Carlos R. Bovell

Inerrancy and the Spiritual Formation of Younger Evangelicals


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Regarding the creation story: the strife that the creation-evolution debate has caused evangelical youth is well known. One evangelical church boasted that its youth group studied nothing but creationism for the nine months during which its young people were in school in order to counter the public schools’ effects on its members!

      Discursus

      Wrestling with 1 Tim 2.11–15, A Case in Point

      Though evangelical theological argumentation is still blackened by an inherited predilection for objectivity and proof-texts, it is not to be supposed that the NT authors were fazed by either of these two concerns. By contrast, they unabashedly read their own situations into their texts and made a very full use of their Scriptures (and other sources) when interpreting and citing texts in support of a specific conclusion.1 In fact, the scientific impetus of evangelical hermeneutics seems inordinately strict when compared with extant examples of ancient exegesis. For this reason, evangelical hermeneutical practices pose problems with regard to the authority of Scripture in a more urgent way than did those of early Judaism or the early church. That varieties of Second Temple “non-scientific” hermeneutics have found their way into the NT has not yet been taken seriously with respect to the way it ramifies biblical authority.2

      What follows is an investigation of the exegetical argument of 1 Tim 2.11–15. The motivation is that evangelical readers might begin to (1) realize just how scientific their own interpretive expectations have become, (2) reexamine the nature of the authority of Scripture in light of ancient interpretive practices, and (3) reconsider what issues are at stake in the women’s debate. The thesis offered here is that irrespective of what position an evangelical takes in