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How to Read the Bible with the Historic Church

June 24th, 2025 | 10 min read

By Michael Niebauer

“A text cannot mean what it could never have meant for its original readers/hearers.” This quote from Gordon Fee, frequently regurgitated on social media, exposes an emerging fault line in evangelical protestant Biblical interpretation. On Fee’s side are those who insist that the true meaning of any Biblical passage is limited to what the author intended to convey to their original audience. The goal of Biblical scholarship is thus to reconstruct the “world behind the text,” in order for contemporary Christians to accurately hear the words of scripture as it would have been received at its writing: One must read a text, grasp its original meaning and context, then attempt to apply the meaning of that text to their life today.

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Michael Niebauer

Michael Niebauer is Director of Heritage Mission, an initiative that trains leaders to start worship services in care facilities. He holds a PhD in Systematic Theology from Duquesne University, specializing in Christian Ethics and Missiology. He hosts the Christian catechesis podcast This We Believe and is the author of multiple books.

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