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You are here: Home / Check it Out / The Word Study Fallacy

The Word Study Fallacy

September 9, 2015 By Peter Krol

Writing for The Master’s Seminary, William Barrick explains the problem of over-occupation with word studies (scroll to page 19 of the doc):

Study of the words alone will not present us with a consistent interpretation or theology. This is one of the misleading aspects of theological dictionaries/wordbooks. One learns far more about obedience/disobedience or sacrifice and sin from the full statement of a passage like 1 Sam 15:22–23 than he will from word studies of key terms like “sacrifice,” “obey,” or “sin” in the text.

He explains briefly why word studies are easy and popular. But he shows with a few good examples that they simply will not do. We do far better to learn how to study passages than to study words.

Check it out!

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Filed Under: Check it Out Tagged With: Context, William Barrick, Word Study, Words

Comments

  1. Elizabeth says

    May 4, 2023 at 10:05 am

    Do you know if there is an updated link for this paper? I’d love to read it!

    Reply
    • Peter Krol says

      May 4, 2023 at 1:47 pm

      I can’t find the original paper any more, but here is a link to a Shepherd’s Conference session, where Barrick presented the same material. The “Word Study Fallacy” begins on page 3.

      https://drbarrick.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Exegetical-Fallacies.pdf

      Reply

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