“if anyone wanted to take everything that was said according to the letter, that is, to understand it exactly as the letter sounds, and could avoid blasphemies and explain everything in harmony with the Catholic faith, we should not only bear him no hostility, but regard him as a leading and highly praiseworthy interpreter” (Augustine, On Genesis, 95)
But because of his view on perspicuity and his belief in a plethora of intentions behind the text, the literal meaning remained just one of many possible interpretations. Because of this, only Calvin’s hermeneutic could actually lead to the authorial intent of the text. Augustine’s hermeneutic falls short because it cannot offer an objective standard to determine the Author’s meaning. He argued that any interpretation of a passage that teaches true doctrine is valid, but he provided no way for us to know if a particular truth was the meaning that the Author intended to communicate through that passage. His only possible defense for his interpretations would be that they at least teach doctrine and applications that conform to the truth. But at that point, he would have to abandon his claims of finding the intention of the Author. Augustine’s problem only becomes worse when we consider his claim that every interpretation of Scripture that conforms to the truth was intended by the Author. If every interpretation that conforms to the truth is intended by the Author, then we have no objective standard to determine truth. We have no basis for claiming that one interpretation conforms to the truth while another does not because we can have no assurance that our interpretations of even the “clear” passages are actually true. In this way, Augustine’s hermeneutic forces us towards one of two extremes. We must either rely on what we believe internally to be true when we approach Scripture or we must rely on what a community, such as a church, declares to be true. But if we rely on our internal perception of truth to interpret Scripture, then we are no longer searching for the Author’s intent but are instead forcing our intentions on Scripture. Similarly, if we rely on the declaration of a community, then we will only find the intent of that community in Scripture. In both cases, the interpreter fails to achieve what Augustine claimed was the foremost duty of the interpreter. Calvin’s hermeneutic, on the other hand, actually reveals the Author’s intended meaning. Calvin recognized that if God had communicated Scripture in order to reveal Himself, then we must assume the perspicuity of Scripture. Once this is assumed, the method to uncover the Author’s intent follows naturally. Thus, of these two great theologians, only Calvin could truly find the author’s intended meaning. While Calvin and Augustine may have come to many of the same doctrinal conclusions on various issues, only Calvin could actually claim to rest his doctrine on an objective and authoritative foundation – the intent of the Author found in His Word through a literal interpretation of the text.
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