The faithfulness and vitality of Christianity are inseparable from its hermeneutic. As the center of Christianity shifts to the Global South, the future of African Christianity depends on whether Scripture will interpret culture or culture Scripture. The growing influence of reader-centered hermeneutics in African pulpits and scholarship poses a serious challenge, as these approaches risk elevating cultural concerns above the authority of God’s Word. This article argues that only a hermeneutic of trust that seeks the author-intended meaning of Scripture can sustain the revival currently underway in Africa. The argument is developed through a literary-theological method that combines philosophical reasoning, biblical precedent, and historical precedent. By weaving together these threads, the author advances a cumulative case for prioritizing the author-intended meaning of Scripture. The case unfolds in three stages. Firstly, drawing on the philosophical work of E. D. Hirsch, it shows that the author-intended meaning is the only defensible way of securing determinate Secondly, following Abner Chou, it demonstrates that the biblical writers themselves— prophets, apostles, and Christ—interpreted Scripture contextually, canonically, and christocentrically, thereby modelling a faithful and normative hermeneutic. Thirdly, it highlights Byang Kato, the father of African evangelicalism, who insisted that Scripture must judge culture rather than the reverse. Taken together, these arguments call for a renewed commitment in African biblical studies and theology to an author-, canon-, and Christ-centered hermeneutic. Such an approach is not a Western imposition but has a biblical, theological, and African basis. The article concludes that the long-term health of African Christianity depends on recovering this hermeneutic of trust.
K. P. Smith (Wed,) studied this question.