Deductive
Reasoning from
General to Specific
Inductive
Reasoning from
Specific to General
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What
Is Inductive Bible Study?
Inductive
Bible Study involves the use of inductive reasoning to study the Bible.
It includes the observation of evidence, the examination of evidence,
and a conclusion based upon the evidence. Inductive goes from specific
to general. In this way, one would observe or examine the evidence, take
notes, and draw a conclusion.
On the other
hand...
Deductive
goes from general to specific. Perhaps you have heard of Deductive Reasoning
before. The fictional character, Sherlock Holmes, used deductive reasoning
to solve mysteries. He was very successful and there is nothing wrong
with deductive reasoning, but it is not recommended for Bible Study.
Why
Study Inductively?
Deductive
Reasoning begins with a hypothesis (fancy word meaning to conclude by
guessing)or an IDEA. After the hypothesis has been made, one gathers evidence
to prove one's point. If the hypothesis is correct, the evidence will
support it. If the hypothesis is wrong, the evidence won't support it.
We all use deductive reasoning.
Children
are taught in school that scientists use The Scientific Method to learn.
It is deductive in nature — it begins with a hypothesis like, "Air is
a gas" (a general idea). Then, evidence is gathered to prove that air
is a gas, or more accurately, a blend of gasses. The evidence gathering
process usually involves a series of tests, or observations, to prove
that "Air is a gas." Does it act like a gas? Does it smell like a gas?
(the specific part) And, so on.
The answers
to these questions may not necessarily determine whether or not the hypothesis
is true. For instance, if one asked whether "air" smelled like a gas,
the answer would be no. It has no odor. Some gasses have odor where others
do not. Yet, if this was the ONLY question asked about "air", then one
might be led to conclude that "air" is not a gas.
In the area
of Bible study, one can fall into the same trap; many do. For example,
using deductive reasoning (general to specific) in Bible study would be
like making a hypothesis that states "money is evil." Then, one would
have to gather evidence to prove that "money is evil." In the Bible in
the book of 1st Timothy chapter 6, verse 10 reads, "For the love of money
is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered
away from the faith, and pierced themselves with many a pang." This could
be taken out of context by simply seeing the words money
and evil,
and re-reading it in such a way that changes the verse to look something
like "...money is ... evil...".
But, this
is absolutely NOT what this passage teaches. First, by using the passage
this way is taking the phrase out of its context. Yet, if one has made
up his mind that "money is evil", this might seem to be "proof" enough.
This is the danger of deductive Bible Study.
The inductive
method says that one will study, observe, and gather evidence (the specific
part) on whatever topic and then draw conclusions(the general part) based
on the observations. This is a much stronger way to establish truth than
any other method of Bible Study.
By using
inductive reasoning with the same passage, we would take the whole context
of the passage. It says that the love of money is the root of all sorts
of evil. Does this mean that money is evil? No. What then is evil? The
love of money is the root of all sorts of evil.
So, the
deductive process uses a series of observations to prove whether the hypothesis
or idea is true or not. The IDEA is stated before the observations are
made and, hence the conclusion is a statement of whether the idea is true
or not. The inductive process uses the process of deduction at every observation.
But, unlike deduction, the inductive process states the IDEA after
the observations are made. In this way, each observation leads to a new
discovery of truth.
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