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Sensus plenior
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Sensus plenior is a phrase that means "fuller sense" or "fuller meaning". It is used in Biblical to describe the supposed deeper meaning intended by but not by the human author. Walter C. Kaiser notes that the term was coined by F. Andre Fernandez in 1927 but was popularized by Raymond E. Brown.Walter C. Kaiser, Jr., "Single Meaning, Unified Referents: Accurate and Authoritative Citations of the Old Testament by the New Testament," in Kenneth Berding and Jonathan Lunde, ed., Three Views on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2007), 47.

Brown defines sensus plenior as

That implies that more meaning can be found within scripture than the original human authors intended and so the study of scripture that isolates a particular book and concerns itself only with the details of the author's time and situation can be incomplete.

Sensus plenior corresponds to rabbinical interpretations of the Hebrew Scriptures, remez ("hint"), drash ("search"), and/or sod ("secret"), by which deeper meaning is drawn out or from the text.

suggests that the citation of in is a "stock example" of sensus plenior.

(2025). 9781894667180, Clements Publishing Group. .

Conservative Christians have used the term to mean the larger or whole teaching of scripture.


See also


Additional references
  • Raymond E. Brown, "The History and Development of the Theory of a Sensus Plenior," CBQ 15 (1953) 141 - 162.
  • The Jerome Biblical Commentary Vol. 1 1971, Geoffry Chapman Publishers, London, pp. 605–23.
  • David H. Stern, Jewish New Testament Commentary 1992, Maryland, pp. 11–4.


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