Historical-Critical Exegesis
Historical-critical exegesis is the dominant scholarly approach to interpreting the Bible: it reads each text in its original language, genre, and historical setting in order to recover what its author meant and what its first audience would have understood. Rather than reading scripture through later doctrine or present concerns, it asks the historical question first. The method is not one technique but an integrated family that draws on textual, source, form, and redaction criticism, applying them within a grammatico-historical reading. Edgar Krentz's compact 1975 The Historical-Critical Method describes its rise, goals, and procedures, while John Barton's 2007 The Nature of Biblical Criticism offers a philosophical defense, arguing that biblical criticism is at heart a disciplined attention to what the text means in its literary and historical context.
Lasīt pilno metodes aprakstu
Piesakieties ar bezmaksas kontu, lai lasītu šo sadaļu.
Metožu karte
Saistīto metožu apkaime — atlasiet mezglu, lai izpētītu.
Avoti
- Krentz, E. (1975). The Historical-Critical Method. Philadelphia: Fortress Press (Guides to Biblical Scholarship). ISBN: 9780800604608
- Barton, J. (2007). The Nature of Biblical Criticism. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN: 9780664225872
Kā citēt šo lapu
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Historical-Critical Exegesis (Grammatico-Historical Interpretation of Scripture). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/lv/religious-studies/historical-critical-exegesis
Kura metode?
Novietojiet šo metodi blakus tās tuvākajām radniecīgajām metodēm un lasiet tās līdzās — bibliotēka noliek grāmatas uz galda; izvēle ir jūsu.
- Form CriticismReligious Studies↔ salīdzināt
- Redaction CriticismReligious Studies↔ salīdzināt
- Source Criticism (Documentary Hypothesis)Religious Studies↔ salīdzināt
- Stemmatic Textual CriticismReligious Studies↔ salīdzināt
Uz to atsaucas
Līdzīgas metodes
Pamanījāt kļūdu šajā lapā? Ziņojiet vai ierosiniet labojumu →