You asked about my hermeneutic. Fair question. I have received formal training in several hermeneutics. I know them all and I’m sure I employ them each in my studies.
However, the Hermeneutic that I follow is not formal. To the contrary my Hermeneutic is quite personal. I have come to understand Bible study to be scientific in its approach. That is, the tools I bring to the subject of my study is object driven. In science the tools you use to study “objects” are germane to the object of your study. You would not use a microscope to study the stars; nor a telescope atoms. The object of your inquiry sets the rules for your study. The same holds true in my study of Scripture.
Hence, Jesus Christ is my Hermeneutic. He is the object of my study and he determines the tools which I use to study him. One day it will be a Greek lexicon, the next "Our Daily Bread."
The day I realized this Hermeneutic, I had to close my Bible and walk away from it. Days I spent in prayer ~ the pray without ceasing kind ~ knowing that this called for a radical shift in my thinking, not only in how I was to approach Scripture, but in the things I thought I knew about both God and humans and his interactions with us.
When I reopened my bible, I determined first to know Jesus, and only when I knew him exhaustively would I move out with him as my Mediator to other subjects. That so, I read Jesus. Then I read Jesus in his interpersonal relations with and interpretations of God. Then I moved into a study of humanity: for Jesus is both God and man. Many things started to shift in my theology. I no longer thought of God abstractly, systematically, which is “what” oriented. Now I knew him personally, relationally. My study of God had become “who” oriented.
I had to let go of many systematic beliefs I had held both about God and about humans as well. Arguments about things like Predestination over against Free Will, even things like what is the right hermeneutic, I found, are futile if not resolved in Christ. There is no true knowledge of God apart from him.
I no longer think of God systematically ~ the “what” oriented approach. Now I know him personally, relationally. My study has become “who” oriented. The object of my study first being God as mediated to me in Christ Jesus and then humanity as mediated by the same.
Years now I’ve studied under the tutelage of this new Hermeneutic.
How do I know I rightly divide the Word? I know Jesus.
“God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things,” ~ even hermeneutics.
hermeneutics is the science of interpreting and explaining, especially as it pertains to scripture.
Science implies that you have a scientific method.
If you wish to figure out at what temperature aluminum melts
You would need some aluminum, a heat source, a way of measuring the temperature as a bare minimum.
Then you need to record what you did and learned to find out if the results can be replicated.
Other scientists would want to check your methods by analysis and by repeating your experiment to confirm or deny your results.
They may wish to learn how to fine tune the results.
There would be papers with the methods and results written down for others to see and review and check.
What is your method?
How do you rightly divide the word of truth?
By prayer? That's a good start, but prayer without believing doesn't work, Mark 11:23-24, Matthew 21:22
What specific believing actions do you take? Believing without works is dead. James 2:17
What specific actions do you take?
What checklist do you have?
Let me give you an example.
One way that scripture interprets itself is right where it is written. VP Wierwille
Examples: Genesis 1:1, it is self explanatory.
John 3:16 is likewise self explanatory.
Matthew 2:11 is mostly self explanatory. for instance, we know what a house is
Next is context. Matthew 2:11 Who is the they? context tells us, it is the wise men. Does context tell us how many there were? No, there is no scripture that tells us how many there were. Therefore, since God does not tell us, we do not guess, we quietly and thankfully accept that we don't need to know.
A third aspect is scripture is for the most part self defining. If we wish to know what the word "god" means as God uses it. We look for how God uses it.
(I say, for the most part, because I did not learn to read English from an English Bible. I need to learn English before I can read the Bible. Most certainly, some may have learned English by first learning to read from scripture, but the English Bible is not a comprehensive dictionary of all English words that could be useful for reading scripture.
Genesis 1:1 God is someone who creates or is the initiator of things
Is it a title or a name? We learn that is it a title, not a name.
Exodus 7:1 And the Lord said unto Moses, See, I have made thee a god to Pharaoh: and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet.
As we continue to read what God did we learn that God does more than create. He speaks, He sees, divides, He calls, He makes etc.
Those are three basic methods of learning the meaning of scripture. Each of those has subcategories.
Anyone can claim that the Holy Spirit is guiding them, but claiming and demonstrating that are two different matters.
For that matter, until a person knows scripture enough to learn who God is and who he isn't, that person could be easily fooled by unholy spirits