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Toulmin Model

A six-part model for analyzing the structure of arguments — Claim, Data, Warrant, Backing, Qualifier, and Rebuttal — used to evaluate theological reasoning.

Source: Stephen Toulmin, The Uses of Argument (1958)Public Domain

Also known as: Toulmin Argument, Claim-Data-Warrant, Toulmin Schema

Definition

The Toulmin Model is a framework for analyzing and constructing arguments developed by British philosopher Stephen Toulmin. It identifies six functional components present in any complete argument: Claim (what is being asserted), Data/Grounds (the evidence), Warrant (the logical bridge between evidence and claim), Backing (support for the warrant), Qualifier (the degree of certainty), and Rebuttal (conditions under which the claim fails).

Detail

Stephen Toulmin developed this model as a reaction against formal symbolic logic, which he found inadequate for evaluating the kinds of arguments actually made in law, ethics, science, and everyday reasoning. His insight was that real arguments are not syllogisms — they involve not just premises and conclusions but also the principles that connect evidence to conclusions, the support for those principles, and the acknowledgment of conditions under which the argument breaks down.

The model's most powerful contribution to biblical and theological reasoning is the concept of the Warrant — the principle that allows a reasoner to move from data to claim. In theological arguments, warrants are often implicit and unexamined: 'The Bible says X, therefore X is true' conceals a warrant about biblical authority and a backing for that warrant in a particular theological tradition. Making warrants explicit forces them into the open where they can be examined, questioned, and compared with alternative warrants.

The Qualifier is equally important in theological discourse. Arguments that are stated without qualification — 'Paul wrote Hebrews,' 'The Flood was global,' 'The kingdom of God is entirely future' — are often overstated versions of arguments that honest scholarship would express more tentatively. Identifying where a qualifier belongs, and whether it is missing, is a key diagnostic for evaluating the intellectual honesty of a theological argument.

How to Spot It
  1. 1An argument presents a theological conclusion without explaining why the evidence leads there (missing warrant)
  2. 2A claim is stated with absolute confidence on a question where scholars genuinely disagree (missing qualifier)
  3. 3No conditions are acknowledged under which the argument would fail or need to be revised (missing rebuttal)
  4. 4The principle connecting evidence to conclusion is assumed to be obvious but is actually contested across traditions
  5. 5A sermon or commentary presents data from one tradition's scholarship as if it settles a question all traditions dispute
Bible Context

The apostle Paul explicitly engaged in structured argumentation. In Acts 17:2-3, Luke describes him as 'reasoning with them from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Messiah had to suffer and rise from the dead' — a sequence that maps onto Data (the Scriptures), Claim (the Messiah had to suffer and rise), and Warrant (the pattern of suffering servant and vindication in the prophets). 1 Peter 3:15 instructs believers to 'give a reason for the hope that is in you' — a call to articulate the argument's structure, not just assert the conclusion. Isaiah 1:18 records God inviting Israel to 'come now, let us reason together' — treating theological dispute as something amenable to structured argument rather than mere assertion.

Bible Examples (3)

The argument for Jesus' messiahship from Psalm 110

Matthew 22:44
The framework in action

A reader encounters the argument: 'Jesus is the Messiah because the Scriptures predicted him.' Without the Toulmin structure, the argument is circular: the warrant ('the Scriptures accurately predict the Messiah') and the backing ('Jesus' life fulfilled those predictions') are both hidden and both contestable. The argument appears to prove itself.

The proper reading

Applying Toulmin: Claim — Jesus is the Davidic Messiah. Data — Psalm 110:1 speaks of 'my Lord' sitting at the right hand of YHWH; Acts 2:32-36 applies this to the risen Jesus. Warrant — Psalm 110 is a royal/messianic Psalm that ancient interpreters read as referring to a future Davidic king. Backing — the Psalm's use in Second Temple Judaism as messianic is attested in other literature. Qualifier — this interpretation is compelling within the Christological hermeneutical framework of the early church; Jewish interpreters then and now read the Psalm differently. Rebuttal — the argument depends on the warrant that Psalm 110 refers to a single future individual, which is contested. Laying this out shows where the argument's strength and weakness lie.

The argument that the Sermon on the Mount abrogates the Old Testament Law

Matthew 5:17
The framework in action

A reader hears: 'Jesus' 'You have heard it said... but I say to you' statements show that he was replacing the Torah with a higher law.' The warrant is implicit: the intensification formula signals replacement. The rebuttal — Matthew 5:17 explicitly denies that Jesus came to abolish the Law — is never engaged.

The proper reading

Toulmin reveals the argument's structure. Claim: Jesus replaced the Old Testament Law. Data: The antithesis formula in Matthew 5:21-48. Warrant: The phrase 'but I say to you' implies correction or replacement of the preceding teaching. Backing: Some scholars argue Jesus was correcting scribal misinterpretation rather than the Torah itself. Qualifier: 'Partially' or 'in some respects.' Rebuttal: Matthew 5:17-19 explicitly states Jesus did not come to abolish but to fulfill; James, the Jerusalem church, and early Jewish Christianity continued Torah observance. The Toulmin structure forces engagement with the rebuttal that the simpler argument bypasses.

The argument for infant baptism from household baptisms in Acts

Acts 16:33
The framework in action

A paedobaptist argument runs: 'Lydia's household and the jailer's household were baptized, and households include infants, so infant baptism is apostolic practice.' The warrant — that ancient households included infants who were baptized — is presented as obvious, but it is precisely what is disputed.

The proper reading

Claim: The New Testament records apostolic infant baptism. Data: Acts 16:15, 16:33; 1 Corinthians 1:16 record 'household' baptisms. Warrant: Ancient Greco-Roman and Jewish households included infants who would have been included in any household ritual. Backing: Sociological and historical evidence about ancient household composition. Qualifier: 'Plausibly' or 'consistently with.' Rebuttal: The texts do not specify that infants were present; Acts 16:34 says the jailer 'rejoiced with his whole household, having believed' (the participle may imply adult belief preceded baptism); credobaptists argue the warrant is unproven. Toulmin reveals that the debate turns almost entirely on competing warrants about what 'household' means and whether the parallel to Old Testament circumcision (the common paedobaptist backing) holds.

Trace Steps
1

Identify the Claim

Ask: What exactly is being asserted? Is it a historical claim, a textual claim, a theological claim, or a moral claim? Is it stated clearly or embedded in other language?

Theological arguments often smuggle claims inside other claims. 'The Bible teaches X' is a claim about what the Bible says. 'X is true' is a separate claim about the truth of what the Bible says. 'Christians should believe X' is a normative claim that requires its own argument. Separating these is the first step.

2

Identify the Data and Warrant

Ask: What evidence is being offered, and what principle is being used to connect that evidence to the claim? Is the warrant stated or assumed?

In biblical arguments, the warrant is almost always where the real disagreement lies. Two scholars can agree on the data (what the text says) and reach opposite conclusions because they operate with different warrants (how to interpret what the text says). A Catholic and a Protestant may both cite Matthew 16:18; they differ on the warrant that connects the verse to conclusions about papal authority.

3

Identify the Backing

Ask: What supports the warrant itself? Why should we accept the principle that connects this evidence to this conclusion?

Backings in theological arguments are often entire theological traditions. The warrant 'Scripture interprets Scripture' is backed by a Reformed doctrine of the perspicuity of Scripture. The warrant 'the Magisterium authoritatively interprets Scripture' is backed by Catholic ecclesiology. Identifying the backing shows where the argument is rooted in tradition, not just in neutral logic.

4

Add the Qualifier

Ask: How strong is this argument, really? Should it be stated as 'necessarily,' 'probably,' 'plausibly,' or 'possibly'? Is the qualifier the argument uses appropriate to the evidence?

Many theological arguments are stated without qualification on questions where the evidence only supports a qualified conclusion. 'The Bible teaches X' should often be 'Many Christians have read the Bible as teaching X, though others read it differently' or 'This reading of the text is compelling within tradition Y.' Restoring the appropriate qualifier is often the most important correction you can make to a theological argument.

5

State the Rebuttal

Ask: Under what conditions would this argument fail? What evidence or counter-argument, if true, would require modifying or abandoning the claim?

An honest argument identifies its own vulnerabilities. On the Pauline authorship of Hebrews: the argument fails if the stylistic differences from Paul's undisputed letters are too substantial to explain by genre or amanuensis. On the global Flood: the argument faces geological evidence that requires engagement, not dismissal. An argument that cannot name what would refute it is not a genuine argument but an assertion wearing argumentative clothing.

Framework Steps
CLAIMClaim

The conclusion or assertion that the argument is designed to establish. The claim is what the arguer wants you to accept as a result of the argument.

In theological discourse, claims range from textual (this is what the Greek word means), to historical (this is when and where an event occurred), to doctrinal (this is what Christians should believe), to ethical (this is how Christians should act). Each type of claim requires different kinds of evidence and warrant. A single sermon may move among all four types without distinguishing them — and this is where arguments often break down.

  • What exactly is being claimed — textual, historical, doctrinal, or ethical?
  • Is the claim stated clearly, or is it embedded in other language that obscures it?
  • Is this a claim about what the Bible says, what it means, or what it requires?
  • Is the claim falsifiable — could evidence or argument in principle show it to be wrong?
  • Is one claim being presented, or are multiple claims bundled together?
DATAData / Grounds

The evidence or facts that the argument uses to support the claim. Data may include biblical texts, historical records, archaeological findings, lexical definitions, or scholarly consensus.

In biblical arguments, data includes the actual words of the text in the original language, manuscript evidence, archaeological context, intertextual parallels, and the judgments of recognized scholars. Not all data is equal: a manuscript from the 1st century carries more weight than a 12th-century copy; a peer-reviewed archaeological report carries more weight than a popular-level book. Identifying the data and assessing its quality is foundational to evaluating any theological argument.

  • What specific evidence is being offered for this claim?
  • Is the data primary (original texts, excavation reports) or secondary (summaries of other scholars' work)?
  • Is all relevant data being presented, or is some evidence being omitted that would complicate the claim?
  • How reliable is the data source — what is its scholarly standing?
  • Does the data actually say what the argument says it says, or is it being stretched?
WARRANTWarrant

The logical principle or rule that connects the data to the claim. The warrant explains why the data counts as evidence for this particular conclusion.

Warrants in biblical arguments are the most contested and the most often hidden element. 'The original audience would have understood X' is a warrant. 'Scripture's meaning is stable across time and cultures' is a warrant. 'A term's use in the Septuagint illuminates its New Testament meaning' is a warrant. Every hermeneutical tradition operates with a set of characteristic warrants, and disagreements between traditions are usually disagreements about warrants, not about data.

  • What principle is being used to connect the evidence to the conclusion?
  • Is the warrant stated explicitly, or does the argument assume you will supply it?
  • Is the warrant generally accepted, tradition-specific, or simply assumed without examination?
  • Would people from different theological traditions accept the same warrant?
  • Is the warrant strong enough to support the strength of the claim being made?
BACKINGBacking

The support for the warrant itself — the reasons why the connecting principle should be accepted. Backing is often a body of theory, tradition, or established practice.

Theological backings are frequently entire doctrinal traditions. Reformed exegesis is backed by a particular doctrine of Scripture and a covenant hermeneutic. Catholic interpretation is backed by the authority of Tradition and the Magisterium alongside Scripture. Historical-critical scholarship is backed by the methodological principles of academic historiography. When two interpreters use the same data and reach opposite conclusions, they are usually operating with different backings for their warrants.

  • What tradition, theory, or established practice supports the warrant?
  • Is the backing explicit, or must it be inferred from the argument's context?
  • Is the backing widely accepted, or is it distinctive to a particular tradition?
  • Does the backing itself rest on assumptions that could be questioned?
  • Would the argument succeed if the backing were replaced by a different tradition's backing?
QUALIFIERQualifier

The degree of certainty or confidence with which the claim is asserted. Qualifiers include words like 'necessarily,' 'probably,' 'plausibly,' 'in most cases,' or 'under these conditions.'

Missing qualifiers are one of the most common problems in popular biblical and theological writing. Claims that should be stated as 'probable,' 'consistent with,' or 'one reading suggests' are frequently stated as 'the Bible clearly teaches,' 'scholars agree,' or 'it is undeniable.' Restoring appropriate qualifiers is not a sign of weak faith — it is a sign of intellectual honesty about the limits of the evidence.

  • How confident does the argument present itself — certain, probable, possible?
  • Is that level of confidence appropriate to the strength of the evidence and warrant?
  • Where should a qualifier appear that is currently missing?
  • Does the argument acknowledge any uncertainty, or does it present all conclusions as equally certain?
  • Would the argument be more or less persuasive if stated with the appropriate qualifier?
REBUTTALRebuttal

The conditions under which the claim would not hold, or the counter-arguments the arguer acknowledges. A strong argument names its own vulnerabilities.

The absence of rebuttal is a diagnostic sign of apologetics rather than scholarship. A scholarly argument about Pauline authorship of Hebrews acknowledges the strongest evidence against its position. A careful treatment of a difficult passage acknowledges the readings that complicate its preferred interpretation. Engaging the rebuttal — rather than ignoring it — is what distinguishes honest inquiry from motivated reasoning.

  • What counter-arguments or counter-evidence does the argument acknowledge?
  • Under what conditions would the claim need to be modified or abandoned?
  • Are the strongest objections to the argument engaged, or only the weakest?
  • Does the absence of rebuttal suggest the argument is filtering evidence to reach a predetermined conclusion?
  • How does the argument's conclusion change if the rebuttal conditions are taken seriously?
Walkthrough
Claim being analyzed

Paul did not write the Letter to the Hebrews

CLAIMClaim

The claim as typically stated is: 'Paul is not the author of Hebrews.' This is a historical-critical claim about authorship, not a doctrinal claim about the letter's authority or inspiration. It is important to separate these: one can hold that Hebrews is authoritative Scripture while also holding that Paul did not write it — as the majority of modern scholars do.

DATAData / Grounds

The data supporting the non-Pauline conclusion: (1) The Greek of Hebrews is the most polished and rhetorically sophisticated in the New Testament, markedly different from Paul's letters. (2) Hebrews 2:3 says the author received the gospel from 'those who heard' Jesus — whereas Paul explicitly claims direct revelation (Galatians 1:12). (3) The letter lacks Paul's characteristic opening (name, apostleship, grace/peace). (4) The theology of priesthood, the Levitical system, and the typology of Melchizedek are developed differently from Paul's undisputed letters. (5) No early manuscript bears Paul's name in the text itself.

WARRANTWarrant

The warrant is: stylistic, theological, and structural consistency within an author's corpus is a reliable indicator of shared authorship. When Hebrews diverges markedly from Paul's style, theology, and self-presentation, this divergence is evidence against Pauline authorship. This warrant is widely accepted in modern literary and historical-critical scholarship, though it is contested by those who argue Paul adapted his style to audience and purpose.

BACKINGBacking

The backing for the warrant is the academic discipline of stylometrics and authorship analysis, which has successfully identified and distinguished authors in classical literature. This backing is well-established in literary studies generally, though its application to ancient texts is more uncertain than to modern ones, given differences in compositional practice (including the use of secretaries/amanuenses) and the limited size of any single author's surviving corpus.

QUALIFIERQualifier

The appropriate qualifier is 'very probably' or 'with high confidence.' The majority of modern New Testament scholars — including many evangelical scholars — hold that Paul did not write Hebrews, and that this conclusion is not a threat to the letter's authority. The early church was divided: Origen famously said 'only God truly knows' who wrote it. A small minority of modern scholars still defend Pauline authorship. The honest statement is: 'Paul almost certainly did not write Hebrews,' not 'It is impossible that Paul wrote Hebrews.'

REBUTTALRebuttal

The rebuttals to consider: (1) Paul may have used a skilled amanuensis (such as Luke or Priscilla) who shaped the Greek while Paul provided the theological content. (2) Paul may have written differently when addressing a different audience with different rhetorical conventions. (3) The absence of Paul's name may reflect intentional anonymity for rhetorical purposes. (4) The theology is not as incompatible with Paul's as sometimes claimed. These rebuttals are serious enough that the qualifier 'probably' rather than 'certainly' is appropriate — and they explain why the question remained open in the early church.

Conclusion

The Toulmin analysis reveals that the case against Pauline authorship of Hebrews is strong at the level of Data and Warrant, but that the Backing (stylometrics applied to ancient texts) is less certain than in modern authorship analysis, and that the Rebuttal (amanuensis, audience adaptation) is substantive enough to keep the Qualifier at 'very probably' rather than 'certainly.' The argument illustrates how Toulmin prevents overconfident conclusions on genuinely uncertain historical questions.

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