Are the great and faithful people mentioned in the OT and NT about us today? No they are not, because we are living in a different dispensation of God's grand plan for humanity. Can we learn from their example of faith, perseverance, righteousness and holiness? Yes we can, because, as Hebrews 11:1-40 and 12:1 shows, all of those people provide good testimonies of genuine faith, perseverance and godliness. Jesus provides the ultimate example and testimony (Hebrews 12:2, 3). Should we allegorize specific events and circumstances in the lives of those Bible characters to establish our own moral or philosophical principles for success? No we should not, because God has a unique purpose for each and every person's life, different from that of the Bible characters. God did not call everyone to part the Red Sea like Moses, or slay giant people as David did, or rule over an entire nation like Solomon, or walk on water or raise dead people back to life as Jesus did. Each Christian should interpret the Bible objectively, have faith in God and live out their life according to God's unique calling for their lives. When we allegorize scripture through narcigesis, we develop a distorted view of God, Christ and the Bible's messages; we also miss the whole point of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Narcigetical interpretation functions to inflate a person's self-esteem and fulfill a person's ungodly desires. It almost completely ignores the reality of sin, the need for brokenness and repentance, the absolute sovereignty of God, and the grace of God provided through Jesus Christ. The Lord Jesus Christ died to save us from sin and restore our fellowship with God; He did not die for our 401K, felt needs or worldly successes.
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I borrowed the following information about narcigesis from Chris Rosebrough, a Christian apologist at Fighting for the Faith and Pirate Christian Radio. Rosebrough vividly illustrates how pastors like Joel Osteen, Rick Warren, Brian McClaren, Patricia King, Steven Furtick, Robert Schuller, Joyce Meyer and many others teach narcigetical interpretation of scripture:
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HOW TO NARCIGETE ANY BIBLE STORY IN 4 EASY STEPS
by Chris Rosebrough
The Primary Assumption of Narcigesis is that Every Bible story is about YOU. And, since YOU struggle with setbacks, problems and challenges that keep YOU from achieving YOUR maximal greatness that means that the Bible is really all about giving YOU a road map that YOU can follow to achieve YOUR dreams and god-given destiny.
Step 1
Read a Bible Story.
Step 2
Identify the hero and the villain(s) in the story.
Step 3
Identify yourself with the hero (who also happens to be on a journey toward greatness and achieving his god-given destiny, just like you).
Identify your current problems, challenges and setbacks with the villain(s) in the story.
Step 4
Identify the key action taken by the hero to defeat the villain. Allegorize that action by calling it a ‘principle’ and then challenge people to ‘apply this principle’ in their lives in order to defeat the problems, challenges and setbacks in their lives so that they can achieve greatness.
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Anyone who pays attention to a sermon given by liberal preachers and prosperity televangelists will recognize these four steps of narcigesis. Chris Rosebrough strongly disapproves of this method of scripture interpretation and warns Christians to avoid practicing it. He strongly encourages interpretation of scripture through proper exegesis, which is the practice of drawing the authentic, objective meaning out of the Bible text itself based on a careful, objective analysis of all aspects of the text.
Listen to Chris Rosebrough talk about narcigesis in this 2-hour program:
http://004f597.netsolhost.com/fftf/F4F120712.mp3
A clearer definition of ''narcissistic eisegesis" or "narcigesis"
http://apprising.org/2012/01/12/narcigesis/
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THE DANGERS OF NARCIGESIS
1.) – Since there is no objective standard to which the interpreter must abide by, the final authority ceases to be the scripture and becomes the interpreter. Because of this method, opinions, emotions and experiences will take precedence over divinely inspired scripture. opinions, emotions and experiences will take precedence, each and every interpreter can apply whatever allegorical meanings they wish. This raises the question: Whose allegorical interpretations are right? This question leads to the establishment of an endless self centered bias which effectively replaces God and His inspired scripture as the true center of authority.
2.) – Most of the Bible can be interpreted literally; therefore, allegorical interpretation is only rarely seen in scripture (example: Galatians 4:21-31; 1 Corinthians 10:1-4). The Bible is its own dictionary and its own interpreter, and, because of this, the Bible usually provides its own explanations for its own symbols, parables and allegories. Parables are usually not allegories. Jesus usually disclosed the actual meaning of His own parables (example: Matthew 13). On other occasions, Jesus spoke plain language without symbols or parables.
3.) – Because narcigetical interpretations are not genuine and fail to convey God's real message, they will not truly benefit anyone who applies the interpretations. Ministers that teach narcigesis are known to prey upon their followers, fleecing them of vast amounts of money as they buy the minister's books and donate to the minister's church. When the narcigetical interpretations fail to confer true benefit to the followers, the minister gets richer and richer while the followers get poorer and poorer. Plus the followers become false converts that miss out on the real salvation that Almighty God provides through the biblical Jesus Christ. Ministers that teach narcigesis are, in a real sense, ravenous wolves in sheep's clothing that make their followers more subject to Hell than themselves (Matthew 7:15; Matthew 23:15).
Great. Just started studying this hermeneutical 'principle.'
ReplyDeleteGreat. Just started studying this hermeneutical 'principle.'
ReplyDelete