A provisional and preliminary attempt to show how the formative hermeneutical thinking of Anthony C. Thiselton — once systematized and critiqued — can begin to resolve the major problems found in the discipline of hermeneutics today, most notably its varying 'disunities' — theoretical, practical, and inter-disciplinary. This book aims to show that the formative thinking of Anthony C. Thiselton provides valuable insights for a programmatic construction towards a unified hermeneutical theory. This construction provides powerful keys for unlocking six contemporary problems in hermeneutics: disorganization, complexity, abstraction, theoretical disunity on several levels, inter-disciplinary polarization, and irresponsible interpretation. Robert Knowles' exhaustive analysis engages critically and creatively.