, what qualified as legitimate understanding, and what sort of truth biblical interpretation was expected to yield changed along with these broader intellectual transformations. Modern hermeneutics did not simply introduce new tools; it arose from a reconfiguration of the intellectual world in which Scripture was being interpreted.

The purpose of this essay is therefore to sketch the major philosophical trajectories that have shaped modern biblical interpretation. By tracing the development of hermeneutics from the classical Christian tradition through the transformations of the Enlightenment, the rise of nineteenth-century historicism, the emergence of philosophical hermeneutics, and the contested debates of the contemporary period, we may see more clearly the assumptions that continue to guide present-day approaches to Scripture. Such a survey is necessarily selective and does not claim to resolve the many disputes that divide interpreters. But it can illuminate the deeper sources of those disputes by placing them within the broader history of ideas.

This clarification matters because many contemporary disagreements in biblical studies rest upon unexamined philosophical assumptions. Methods are often debated as though they were neutral procedures available for simple comparison, when in fact they are embedded within larger accounts of reason, language, history, and reality. To ask whether Scripture should be interpreted historically, literarily, canonically, or theologically is never only to ask about method. It is also to ask what Scripture is, what kind of meaning a text can possess, whether truth is discovered or constructed, and whether interpretation aims at explanation, understanding, judgment, or obedience. Hermeneutical conflict is therefore not merely technical. It reflects a deeper uncertainty about the nature of meaning itself.

A map of these philosophical developments cannot settle the disagreements surrounding biblical interpretation. It cannot eliminate the tensions between competing schools or provide a final method capable of universal acceptance. What it can do, however, is make those disagreements more intelligible. It can show why modern debates often appear intractable, why interpreters frequently speak past one another, and why disputes about exegesis so easily become disputes about truth, authority, and the possibility of theological knowledge.

Once the philosophical foundations of hermeneutics are brought into view, a more fundamental question emerges. Should the interpretation of Scripture remain primarily a technical activity governed by the procedural frameworks of modern biblical studies? Or should it be recovered as a task belonging properly within the wider vocation of philosophical theology? That question lies beneath many of the most important debates in contemporary interpretation. And it is this deeper question—concerning the place of Scripture within the order of truth and the place of hermeneutics within the life of theology—that ultimately gives the present inquiry its urgency.

I. The Classical Tradition

For most of Christian history, the interpretation of Scripture was inseparable from theology itself. What modern scholarship now calls “hermeneutics” had not yet emerged as an independent discipline with its own methods, problems, and technical vocabulary. Interpreting the biblical text belonged instead to the larger theological task of articulating the truth of the Christian faith. Scripture was read not as an isolated object of scholarly inquiry but as the church’s authoritative witness to God’s self-revelation. Its interpretation therefore took place within the doctrinal, liturgical, and contemplative life of the Christian community.

Patristic and medieval interpreters approached Scripture with a governing conviction that modern habits of reading often obscure: the biblical writings constitute a unified witness to the divine economy. Scripture was not regarded merely as a collection of ancient religious documents, still less as a loose archive of historically conditioned voices to be sorted and analyzed in isolation from one another. Rather, it was understood as the textual form of God’s redemptive self-disclosure in history, ordered toward Christ and received within the fellowship of the church.

Interpretation therefore proceeded under the guidance of what the early tradition called the regula fidei, the rule of faith. This rule summarized the church’s confession of the triune God revealed in Jesus Christ. It did not function as an arbitrary constraint imposed from outside the text. Instead, it named the theological horizon within which Scripture was believed to possess its proper coherence.

Augustine offers one of the most influential articulations of this classical vision. In De doctrina christiana, he argues that the interpretation of Scripture must ultimately serve the knowledge and love of God. The biblical text communicates divine truth through human signs, and the task of the reader is to discern how those signs direct the mind beyond themselves toward the realities they signify. Scripture is therefore read not merely to gather information, nor simply to reconstruct the intentions of an ancient author, but to form the reader in wisdom and charity. Augustine’s hermeneutic is theological in the strongest sense: interpretation is ordered toward participation in the truth to which the text bears witness. Because Scripture speaks from within the economy of salvation, it cannot be rightly understood apart from the theological reality that grounds it.

This Augustinian framework remained decisive for the medieval tradition, though it was developed with increasing conceptual precision. Medieval theology did not treat the biblical text as a flat repository of propositions. It understood Scripture instead as a divinely ordered discourse whose historical and verbal dimensions participate in a providential pattern of meaning established by God.

Thomas Aquinas, for example, insisted on the primacy of the literal sense. By this he did not mean crude literalism, but the sense intended through the words of Scripture as they signify historical realities. Yet Aquinas also affirmed that because God is the ultimate author both of Scripture and of the history it narrates, the realities signified by the words may themselves function as signs of further realities. From this conviction emerged the mature doctrine of the fourfold sense of Scripture—literal, allegorical, moral, and anagogical—which expressed the belief that the biblical text participates in the wider drama of creation, redemption, and consummation.

Modern readers often miss that this interpretive vision rested on a broader metaphysical and theological framework. Language was assumed to be capable of referring to reality. History was assumed to possess intelligible form because it unfolded within divine providence. The events narrated in Scripture were therefore not merely occasions for religious reflection. They were themselves moments within the divine economy and could bear theological significance without ceasing to be historical.

Text, world, and divine action were not placed in competition with one another. Because God was understood to be the author of both creation and redemption, the world itself could signify more than its immediately visible surface. Scripture could therefore be read as truthful discourse about God’s action in history, and interpretation could proceed without anxiety over whether language might fail to mediate reality.

The Protestant Reformation reshaped this hermeneutical landscape decisively, yet it did so while retaining its basic theological orientation. Luther’s polemic against late medieval exegesis was not, at its deepest level, a rejection of theology in favor of method. It was a protest against forms of interpretation that, in his judgment, had allowed speculative and uncontrolled allegory to obscure the evangelical substance of Scripture.

Against this tendency, Luther emphasized the primacy of the literal sense and the principle that Scripture interprets itself—scriptura sui ipsius interpres. Yet this insistence did not reduce interpretation to historical description. The literal sense, for Luther, is not a self-sufficient historical residue accessible apart from theology. It is the determinate sense through which Scripture bears witness to Christ.

Luther’s account of the clarity of Scripture (claritas scripturae) makes this especially clear. Scripture is not clear because every passage is equally transparent when read in isolation, nor because interpretive difficulty can be solved by technical procedure alone. It is clear because its ultimate subject matter is Christ and the saving work of God revealed in him. The coherence of Scripture is therefore christological before it is methodological. One reads Scripture rightly not simply by mastering a technique, but by perceiving the unity of its witness as ordered toward the gospel.

Luther’s theology also reveals something more far-reaching about the nature of theological language itself. Scriptural discourse does not always conform to the expectations of ordinary rational clarity. It often speaks through paradox: divine power manifested in weakness, righteousness revealed under the form of judgment, life given through death, glory disclosed in the cross. These are not ornamental turns of phrase. They signal that theological language operates according to a distinctive logic arising from the event of revelation itself. God is known not through the ascent of speculative reason but through the scandalous and hidden form of the crucified Christ.

Interpretation therefore requires more than philological skill or historical sensitivity. It requires immersion in the grammar of the gospel—a grammar in which apparent contradiction becomes the medium through which divine truth is disclosed.

For all the differences between patristic, medieval, and Reformation exegesis, a fundamental continuity remained. Throughout this classical period, the philosophical assumptions underlying interpretation were largely unspoken because they were widely shared. Interpreters assumed that words could refer to realities, that historical events could bear theological meaning, that texts could participate in an intelligible order beyond the reader’s subjectivity, and that Scripture could truthfully communicate divine wisdom through human language.

Because these convictions remained largely intact, the interpretation of Scripture did not yet appear as a theoretical crisis. The question was not whether understanding was possible, nor whether language could mediate truth at all. The question was how Scripture, rightly received within the church, should be understood as the witness to God’s saving action.

In this setting, hermeneutics had not yet emerged as an independent discipline because there was no perceived need for one. Interpretation was simply one moment within theology’s larger task. Exegesis, doctrine, preaching, and spiritual formation belonged together within a single intellectual and ecclesial order. To interpret Scripture was already to engage in theology, just as theology itself remained accountable to Scripture as its normative source and governing authority.

Only with the rise of modern philosophy—especially the epistemological transformations associated with the Enlightenment—did these assumptions become matters of explicit dispute. As confidence in the transparency of language weakened, as tradition lost its self-evident authority, and as history came to be conceived in increasingly immanent and critical terms, the act of interpretation itself began to appear problematic in a new way.

The relation between text and meaning, language and reality, past and present could no longer be taken for granted. Understanding became uncertain, mediation suspect, and the very possibility of recovering truth through texts required theoretical justification.

It was at this point that hermeneutics began to detach itself from theology and present itself as an independent intellectual enterprise. What had once functioned as an implicit dimension of theological reasoning gradually became a general theory of interpretation, one capable of addressing not only biblical texts but textual understanding as such.

The birth of modern hermeneutics, therefore, was not simply the emergence of a new method. It marked the dissolution of the older theological and metaphysical framework within which Scripture had long been read. Once that framework fractured, interpretation could no longer proceed as a relatively untroubled practice within theology. It now required justification at the level of principle.

The modern discipline of hermeneutics was born precisely as the classical world that had sustained biblical interpretation for centuries began to erode. Its emergence was inseparable from a deeper crisis concerning reason, history, language, and authority. To understand modern biblical interpretation, one must therefore understand not only new exegetical procedures but also the philosophical upheavals that made those procedures appear necessary in the first place.

The next chapter in this story unfolds in the Enlightenment, where the conditions of interpretation were decisively recast. There the question was no longer simply how Scripture should be read within the church’s confession, but whether Scripture could still be received as truthful revelation under the new canons of reason, criticism, and historical consciousness.

II. Luther and the Nova Lingua of Theology

Yet Luther’s contribution to hermeneutics reaches deeper than the familiar Reformation principle that Scripture interprets itself. Important as that claim is, it does not exhaust what is most significant in Luther’s account of theological understanding. Beneath the methodological affirmation lies a more fundamental insight: the language of Scripture operates according to a distinctive grammar, one not simply reducible to the categories of ordinary discourse or to the conceptual habits of philosophical reasoning.

This feature becomes especially visible in Luther’s great polemical work De servo arbitrio. Throughout that text, Luther repeatedly employs formulations that strike the reader as paradoxical, even destabilizing. Strength is disclosed in weakness. Righteousness appears in the midst of sin. Freedom is found under the form of bondage. Life emerges through death. At first glance such expressions may seem merely rhetorical, the sort of heightened language common to theological controversy or devotional intensity. Yet in Luther’s argument they perform a more decisive function. They are not ornaments of style. They are disclosures of theological form.

What these formulations reveal is that theological language does not simply borrow its meaning from common usage and then apply it to sacred subject matter. Within the proclamation of the gospel, familiar terms undergo a profound semantic reordering. Words such as freedom, righteousness, power, wisdom, glory, and life do not retain the meanings assigned to them by ordinary moral intuition or philosophical reflection. They receive their proper sense only within the history of God’s action in Christ. What appears incoherent when judged by the canons of ordinary reasoning becomes intelligible once those terms are located within the narrative and logic of divine redemption.

Luther occasionally gestures toward this phenomenon by speaking of a nova lingua, a new language. The phrase is significant precisely because it does not imply the creation of an entirely new vocabulary. The words themselves remain familiar. What changes is the world of meaning in which they function. The gospel does not introduce an alien lexicon so much as it reconstitutes the semantic field within which theological predicates can be truthfully spoken. Language is taken up into revelation and, in that movement, made to signify according to a new order. Terms already present in human discourse are not abandoned; they are transformed by being placed within the drama of sin, judgment, grace, cross, and resurrection.

The hermeneutical implications of this insight are considerable. Luther is not merely recommending an interpretive procedure, nor simply urging readers to compare passage with passage until scriptural coherence emerges. He is recognizing something more basic: the language of theology itself follows a distinctive logic. Theological discourse cannot be mastered simply by appeal to ordinary definitions, abstract philosophical concepts, or the autonomous operations of reason. Its intelligibility depends upon inhabiting the grammar generated by revelation. One must learn how scriptural language works before one can determine what it says.

Within this nova lingua, the meaning of theological statements cannot be established by reference to conventional usage alone. Their meaning arises from the form of the gospel itself. Statements that appear contradictory when measured by ordinary categories become coherent once they are heard within the biblical proclamation. The claim that the sinner is righteous, for example, seems absurd if righteousness is understood as a moral condition transparently present in the subject. Yet within the evangelical grammar of justification such language becomes not only intelligible but necessary, because righteousness is understood not as an immediately visible possession but as a gift given in Christ and received in faith. The paradox is therefore not a defect of expression. It is the verbal form required by the reality to which the gospel bears witness.

Here one can see a subtle but important development within the broader classical tradition. Medieval theology had long acknowledged the richness and plurality of scriptural meaning. It recognized that the biblical text could be read according to multiple senses and that divine truth could exceed the most immediate level of verbal signification. Luther’s distinctiveness lies elsewhere. His contribution is not primarily the multiplication of senses, but the sharpening of attention to the way the biblical proclamation itself reshapes the conceptual framework within which theological speech becomes possible. He directs attention not only to what Scripture means, but also to how scriptural language means at all.

In this respect, theological discourse is not simply ordinary language extended toward divine objects. Nor is it a neutral conceptual instrument available for independent manipulation. It is a form of speech generated by the event of revelation itself. The language of theology is shaped by the divine act to which it responds. Because God is known in the crucified Christ, theological language inevitably bears the marks of that revelation: reversal, paradox, concealment, and disclosure. The grammar of theology is inseparable from the manner in which God gives himself to be known.

This point is easily obscured in later discussions of biblical interpretation, particularly once hermeneutics becomes closely identified with historical reconstruction. Modern scholarship tends to direct its attention toward recovering authorial intention, reconstructing historical settings, describing social contexts, and analyzing literary forms. Such work can be valuable and often necessary. Yet Luther’s insight suggests that these tasks do not yet reach the deepest level at which interpretation occurs. Before one can reconstruct what a text meant in its historical setting, one must already possess some sense of the linguistic and theological world within which its claims become intelligible. Historical method alone cannot provide that world, because the world in question is constituted by the gospel’s own logic.

In this sense, the Reformational insight remains of enduring importance. Interpretation is never merely the technical application of method to a neutral textual object. It always presupposes some prior understanding of how language relates to reality, how meaning arises, and what kind of truth is sought in the act of reading. Luther’s significance lies in the fact that he exposes, with unusual clarity, the specifically theological character of those prior assumptions. Scripture is not properly understood when it is forced into the semantic structures of unaided reason. It is understood only when its language is heard according to the grammar that arises from God’s reconciling action in Christ.

For Luther, then, the gospel is not simply one topic among others within Scripture. It is the generative center from which scriptural language receives its coherence. The proclamation of Christ does not merely add new content to an already established linguistic framework; it produces the framework within which theological speech becomes possible. It teaches the church how to speak, and therefore how to read. Only within this nova lingua can the peculiar claims of Scripture be recognized as more than contradiction, scandal, or folly. Only there do they emerge as truthful discourse about the God who justifies the ungodly, reveals power in weakness, and brings life out of death.

If hermeneutics concerns the conditions under which understanding becomes possible, then Luther’s importance lies not merely in offering a rule of interpretation but in exposing the deeper relation between revelation and language itself. Interpretation begins not with method alone but with the acquisition of a theological grammar. And that grammar is given not by speculative philosophy but by the gospel.

III. The Enlightenment Transformation

The Enlightenment did not merely introduce a new set of interpretive techniques. It altered the philosophical conditions under which interpretation itself was understood. What had long been treated as an internal task of theology was gradually recast as a problem of method, one to be governed by principles thought to be universally accessible apart from ecclesial authority or confessional commitment. The change was not simply procedural. It was conceptual. The very question of what it means to understand a text was being reformulated.

During the early modern period, growing historical consciousness and increasing philosophical suspicion toward inherited authority began to erode the classical assumptions that had governed the interpretation of Scripture for centuries. The authority of tradition no longer appeared self-authenticating, and ecclesial continuity could no longer function as an unquestioned horizon of understanding. Interpreters increasingly sought foundations for judgment that could claim universal legitimacy—not because they arose from the rule of faith, but because they could be justified by reason, grammar, and historical inquiry alone. The pressure of this shift was immense. Once theology ceased to provide the unquestioned framework for reading Scripture, interpretation had to locate its warrant elsewhere.

It was within this changing intellectual climate that Johann August Ernesti formulated the principle that would become foundational for modern biblical interpretation: the Bible must be interpreted like any other book. At first the claim can sound restrained, even obvious. Ernesti did not deny that Scripture has religious significance, nor did he simply dismiss its theological authority. Yet the force of the principle lay precisely in its methodological neutrality. If Scripture is to be read according to the same linguistic and historical rules that govern all other texts, then its interpretation can no longer depend upon the doctrinal judgments of the church or upon a theological account of divine revelation. Interpretation must proceed instead by appeal to those general principles of grammar, usage, literary convention, and historical context that apply to written discourse as such.

This marked a decisive break with the classical tradition. In the earlier theological world, Scripture had been read as a unique kind of text because it was understood to be a unique kind of discourse: human words bearing divine truth within the economy of salvation. Ernesti’s principle did not necessarily deny that claim outright, but it bracketed it methodologically. Theological judgments were no longer permitted to govern interpretation at its foundation. Meaning was to be sought first at the level of ordinary linguistic operations. The interpreter’s task became the recovery of what the human author intended to say in a particular historical setting, using the conventions of language available at the time.

The philosophical assumption underlying this transformation was profound. Meaning was now understood to arise not from participation in a theological reality to which the text bore witness, but from the normal functioning of language within determinate historical circumstances. Words signify by usage. Texts mean what their authors, as historical agents, intended them to mean. Interpretation therefore proceeds by reconstructing the conditions under which meaning was originally produced. The shift appears modest only so long as one overlooks its implications. Once meaning is located primarily in historical-linguistic process, the theological framework that had previously oriented scriptural interpretation is no longer constitutive. It may remain a matter of belief, but it no longer governs method.

In this way interpretation gradually detached itself from the theological order that had sustained the classical tradition. Scripture could still be revered, preached, and confessed within the life of the church. Yet the academic interpretation of Scripture increasingly sought to justify itself on grounds independent of those practices. Understanding became a matter of disciplined historical and grammatical inquiry rather than participation in a received theological world. The result was not the abandonment of interpretation, but its relocation. The center of gravity shifted from theology to method, from ecclesial judgment to critical procedure, from the unity of divine discourse to the recoverable intentions of historically situated authors.

This development was carried much further by Friedrich Schleiermacher, who transformed what had been a set of exegetical principles into a comprehensive philosophical account of understanding itself. With Schleiermacher, hermeneutics ceased to be a specialized concern attached primarily to biblical interpretation or classical philology. It became a universal discipline—a general theory concerned with the conditions under which any act of textual understanding becomes possible. The significance of this move can hardly be overstated. Hermeneutics was no longer a subordinate tool in the service of theology; it had become an autonomous field of reflection in its own right.

According to Schleiermacher, interpretation involves two interrelated moments. The first is grammatical interpretation, by which the reader attends to the linguistic structure of the text and situates its expressions within the wider system of language. The second is psychological interpretation, by which the reader seeks to reconstruct the interior act of thought or intention from which the text emerged. To understand a text fully, therefore, is not only to parse its words correctly but also to re-enter the mental world of its author. Interpretation becomes an act of empathetic reconstruction—a disciplined effort to recover the original movement of consciousness that produced the utterance.

Here the transformation of hermeneutics becomes unmistakable. The aim of interpretation is no longer primarily to hear Scripture as the church’s witness to divine revelation. It is to understand an author better than he understood himself by situating his expression within the totality of linguistic and psychological conditions that made it possible. Meaning is sought through reconstruction rather than reception, through re-creation of the original act of expression rather than through participation in a theological economy. The interpreter now stands before the text not first as a hearer within the communion of faith, but as an analyst of human communication.

With Schleiermacher, hermeneutics fully emerges as an independent philosophical discipline. Interpretation is no longer conceived primarily as a theological practice governed by the rule of faith, the christological coherence of Scripture, or the sacramental relation between divine truth and human language. It becomes a universal theory of understanding applicable to every form of discourse. Sacred and secular texts are now treated within the same formal horizon. Scripture is no longer unique in principle as an object of interpretation; it becomes one instance of the broader problem of textual understanding.

This development represents one of the most consequential intellectual transformations in the history of biblical interpretation. What had once been an internal task of theology was recast as a methodological problem within the wider study of language, history, and culture. The shift did not occur because interpreters simply lost interest in theology. It occurred because the conditions under which theology could function as an authoritative horizon of interpretation had themselves come under suspicion. Once universal reason, historical inquiry, and critical analysis were treated as the primary avenues to knowledge, interpretation had to be justified in those terms. Hermeneutics became autonomous because theology was no longer permitted to provide its unquestioned ground.

The modern discipline of hermeneutics was therefore born precisely when the theological framework that had governed scriptural interpretation for centuries was set aside in favor of general principles of linguistic and historical analysis. This did not mean that theology disappeared. It meant that theology was displaced from its former governing role. Scripture could still be read devotionally, doctrinally, and ecclesially, but the dominant intellectual account of interpretation had changed. Meaning was now to be established by critical method before it could be taken up into theological reflection.

The consequences of that shift would only deepen in the nineteenth century. Once interpretation had been relocated within the categories of history, language, and human consciousness, the rise of historical consciousness would transform biblical studies even further. The question was no longer merely how texts mean, but how historically conditioned forms of life generate meaning at all. It is there, in the world of historicism, that modern hermeneutics takes its next decisive turn.

IV. Historicism and the Rise of Historical Consciousness 

During the nineteenth century, hermeneutics underwent another decisive transformation as European thought came increasingly under the influence of what is often called historical consciousness. The growing recognition that human ideas, institutions, practices, and texts are products of particular historical conditions fundamentally altered the way interpretation was conceived. Earlier interpreters had certainly acknowledged that texts arise within specific times and places. But in the nineteenth century historical situatedness ceased to function as a secondary consideration and became instead the primary horizon within which meaning itself was understood.

This shift involved more than an increase in historical knowledge. It introduced a new way of thinking about truth, culture, and human self-understanding. Meaning was no longer assumed to stand above history in the form of timeless rational or theological principles transparently available across ages. It was increasingly understood as something mediated by the historical worlds in which human beings live, speak, and think. The interpreter’s task, accordingly, was no longer simply to clarify what a text says, but to recover the historical conditions that made such saying possible in the first place.

This development was closely connected to the rise of modern philology. Scholars such as Friedrich August Wolf and Friedrich Ast argued that texts can be understood only through the careful reconstruction of the linguistic, cultural, and intellectual worlds from which they emerged. Interpretation thus became irreducibly historical. The meaning of a text was no longer located primarily within a theological framework that transcended historical difference, nor within a stable philosophical order presumed to be universally accessible. It was sought instead within the horizon of the author, the conventions of language, and the broader cultural world that shaped both expression and understanding.

Ast, in particular, gave this development a broader theoretical form by emphasizing the organic unity of historical cultures. An individual text, on this view, can never be fully understood in isolation. It is the expression of a wider spiritual and intellectual totality—a particular historical world whose language, institutions, assumptions, and forms of life give it meaning. To interpret a text therefore requires more than lexical analysis or grammatical precision. It requires situating the text within the total life of the historical community from which it emerged. Meaning arises from the whole, and the whole in turn can be grasped only through its particular expressions. Interpretation thus moves within a circular relation between part and whole, text and culture, expression and historical world.

These developments prepared the way for the more systematic reflections of Wilhelm Dilthey, who sought to provide a philosophical foundation for what he called the Geisteswissenschaften, the human sciences. Dilthey’s concern was not limited to textual interpretation in a narrow sense. He addressed the broader problem of understanding human life as it becomes objectified in history. Unlike the natural sciences, which explain phenomena by identifying causal laws, the human sciences aim to understand the meaningful expressions through which human life becomes visible to itself. Texts, institutions, works of art, legal systems, and historical events are all embodiments of what Dilthey called lived experience (Erlebnis). They are not inert objects but expressions of life.

Within this framework, hermeneutics assumes a new and enlarged significance. It becomes the methodological core of the human sciences because it provides the means by which the inner structures of historical life can be reconstructed from their outward expressions. To interpret is to move from the visible form of an expression to the lived world that produced it. Understanding becomes a disciplined act of historical reanimation—an effort to recover the nexus of experience, intention, and cultural formation from which a text or practice has emerged. Hermeneutics is therefore no longer simply a regional concern of biblical exegesis or classical scholarship. It becomes a general account of how historical understanding itself is possible.

Within this framework, interpretation is no longer primarily oriented toward the recovery of timeless theological truth. Its focus shifts instead to the historical forms of life within which particular utterances become intelligible. A text matters because it discloses a world. To understand that world is not first to ask whether its claims are true in a metaphysical or doctrinal sense, but to grasp how those claims arose as meaningful expressions within a particular historical situation. The emphasis thus falls on contextual intelligibility rather than theological normativity, on historical reconstruction rather than confessional reception.

The influence of this historical orientation on biblical studies was immense. During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the study of Scripture increasingly adopted the methods and ambitions of historical investigation. Biblical texts came to be treated as historical artifacts whose significance could be explained only by reconstructing the processes through which they were composed, transmitted, edited, and received. Scholars sought to move behind the canonical form of the text in order to identify earlier sources, recover pre-literary traditions, describe the social settings in which these traditions circulated, and trace the editorial activity by which they were gathered into their present literary shape.

From this setting emerged the major forms of modern historical criticism. Source criticism attempted to identify the written strata that lie behind the biblical books. Form criticism classified smaller units of tradition according to genre and social setting, asking how they functioned within the life of the community before being incorporated into written texts. Redaction criticism, in turn, examined the theological and literary intentions of the editors who shaped inherited materials into larger wholes. Different as these approaches were, they shared a common conviction: the meaning of Scripture could not be adequately understood without historical explanation of the conditions under which it came into being.

The consequences of this shift were far-reaching. Earlier interpreters had certainly attended to history, but they did so within an overarching theological framework in which Scripture was read primarily as a witness to divine revelation. Nineteenth-century historicism altered this order of priority. The biblical text increasingly appeared first as an object of historical analysis and only secondarily, if at all, as an authoritative theological word. Interpretation became an exercise in explanation rather than reception, in reconstruction rather than confession. The central task was no longer to hear Scripture as the living voice of the divine economy, but to account for it as a product of historical development.

This did not necessarily imply hostility toward theology. Many scholars continued to regard biblical study as religiously significant. Yet the controlling intellectual assumptions had changed. Once historical consciousness became dominant, theological claims could no longer function as the unquestioned horizon within which exegesis proceeded. They themselves became historically conditioned phenomena to be described and analyzed. Revelation, doctrine, and ecclesial authority were drawn into the same historical field as every other human product. The distinction between sacred and secular texts was methodologically diminished, if not entirely suspended.

What emerged, therefore, was a profound reorientation of the interpretive task. Scripture was no longer approached primarily as a coherent theological witness grounded in God’s redemptive action. It was approached as a complex historical phenomenon, composed across time, shaped by communities, and marked by development, tension, and diversity. The goal of interpretation correspondingly shifted. What earlier ages sought as theological understanding, modern scholarship increasingly pursued as historical explanation.

This nineteenth-century transformation remains one of the decisive conditions of contemporary biblical interpretation. Much of what now appears self-evident within modern scholarship—the priority of historical context, the centrality of authorial and communal setting, the treatment of texts as products of development rather than as transparent unities—derives from the triumph of historicist assumptions during this period. Hermeneutics had been detached from theology in the Enlightenment; in the age of historicism it became ever more deeply embedded within the study of historical life.

Yet historicism also generated tensions it could not finally resolve. If all meaning is historically conditioned, then the interpreter is no less historically conditioned than the text. If understanding requires entry into a past world, by what means can the present interpreter overcome the distance that separates one historical horizon from another? It is precisely at this point that hermeneutics would undergo another major development. The central question would no longer be only how to reconstruct the past, but how understanding itself occurs across the distance between past and present. That question opens the way to philosophical hermeneutics in the twentieth century

V. Philosophical Hermeneutics and the Problem of Situated Understanding

By the early twentieth century, historical consciousness had become the dominant framework for interpreting texts. Scholars increasingly assumed that understanding required reconstructing the historical conditions under which a work had been produced. To interpret a text was to recover its original horizon—the language, culture, intentions, and historical setting that gave rise to it. Yet this historicist model soon became the object of philosophical criticism. The problem was not merely whether historical reconstruction could be carried out with sufficient rigor. More fundamentally, it was whether interpretation could ever be reduced to method at all.

The most decisive challenge came from Martin Heidegger, who transformed the discussion by shifting the focus of hermeneutics from epistemology and method to ontology. In Being and Time, Heidegger argued that understanding is not first a specialized scholarly procedure applied to texts. It is a basic structure of human existence itself. Human beings do not begin as detached observers confronting a world of neutral objects and subsequently assigning meaning to them. Rather, they always already find themselves situated within a world that is meaningful in advance of explicit reflection. The world is encountered not as raw material awaiting interpretation, but as a field of significance already shaped by practices, concerns, and possibilities.

This shift is decisive. If understanding belongs to the very structure of human existence, then interpretation cannot be treated merely as a technique for recovering an external meaning. It is rooted more deeply in what Heidegger calls being-in-the-world. Human existence is always situated, always already involved, always oriented by prior structures of intelligibility that make any encounter with the world possible. One does not first achieve a position outside all assumptions and then begin to understand. One understands from within a prior horizon of meaning that one never fully chooses and never wholly escapes.

From this perspective, interpretation cannot be reduced to reconstructing an author’s intention or recovering an original historical context as though the interpreter could simply enter the past through disciplined method alone. Every act of understanding arises from within a preexisting world of assumptions, habits, and possibilities. Interpreters inevitably approach texts with anticipations that shape what can appear to them and how it can appear. Understanding is therefore not the overcoming of situatedness but its enactment. It is precisely because human beings are already formed by worlds of meaning that interpretation is possible at all.

Heidegger thus transformed hermeneutics from a regional discipline into a philosophical account of existence. The question was no longer merely how texts should be interpreted, but how understanding belongs to the mode of being proper to finite and historical creatures. Hermeneutics ceased to be primarily methodological and became ontological. Interpretation was now seen as an expression of the fact that human life always unfolds within structures of significance that precede deliberate reflection and condition every act of knowing.

Hans-Georg Gadamer developed this Heideggerian insight into what he famously called philosophical hermeneutics. In Truth and Method, Gadamer argues that the modern search for an objective interpretive method capable of neutralizing the interpreter’s historical situation rests on a misunderstanding of how understanding actually occurs. The ideal of method had encouraged interpreters to imagine that genuine understanding requires the bracketing of all prior commitments in order to recover an original meaning in its pure objectivity. Gadamer’s central contention is that this ideal is illusory. Understanding does not arise by escaping one’s historical situation, but by working within it.

For Gadamer, interpretation is not a technique by which a reader strips away personal assumptions in order to uncover a meaning hidden within the text. Rather, understanding occurs through the encounter between two historical horizons: the horizon of the text and the horizon of the interpreter. Every act of reading begins within a historically conditioned standpoint, and it is only from within such a standpoint that a text can address the reader at all. The interpreter does not stand over against the text as a neutral consciousness. He stands within a tradition of language, concepts, and expectations that makes the very possibility of understanding possible.

This is why Gadamer rehabilitates the notion of prejudice. For him, prejudice does not simply name irrational bias or distorting subjectivity. It refers more fundamentally to those historically formed assumptions and anticipations that belong to the structure of understanding itself. These prejudgments are not obstacles to interpretation in the first instance; they are the conditions under which interpretation begins. One cannot understand without bringing expectations to the encounter. The task, therefore, is not to eliminate prejudice entirely, but to allow one’s prejudgments to be tested, corrected, and transformed in dialogue with the text.

Interpretation thus unfolds as a dialogical event. As the reader engages the text, the assumptions brought to the encounter do not remain unchanged. They are exposed to challenge, revision, and reorientation. Gadamer describes this process as a fusion of horizons (Horizontverschmelzung), not because past and present collapse into one another without remainder, but because understanding arises through their interaction. The horizon of the text and the horizon of the interpreter meet, and in that meeting a new act of understanding becomes possible. Meaning is not simply extracted from the past as though it were a fixed object lying behind the text. It comes to presence in the event of interpretation itself.

At this point Gadamer introduces one of his most important concepts: wirkungsgeschichtliches Bewusstsein, historically effected consciousness. The phrase names the recognition that interpreters do not confront history from outside history. They are themselves shaped by the very traditions, conceptual inheritances, and linguistic developments they seek to understand. The past is not a distant object laid before the interpreter for inspection. It is active in the present, shaping the categories through which the present understands itself. Every reader therefore stands within an ongoing history of effects. Language, concepts, canons of judgment, and even the questions one brings to a text are themselves historically mediated.

Understanding, therefore, is neither the simple recovery of an original meaning untouched by later history nor merely a projection of subjective preference. It is the event in which text, interpreter, and tradition interact within a historically mediated field of meaning. The interpreter’s task is not to abolish historical situatedness but to become reflective about it. Understanding requires attentiveness to the ways in which one’s own horizon has already been shaped by the history into which one has been thrown.

Gadamer’s account also redefines the role of tradition in a way that sharply departs from Enlightenment suspicion. Enlightenment thought had often treated tradition as an impediment to knowledge—an inherited weight from which reason must free itself in order to achieve objectivity. Gadamer reverses this assumption. Tradition is not first a barrier to understanding but the medium in which understanding becomes possible at all. Human beings do not invent from nothing the language through which they think, the concepts by which they judge, or the interpretive patterns through which the world becomes intelligible. They receive them. Understanding is therefore historically mediated before it is methodologically controlled.

At a deeper level, this entire development stands within the trajectory inaugurated by Immanuel Kant. Kant’s critical philosophy had already argued that human knowledge does not simply mirror an independent reality as it is in itself. Experience is possible only because the knowing subject contributes the formal conditions under which objects can appear. The mind does not passively receive the world in an unstructured form; it organizes experience according to the a priori conditions that make intelligibility possible. Whatever one makes of Kant’s specific account, the decisive point is clear: human knowing is conditioned from the side of the subject.

Heidegger radicalized this insight by relocating it from transcendental subjectivity into the concrete existence of human life. The conditions of understanding are not merely universal structures of consciousness but features of historically situated existence. Gadamer extended the argument further by showing that these conditions are mediated through language, tradition, and historical life. What Kant had identified at the level of the knowing subject, Heidegger and Gadamer reinterpreted at the level of existence and history. The result is a conception of interpretation in which understanding always occurs within historically conditioned horizons of meaning that cannot be bypassed in the name of pure method.

The implications of this shift for biblical interpretation were profound. Once the interpreter’s historical situation was recognized as constitutive of understanding, biblical exegesis could no longer be described simply as the recovery of an original historical meaning lying intact behind the text. The reader was no longer a neutral analyst standing outside the interpretive process. Every reading of Scripture arose from within a particular horizon of questions, traditions, conceptual inheritances, and communal practices. Interpretation became reflexive: the reader had to account not only for the historical world of the text but also for the world from which the reading itself proceeded.

This development did not eliminate the importance of historical inquiry. It did, however, relativize the assumption that history alone could secure meaning. The meaning of the biblical text increasingly appeared as something that arises through the interaction between Scripture’s historical witness and the interpretive horizon of contemporary readers. The question was no longer only what the text once meant, but how its meaning comes to address the present through the historical and linguistic conditions of understanding itself.

Philosophical hermeneutics thus reshaped modern discussions of biblical interpretation by exposing the illusion of interpretive neutrality. The interpreter is never a spectator outside history but always a participant within it. Reading Scripture is therefore not simply the application of method to a stable object. It is an event in which text, reader, and tradition mutually implicate one another within a living history of understanding.

Yet for all its power, philosophical hermeneutics also introduced new questions. If meaning arises through historically conditioned horizons, what becomes of truth? If understanding is always mediated by language and tradition, how can revelation claim authority over the interpreter rather than simply being absorbed into the interpreter’s own horizon? And if the conditions of understanding are themselves historically variable, does interpretation culminate in genuine knowledge of divine reality, or only in an ever-renewed conversation within history?

The enduring significance of philosophical hermeneutics lies in the fact that it made impossible any simple return to precritical innocence. One could no longer speak of interpretation as though the reader were absent from the act of understanding. But neither could one rest content with mere historicism. The problem had shifted once again. Hermeneutics was no longer simply about recovering the past. It had become the question of how truth, language, history, and human finitude belong together in the act of understanding itself.

VI. The Anglo-American Trajectory 

While continental hermeneutics developed through the philosophical work of figures such as Heidegger and Gadamer, a different trajectory unfolded in the Anglo-American world. Here reflection on interpretation was shaped less by a unified philosophical account of understanding and more by developments within biblical scholarship, literary criticism, and, later, analytic philosophy.

For much of the twentieth century, biblical studies in English-speaking universities remained dominated by the historical-critical method. Building on the nineteenth-century legacy of German scholarship, interpreters sought to reconstruct the processes through which the biblical texts had come into being. Attention focused on identifying literary sources, tracing the growth of traditions, and reconstructing the historical settings in which particular texts or communities emerged.

Methods such as source criticism, form criticism, and redaction criticism treated the biblical writings primarily as historical documents whose meaning was to be explained in relation to the conditions of their production. The central task of interpretation therefore became historical reconstruction rather than theological reflection. Biblical studies increasingly aligned itself with the wider practices of historical scholarship and with adjacent disciplines such as religious studies and ancient Near Eastern history.

At the same time, a different development was taking place within literary criticism. Movements such as New Criticism shifted attention away from authorial intention and historical background toward the internal structure of the text itself. On this view, meaning arises through the interplay of formal elements such as imagery, narrative design, metaphor, irony, and rhetorical pattern. The text was treated less as a historical artifact to be explained and more as a literary object to be read closely.

This literary turn had important consequences for biblical interpretation. It encouraged scholars to regard the Bible not simply as a collection of historical sources but as a body of texts possessing literary shape, narrative coherence, and rhetorical force. From the latter half of the twentieth century onward, a range of approaches emerged that foregrounded these dimensions. Narrative criticism examined the structure of biblical stories and the ways narrative form itself carries theological significance. Canonical criticism, in turn, asked how the final form of the canon functions as a theological whole rather than as a mere repository of earlier traditions.

Reader-response approaches extended the discussion further by emphasizing the role of the reader in the production of meaning. Influenced by wider developments in literary theory, these approaches argued that interpretation is never simply the passive recovery of what a text already contains. It is also shaped by the expectations, assumptions, and interpretive strategies that readers bring to the act of reading. Whatever one makes of the stronger versions of this claim, it contributed to a broader recognition that meaning cannot be discussed without some account of the reader’s participation in interpretation.

Alongside these developments, another influence entered the discussion from analytic philosophy. Twentieth-century philosophers of language increasingly drew attention to the ways meaning arises from use, convention, and communicative practice. Wittgenstein’s later philosophy emphasized that language functions within forms of life, while Austin and Searle showed that utterances do not merely describe states of affairs but can also perform actions.

Speech-act theory proved especially suggestive for theology and biblical studies. On this account, language is not exhausted by its descriptive content. Promises, commands, blessings, warnings, and declarations accomplish something in the very act of being spoken. When applied to Scripture, this perspective opened the possibility of understanding biblical language not merely as the communication of information but as a form of discourse that acts upon its hearers. Scripture could thus be approached as language that summons, judges, promises, commands, and forms the community that receives it.

The result was an increasingly complex interpretive landscape. Historical, literary, and philosophical approaches intersected without being integrated into a single theoretical framework. Unlike the continental tradition, which sought a comprehensive philosophical account of understanding, the Anglo-American world tended to produce a plurality of methods shaped by different disciplinary concerns. Historical critics asked how texts came to be. Literary critics asked how texts function in their final form. Reader-oriented approaches asked how meaning emerges in the act of reading. Philosophers of language asked what kind of activity language performs when it is used.

Yet beneath this methodological diversity a common question gradually came into view: how should the relation between language, meaning, and reality be understood in the interpretation of Scripture? Historical criticism tended to locate meaning in the past. Literary approaches drew attention to the integrity of the text in its final form. Reader-oriented theories emphasized the conditions of reception. Analytic philosophy, meanwhile, reopened the question of what language itself accomplishes. Taken together, these developments made it increasingly difficult to treat interpretation as merely a technical procedure.

It is precisely at this point that the possibility of reconnecting biblical interpretation with philosophical theology begins to re-emerge. Once the central issue is recognized to concern the nature of language, the conditions of meaning, and the relation of textual discourse to reality, interpretation can no longer remain simply a matter of disciplinary technique. It is drawn back toward the larger philosophical and theological questions from which modern hermeneutics had once attempted to detach itself.

VII. The Contemporary Landscape and the Hans Frei Proposal

By the late twentieth century, many theologians had begun to question the dominance of historical-critical interpretation. The issue was not simply whether historical criticism had produced valuable results. It plainly had. The deeper question was whether its underlying assumptions had come to shape the meaning of Scripture in ways that displaced the theological function of the text itself.

One of the most important voices in this discussion was Hans Frei. Frei argued that modern biblical interpretation had gradually subordinated the narrative world of Scripture to explanatory frameworks external to the text. In the premodern tradition, he observed, the biblical narrative had functioned as the primary framework within which Christian identity and understanding were formed. Scripture was not approached chiefly as a source of historical data lying behind the text, nor as an occasion for the interpretive self-activity of the reader. Its narratives provided the world within which believers learned to locate themselves.

Modern hermeneutics altered this relation in decisive ways. Historical criticism directed attention behind the text toward the events, sources, and developmental processes from which it emerged. Philosophical hermeneutics, by contrast, drew attention to the role of the interpreter and the conditions under which meaning arises in the present. Different as these approaches were, both tended to marginalize the narrative coherence of Scripture itself. The text was often treated either as a window onto a historical reality lying behind it or as a site in which meaning is generated through the encounter with the reader. In either case, the plain sense of the biblical narrative as narrative was displaced.

Frei’s response was neither a retreat into precritical naĂŻvetĂ© nor a simple rejection of modern hermeneutics. He did not deny the significance of historical consciousness, nor did he suggest that the problems raised by modern interpretation could simply be set aside. His point, rather, was that the theological function of Scripture cannot be exhausted by historical reconstruction. The meaning of biblical narrative is not finally secured by recovering events behind the text, but by attending to the world the text itself renders. The literal sense, in Frei’s account, is not a minimal residue of historical reference. It is the sense generated by the narrative shape of Scripture as it identifies its subject matter.

This was the force of Frei’s appeal to the literal sense. He sought to recover the priority of the biblical narrative itself as the medium through which Christian understanding is formed. Scripture means not because it can first be translated into some more fundamental historical or conceptual substrate, but because its narrative world has the power to render reality under the description given in the text. The Gospels, for example, do not merely provide materials from which a historical figure may be reconstructed. They identify Jesus Christ through the unsubstitutable shape of the narrative itself. To read them rightly is therefore not first to move behind them, but to attend to the way their plain sense depicts the identity of their subject.

For this reason, Frei’s proposal is best understood as a sophisticated response to the modern hermeneutical situation rather than as a repudiation of it. He accepts the irreversibility of historical consciousness, yet resists the conclusion that Scripture’s theological significance must therefore be subordinated to historical method. His work marks an attempt to recover the text’s role in shaping Christian judgment without denying the intellectual conditions of modernity. In that respect, Frei stands at a critical juncture: he does not undo the modern problem of interpretation, but he does seek to relocate biblical meaning within the actual practice of reading Scripture as Scripture.

The significance of this move was considerable. Frei’s work helped prepare the way for what would later be called the theological interpretation of Scripture. That movement, in its various forms, sought to recover the reading of Scripture within the doctrinal and ecclesial life of the church without simply abandoning the gains of modern scholarship. At its best, theological interpretation argues that Scripture should be read not only as an ancient text open to historical analysis, but also as the normative witness through which the church hears and speaks of God.

Within Lutheran contexts, the implications of Frei’s proposal have been received in different ways. The traditional Reformation principle that Scripture interprets itself has continued to generate divergent hermeneutical trajectories, including those visible in figures such as James Voeltz and Ralph Klein. What these debates make clear is that hermeneutics remains a live issue within confessional theology itself. The question is no longer whether Scripture should be interpreted theologically, but how such theological interpretation can be articulated under modern conditions.

The contemporary landscape is therefore marked less by resolution than by renewed contestation. Historical criticism remains influential, philosophical hermeneutics continues to shape reflection on the conditions of understanding, and theological interpretation presses the question of how Scripture functions within the life of faith. Frei’s work remains important because it names the central issue with unusual clarity: whether the meaning of Scripture is to be sought chiefly behind the text, before the text, or within the narrative world rendered by the text itself.

VIII. Model Theory and Biblical Hermeneutics 

The developments surveyed above disclose a recurring problem. Modern hermeneutics has yielded powerful insights into the historical, linguistic, and existential dimensions of interpretation, yet it has often left unresolved a more basic question: how does theological language relate to reality? Historical criticism clarifies the conditions under which texts arose. Philosophical hermeneutics illuminates the situated character of understanding. Literary approaches attend to the shape and force of texts as texts. But none of these developments, taken by themselves, fully answers the question of how biblical discourse refers to God, world, and history.

This unresolved issue became increasingly important in late twentieth-century theology. By that point many theologians had begun to question the dominance of historical-critical interpretation—not because its achievements were negligible, but because its success appeared to come at a cost. Historical scholarship had yielded extraordinary insight into the origins, development, and formation of biblical texts. Yet it also forced a pressing question to the surface: what had become of Scripture as the central text of Christian theology? If Scripture is treated principally as an artifact to be explained through historical reconstruction, then its theological function risks becoming secondary to the methods used to analyze it.

The resulting tensions were especially visible in debates over the place of historical criticism within confessional traditions. Discussions surrounding figures such as James Voeltz and Ralph Klein illustrate the continuing difficulty of relating historical scholarship to theological interpretation within Lutheran biblical studies. The issue was not simply whether historical-critical work should be accepted or rejected. The deeper issue concerned the conceptual framework within which Scripture is understood. Is biblical meaning exhausted by historical explanation, or does the theological use of Scripture require a more robust account of how biblical language signifies reality?

It is at precisely this point that model theory becomes relevant. For the central difficulty in modern hermeneutics is not merely methodological. It is semantic and ontological. How do theological statements mean? In what sense do biblical descriptions, narratives, and predicates refer? How can scriptural language speak truthfully of God without collapsing either into literalism on the one hand or nonreferential symbolism on the other? These questions cannot be resolved by historical method alone, because they concern the nature of theological discourse as discourse.

Model theory offers one possible way forward because it directs attention to the relation between language and world. In its broadest sense, model theory asks how systems of language may be understood in relation to structures of meaning that render their claims intelligible. When transposed into theological discussion, this approach opens a way of describing how biblical language may function referentially without requiring that every theological statement operate according to the descriptive conventions of ordinary empirical discourse. The issue is therefore not whether theological language refers, but how it refers.

This insight carries important consequences for hermeneutics. If biblical language functions through models, patterns, and conceptually ordered forms of representation, then interpretation cannot be reduced either to the recovery of authorial intention or to the free play of readerly response. Nor can it be confined to the internal analysis of literary form. Interpretation must also ask how the language of Scripture renders reality under specific theological descriptions. Biblical discourse does not merely report historical events, nor merely evoke religious experience. It presents the world, Israel, Christ, judgment, promise, and God himself under determinate modes of intelligibility.

Such an approach helps clarify what was at stake in many of the debates surveyed above. The classical tradition assumed that scriptural language could truthfully mediate divine reality. Enlightenment and historicist approaches relocated meaning within historical and linguistic process. Philosophical hermeneutics emphasized the historically conditioned horizon of understanding. Literary and reader-oriented approaches drew attention to textual form and reception. Yet throughout these developments the question of reference remained unsettled. Model theory becomes significant precisely because it reopens that question directly. It asks how theological language may be both conceptually disciplined and world-disclosing.

In this sense, model theory does not replace the concerns of modern hermeneutics. Rather, it gathers them within a more fundamental inquiry. Historical context still matters, because models arise within particular linguistic and intellectual settings. The interpreter’s horizon still matters, because understanding is historically situated. Narrative and literary form still matter, because biblical meaning is carried through textual patterns rather than isolated propositions. Yet beyond all this lies the larger theological question: how does Scripture, through its own forms of discourse, render reality intelligible as the reality of God’s action?

The enduring importance of this question is evident in contemporary theology. The relation between historical scholarship, philosophical reflection, and theological interpretation remains contested. The debate is no longer simply over method. It concerns the nature of biblical language itself. To ask how Scripture should be interpreted is ultimately to ask what kind of discourse Scripture is, what sort of world it renders, and how its language may truthfully refer to divine reality. It is here that model theory promises not a final solution, but a more adequate conceptual framework for rethinking the relation between language, meaning, and theological truth.

IX. Model Theory and the Reference of Theological Language 

The preceding discussion leads directly to a question that modern hermeneutics has often sharpened without finally resolving: how does theological language refer? Historical criticism can describe the conditions under which biblical texts were produced. Philosophical hermeneutics can clarify the situated character of understanding. Literary approaches can illuminate the formal and narrative dimensions of Scripture. Yet none of these by itself provides a sufficient account of how biblical language relates to reality, and especially how it may speak truthfully of God.

It is at this point that model theory becomes important. The term is used in different ways across disciplines, but its relevance for theology can be stated simply enough. A model is not merely a decorative metaphor or a heuristic fiction. It is a structured way of representing reality by organizing perception and judgment according to a determinate pattern. Models do not merely label what is already obvious. They make certain aspects of reality intelligible by rendering them under a particular conceptual form. To speak of the atom as a miniature solar system, of the mind as a machine, or of society as an organism is not merely to employ vivid language. It is to propose a way of understanding how a domain of reality is structured.

Theological language frequently operates in this way. Scripture speaks of God as king, shepherd, father, judge, redeemer, and creator. It speaks of Israel as vineyard, flock, servant, and bride. It speaks of the church as body, temple, priesthood, and new creation. None of these designations functions as a simple synonym for a neutral underlying concept. Each organizes understanding by situating its subject matter within a field of relations, expectations, and judgments. A model does not merely assert that God exists or that Christ saves. It renders the character of divine action intelligible by locating it within a pattern of meaning.

This point matters because theological language is not well described by the alternatives that have often governed modern debates. On the one hand, theological statements are sometimes treated as though they must refer in exactly the same way as empirical descriptions. On that assumption, meaningful discourse is discourse that corresponds directly to observable states of affairs, and anything that fails to function in that manner becomes suspect. On the other hand, theological language is sometimes reduced to symbol, projection, or expressive utterance, such that its significance lies chiefly in its ability to evoke attitudes or sustain communal practices rather than to say anything true about reality. Model theory offers a way beyond this opposition. It suggests that theological language may be genuinely referential without being reducible to flat description.

This is because models mediate reference through structured representation. They do not refer by offering exhaustive or univocal description. Rather, they refer by presenting reality under a pattern that discloses relevant relations and renders intelligible what might otherwise remain obscure. In this respect, model theory is particularly useful for theology. God is not an object among other objects within the world, nor is divine reality available to empirical inspection in the same way that one examines a physical event or material process. If God is to be spoken of truthfully, such speech must employ forms of discourse capable of rendering divine action intelligible without treating God as one item within a common ontological field. Models allow language to remain referential while acknowledging the distinctive character of its subject matter.

This feature is already evident in Scripture itself. Biblical language rarely proceeds by abstract definition. Instead it characteristically works through narrative, image, pattern, and typological relation. God’s identity is disclosed in acts and relations: the one who brought Israel out of Egypt, who raised Jesus from the dead, who justifies the ungodly, who judges the nations, who dwells with his people. Such language is not therefore noncognitive. On the contrary, it is precisely through these concrete patterns of discourse that Scripture renders divine reality known.

To say that God is king is not merely to borrow a political image for devotional effect. It is to render God’s relation to the world in terms of authority, judgment, protection, order, and covenantal rule. To say that Christ is the Lamb of God is not merely to append a pious metaphor to an otherwise neutral subject. It is to place the identity of Christ within a sacrificial and redemptive pattern that orders the understanding of his work.

Model theory helps make sense of this by showing that such language neither abandons reference nor secures it through literalist reduction. Biblical models disclose reality by redescribing it. They allow the world to be seen under theological predicates. In this sense, theological language is not simply appended to an independently intelligible reality. It is world-interpreting discourse. It renders reality under forms that arise from the history of divine action and the communal practices of faith.

This insight has direct consequences for hermeneutics. If Scripture speaks through models, then interpretation cannot consist merely in translating biblical language into allegedly more basic historical or conceptual terms. Nor can it treat images, titles, and narratives as ornamental surfaces concealing a more fundamental meaning beneath them. The model is not dispensable. It is the form in which the meaning is given. To interpret Scripture is therefore to ask how its patterns of discourse render reality intelligible, what world they disclose, and how they order judgment concerning God, humanity, and history.

At this point the connection with Hans Frei and related developments becomes clearer. Frei’s recovery of the literal sense of biblical narrative was, in part, a protest against the tendency to move too quickly behind the text in search of some supposedly more foundational explanatory level. Model theory strengthens that protest by clarifying why such a move is often misguided. If theological meaning is carried through the patterns, narratives, and conceptual models of Scripture itself, then one cannot simply extract a neutral content from those forms without altering what is said. The narrative world of Scripture is not a dispensable vehicle. It is constitutive of the way biblical language refers.

The same point also clarifies the limits of historical criticism. Historical scholarship can illuminate the origins, development, and social setting of biblical language. It can show how particular models emerged and how they functioned within ancient communities. All of this is valuable. But such work does not by itself settle the question of theological truth. To explain how a model arose is not yet to determine what reality it discloses. A hermeneutic governed solely by historical reconstruction therefore tends to remain at the level of genesis rather than reference.

Model theory also resists the reduction of theology to subjectivity. If theological models are merely projections of communal imagination, then they may be sociologically interesting but no longer bear truth about divine reality. Yet that conclusion does not follow. Models may be historically conditioned without being epistemically empty. Indeed, all language is historically conditioned. The relevant question is not whether biblical models arise within particular linguistic and cultural worlds, but whether through those historically situated forms reality is genuinely disclosed.

A further strength of model theory is that it helps explain the density of biblical language. Scriptural discourse often exceeds the limits of single propositions because it operates through clusters of interconnected predicates and narratives. God is not only king but father, judge, warrior, shepherd, and bridegroom. Christ is not only teacher but Lord, Lamb, priest, wisdom, image, and head of the body. These are not random images placed side by side. Together they form overlapping models through which the identity and action of God are rendered intelligible. Theological understanding therefore requires more than lexical analysis; it requires attention to the ordered interaction of these models and the ways in which they shape the reader’s perception of reality.

For that reason, model theory may also serve as a bridge between older and newer hermeneutical approaches. It can acknowledge with the classical tradition that scriptural language genuinely mediates divine truth. It can acknowledge with modern historical scholarship that biblical discourse is historically formed. It can acknowledge with philosophical hermeneutics that understanding occurs within historically conditioned horizons. And it can acknowledge with literary approaches that meaning is inseparable from textual form. What model theory adds is a more explicit account of reference. It asks not only how texts arose or how readers understand them, but how theological language, in and through its own forms, renders the world and God intelligible.

Within Christian theology this point is especially important because revelation is not given apart from language. Scripture is not a neutral container into which theological content is later poured, nor is divine truth accessible in a pure form prior to its linguistic and narrative mediation. God is known in and through the forms by which Scripture identifies divine action: creation, covenant, exodus, promise, incarnation, cross, resurrection, Spirit, church, and kingdom. These are not merely topics. They are the ordered forms through which theological reality is apprehended.

This does not mean that every biblical model is equally adequate or equally central for doctrine. Nor does it mean that theological language is immune from criticism or clarification. Models may be extended, disciplined, or corrected in relation to other models and in relation to the larger canon of Christian confession. But such work belongs to theology precisely because it concerns the truth of the discourse and the reality to which it refers. Once this point is recognized, hermeneutics can no longer remain a merely technical discipline. It inevitably opens onto questions of ontology and doctrine.

The significance of model theory for biblical hermeneutics, then, lies in its reorientation of the discussion toward the problem of theological reference. It asks how biblical language speaks of God, how its patterns of discourse disclose reality, and how interpretation may honor both the historical particularity and the truth-claim of Scripture. In doing so, it helps explain why the interpretation of Scripture can never be reduced either to historical method or to readerly response. Biblical interpretation is concerned with a text that claims to speak truthfully of God’s action in history. To understand such a text requires more than technical competence; it requires a philosophical and theological account of how language mediates reality.

If that is correct, then the question of hermeneutics returns us once more to the larger argument of this essay. The interpretation of Scripture is not simply a regional problem within biblical studies. It belongs within the wider vocation of philosophical theology, because the deepest issues at stake concern language, truth, reality, and divine self-disclosure. Model theory matters not because it resolves every hermeneutical dispute, but because it helps restore that larger horizon.

Conclusion: Hermeneutics, Theological Meaning, and the Future of Interpretation

The history of biblical hermeneutics makes clear that disputes about interpretation are never merely technical disputes about method. Beneath disagreements over historical criticism, literary analysis, narrative reading, and theological interpretation lie deeper philosophical questions concerning language, meaning, history, and truth. The central issue has never been only how Scripture should be read. It has also been what sort of discourse Scripture is, how its language relates to reality, and under what conditions theological claims can be understood as meaningful or true.

In the classical Christian tradition, these questions did not appear in their modern form because the interpretation of Scripture remained internal to theology itself. Scripture was received as a unified witness to the divine economy, and its meaning unfolded within the life of the church under the rule of faith. Interpretation proceeded within a framework that assumed a real relation between language, history, and divine reality. Theological interpretation did not need to secure this relation by independent philosophical argument because it was embedded within a shared metaphysical and ecclesial world.

The Enlightenment transformed that world. As interpreters increasingly sought foundations independent of confessional authority, meaning came to be located in the grammatical structure of language, the intentions of human authors, and the historical reconstruction of past events. The nineteenth century intensified this shift through the rise of historical consciousness, which treated texts as expressions of historically situated forms of life. In the twentieth century, philosophical hermeneutics complicated the picture further by showing that interpretation is not merely a scholarly procedure but a fundamental feature of human existence. Heidegger and Gadamer demonstrated that understanding always occurs within historically formed horizons of meaning. Yet this achievement, important as it was, left a further question unresolved: how does theological language relate to the realities it claims to describe?

That question remained visible in later theological responses to modern hermeneutics. Hans Frei’s recovery of the narrative coherence of Scripture represented one of the most significant attempts to resist the reduction of biblical meaning either to historical reconstruction or to interpretive subjectivity. Frei rightly insisted that the biblical text itself constitutes the world within which Christian understanding is formed. Yet even Frei’s proposal leaves open a deeper issue. If theological meaning is mediated through narrative, and if all understanding is historically conditioned, how should one account for the relation between theological language and the reality to which it refers?

At this point the problem of hermeneutics becomes inseparable from philosophical theology. Every interpretation of Scripture presupposes some account—whether explicit or implicit—of how theological language can speak about God, history, and human existence. Disagreements over interpretation therefore often reflect deeper disagreements about the ontological and semantic frameworks within which biblical language is understood. Historical criticism, philosophical hermeneutics, narrative theology, and theological interpretation differ not only in method but also in the accounts of language and reality that they presuppose.

This is why model-theoretic reflection may offer a helpful way of reframing the problem. In its formal context, model theory analyzes the relation between linguistic statements and the structures that render those statements intelligible or true. When transposed into theological discussion, the point is not to import a foreign technique into biblical studies for its own sake. Rather, it is to clarify that theological statements always operate within some framework of intelligibility. To say that God creates, that Christ redeems, or that the Spirit sanctifies is not merely to utter religious language. It is to speak within a structured understanding of reality in which such claims can be meaningful and truth-bearing.

Seen in this light, hermeneutical debates are never only disagreements about reading strategies. They are also disagreements about the kinds of realities theological language presupposes and the forms of reference through which that language operates. Historical analysis, literary sensitivity, and theological judgment remain indispensable. But none of them is self-interpreting. Each already depends upon broader assumptions about language, world, and truth. Model-theoretic reflection does not eliminate those tasks; it helps clarify the deeper level at which they are carried out.

A suggestive parallel may be seen here with Luther’s insight concerning the nova lingua of theology. Luther recognized that the language of Scripture often appears paradoxical when judged by the standards of ordinary reasoning: life through death, strength through weakness, righteousness through the cross. Such formulations are not merely rhetorical intensifications. They indicate that theological language operates within a distinctive framework of meaning shaped by the revelation of God in Christ. What appears contradictory within one conceptual order may become coherent within another. In this respect, Luther’s nova lingua anticipates a broader philosophical point: the intelligibility of theological language depends upon the structures of reality within which it is read.

The importance of this insight for biblical hermeneutics is considerable. Modern hermeneutics has generated indispensable insight into the historical, literary, and existential dimensions of interpretation. Yet it has often left the problem of theological reference insufficiently developed. Historical criticism illuminated the formation of the biblical texts but often treated Scripture primarily as a historical artifact. Philosophical hermeneutics clarified the historically mediated character of understanding but sometimes left unclear how theological language refers beyond the process of interpretation itself. Literary and reader-oriented approaches recovered the significance of narrative and textual form but frequently remained within the sphere of interpretation alone. In each case, the decisive question persisted in the background: how can the language of Scripture speak truthfully of God?

That question suggests that the future of biblical hermeneutics may lie not in abandoning philosophical reflection but in engaging it more deeply. The interpretation of Scripture is not simply an exercise in textual analysis. It belongs within the broader task of theology, which seeks to articulate how the language of faith relates to the reality it proclaims. Hermeneutics therefore cannot remain merely a technical discipline. It must reopen onto the larger questions of ontology, semantics, and truth that have accompanied Christian interpretation from the beginning.

At this point a further question arises that philosophy alone cannot evade: why reality should be intelligible at all. The preceding discussion has suggested that theological language presupposes more than historical reconstruction, interpretive method, or narrative coherence. It presupposes a world in which meaning, truth, and reference are possible. Christian theology has traditionally named the ground of this intelligibility the Logos. The Logos is not an additional object within the world nor a merely theological hypothesis intr    oduced to resolve hermeneutical difficulties. Rather, it names the deeper ontological condition under which language, history, and reality can stand in meaningful relation at all. To speak of the Logos in this sense is simply to acknowledge that intelligibility itself is not self-grounding but given. The language of Scripture can speak truthfully of God because the world in which it speaks is already ordered toward meaning.

The enduring challenge is thus the oldest one. Theology must still ask how human language can speak truthfully about the reality of God. The history of hermeneutics does not remove that question. It only makes clearer how difficult—and how unavoidable—it remains.