Some are timeless, such as "You shall have no other gods before Me." and "You shall not commit adultery."
Others clearly are time period or culture based "a woman should pray with her head covered."
For the greatest, far greatest, majority, I believe we should hold to what was written. God will never change His mind on adultery, stealing, fornication, lying and homosexuality. He will never change His mind on sin and the punishment of sin.
I believe that if you have a sincere question about whether some teaching in The Bible applies to just then, or then and now, that you can seek God, and ask Him to show you. Look at other Scriptures, see how they line up. Try to determine how respected men of faith look at the passage.
Like I said, there are some things that God said were sins, look at 1 Corinthians 6:18-20, those things will never change.
The most important thing is to love God above all else, and to obey Him.
there are no steps. its contemporary, its all about feeling and the way you interpret a song.
It was believed that only the Pope had authority to interpret scripture.
Your question is too broad. There were rules for determining which books belonged in Sacred Scripture, there are rules as to how to interpret Sacred Scripture. There are rules as to how to nourish your life with Sacred Scripture. There are rules for the inclusion of Sacred Scripture in all of life, and rules for the reading of Sacred Scripture, which ones are you asking about?
Four very sensible rules for reading and interpreting the Bible are:The simplest and most natural explanation of a text is always the best. Don't make things more complicated than what they are.Use Scripture to interpret Scripture. The best way to understand a striking word or phrase is to find out how that phrase is used elsewhere in Scripture.The meaning of a word is determined by its usage in context. Rather than focus on a particular word remember that the basic unit of thought is a sentence. Then look at the sentence within its context to see what the author means.We should discover the original meaning of a biblical text, and then apply it to our contemporary situations. A biblical text cannot mean what it never meant, so do not try to apply contemporary situations to the text to prove that the author was somehow trying to give us guidance in an entirely new and different context.
well this is so crazy because you got to learn the bible first
This is something every Christian can do. Many Christians believe they have the Holy Spirit indwelling them and the Holy Spirit will bear witness to the Christian what is truth and what is not truth. Also there are established ways to interpret Scripture to avoid error. For example your should compare Scripture with Scripture. So if you say a piece of Scripture means 'this' and what you say is not backed up by other Scripture then you may be wrong - in a sense allowing the Bible to interpret itself and not someone else. Also, reading the topic Scripture in full context to get the real meaning.
An interpreter of scripture is commonly referred to as an exegesist or biblical exegete. They analyze and interpret texts from religious scriptures, such as the Bible, to uncover meanings and messages within the context of the text.
Jewish scholars are anyone who studies Judaism. Some interpret the Hebrew scriptures and formulate new ideas, but many also just study the previous interpretations to gain knowledge.
Theater Research are trained to analyze and interpret performances through studying contemporary productions and exploring the traces of past performances.
In the middle ages, the idea of being humanistic was to be faithful to scripture. The contemporary association with being humanistic is to comply with a degree of charity and behavior that is expected of social norms.
No, the poem "For Everything There Is a Season" is not a contemporary poem. It is a verse from the Book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible, written many centuries ago.
In the real world you can use the order of rational numbers. This is used a lot in math.