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hermeneutic

ADJECTIVE
  1. interpretive or explanatory

How To Use hermeneutic In A Sentence

  • He establishes that Evangelical theology ‘lacks a unitary hermeneutic’ of Catholicism.
  • The second type of human/technology relation is what he calls hermeneutic (p. 80). Phenomenological Approaches to Ethics and Information Technology
  • Newman's foray into Monophysitism, still operating from the hermeneutic established in his work on Arianism, helped to pave the way for his conversion.
  • The explanation that Jesus gives is not The Explanation for All Ages; it is what we could call a hermeneutical pattern, or an interpretative model. Parables do not save
  • The blinkered tendency to derive all-encompassing, universal answers has dumbed down semantic questions, eclipsed interpretative discussion and blinded scholarship to the ways in which context could cook up hermeneutic content.
  • There was consensus on the roles that social constructionism, narrative, and hermeneutics play in postmodern thought and their application to therapy.
  • They were harridans, engaged in a harangue of hermeneutics, harpooning his hyperbolic sense of hagiocracy, calling him a haggard hooligan hamming up a heedless hegemonic hullabaloo. Martin Marks: Bushenschadenfreude: Where has it all Gone?
  • More generally, the opening lines of the poem foreground the hermeneutic processes of reading and evaluation by which meaning will be constructed.
  • Another strength of the book is its attempt to synthesize homiletics, theology, and biblical hermeneutics.
  • Lesslie Newbigin underscores this need passionately: ‘the only hermeneutic of the gospel is a congregation of men and women who believe it and live by it.’
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