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The Holy Spirit and the Reformation Legacy


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text was the direct means to grasp the substance and content of Scripture” and, hence, his argument that secular methods of textual analysis were, in principle, appropriate for biblical interpretation.117

      The above arguments show that Martin Luther’s hermeneutic of Scripture is, indeed, pneumatic hermeneutic. The centrality of the Holy Spirit in Luther’s hermeneutic represents a sui generis integration of the third person of the Trinity, who had largely been neglected by the medieval Church, in the development of Christian theology. Martin Luther’s unique contribution to Christian theology in this regard is, arguably, the integration of Christology and pneumatology in biblical hermeneutics. This is a development in biblical theology that should be instructive for contemporary developments in biblical theology. In some quarters of the Church, the Holy Spirit is largely ignored, and hardly ever invoked, in biblical hermeneutics. In other quarters of the Church, particularly in the Pentecostal-Charismatic tradition, an overemphasis on the work of the Holy Spirit has tendentiously undervalued Christology in the task of biblical interpretation.