Davie-Kessler, Jesse. “‘Discover Your Destiny’: Sensation, Time, and Bible Reading among Nigerian Pentecostals.” Anthropologica 58, no. 1 (2016): 1–14.
Davie-Kessler, Jesse. “‘Discover Your Destiny’: Sensation, Time, and Bible Reading among Nigerian Pentecostals.” In Text and Context: Vernacular Approaches to the Bible in Global Christianity, edited by Melanie Baffes, 187–222. La Vergne: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2018.
Fyanka, Bernard B. “Postmodernism and the Hermeneutics of Nigerian Pentecostalism: Implications for Class Mobility.” Social Science Research Network, April 29, 2014.
Gabaitse, Rosinah M. “Towards an African Pentecostal Feminist Biblical Hermeneutic of Liberation: Interpreting Acts 2:1-47 in the Context of Botswana.” PhD diss., University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2012.
Herholdt, Marius D. “Pentecostal and Charismatic Hermeneutics.” In Initiation into Theology: The Rich Variety of Theology and Hermeneutics, edited by Simon Maimela and Adrio Konig, 417–32. Pretoria: J. L. van Schaik, 1998.
AbstractWhat is distinctive about Pentecostals' reading of the Bible? In what way do Pentecostal people read the Bible so that they reach different conclusions than believers of other denominations? Is it possible to speak of a Pentecostal hermeneutics? In what way does it differ from the hermeneutics found in other theological traditions, such as the Catholic, Eastern and Reformed traditions? And how does their hermeneutics inform Pentecostals' practice? These questions are discussed and some preliminary conclusions reached. Pentecostals' religious consciousness expects an experience or encounter between God and human beings through his Spirit. This is supposed to happen in the worship service and also in the practice of Bible reading, whether individually or collectively. The presupposition is that the Word is revealed in the Bible only when people experience God, and the existential precondition leads to a Pentecostal emphasis of narratives describing such encounters in the Bible.
Nel, Marius. “Defining a Pentecostal Hermeneutic for Africa.” In Text and Context Vernacular Approaches to the Bible in Global Christianity, edited by Melanie Baffes, 16–32. La Vergne: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2018.
AbstractMost of the early twentieth-century Pentecostal denominations were peace churches that encouraged a stance of conscientious objection. However, since the Second World War Pentecostals have largely abandoned their pacifist viewpoint as they have taken on a more literal Biblical hermeneutic from their interaction with Evangelical denominations. This book traces the history of nonviolence in Pentecostalism and suggests that a new hermeneutic of the Bible is needed by today{u2019}s Pentecostals in order for them to rediscover their pacifist roots and effect positive social change.
Omenyo, Cephas N., and W. A. Arthur. “The Bible Says! Neo-Prophetic Hermeneutics in Africa.” Studies in World Christianity 19, no. 1 (2013): 50–70.
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