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Old 02-08-2011, 09:51 PM   #21
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Ehrman does give me the impression that he's become more... I don't know, driven, recently with respect to putting out the information he does. He seemed to always simply be taking scholarly stuff and packaging it for the masses, which I appreciated because I never know textual criticism even existed before, but his recent works do seem more targeted at attacking belief.. could just be an impression though, since he is an agnostic and didn't arrive at that due to his textual criticism work.

But he usually does indicate when things he's saying are more possibilities and when the things he's saying are standard scholarship. To me it wasn't so much the exact conclusion that mattered so much as the fact that things were up for debate in the first place.

I was taught the Bible we read was the Bible that was written to 99.5% accuracy so of course you have to take it literally, that fact alone proves that it's different than any other book.

Once you start picking out the cards in a house of cards things don't last long.

So even with the most basic conclusions that Ehrman communicates, it's easy to see that the version of God I was taught does not exist.
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Old 02-09-2011, 12:38 AM   #22
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Originally Posted by Apostate Abe
Bart Ehrman was a guest on the Infidel Guy's radio show a few years ago to talk about one of his books, and there was a caller who thought that Jesus never existed. Ehrman was greatly condescending toward such a position, he joked that there were people online who quoted him as though he agreed with that position, which is especially preposterous since he wrote a book on the life of Jesus. The Infidel Guy, who advocated mythicism, asked him what evidence there was of the historical Jesus. And Ehrman responded, "What evidence is there of Julius Caesar?"
The historians Plutarch and Suetonius may both have written a century after Caesar's death, and may both have suffered interpolation, fraud, forgery, etc,
however,
unlike JC,
Gaius Julius Caesar wrote something, himself: De Bello Gallico.

To me, that is evidence of his life. I think that a better analogy for Ehrman's position, would have been Socrates, since he did not write any document in our possession.

avi
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Old 02-09-2011, 05:13 AM   #23
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To me, that is evidence of his life. I think that a better analogy for Ehrman's position, would have been Socrates, since he did not write any document in our possession.

avi
Do we have members of the Socrates Fan Club writing that the authorities do not bear the hemlock for nothing, and that people who are punished by the authorities brought down God's judgement on themselves?
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Old 02-09-2011, 06:34 AM   #24
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Sorry, Abe. My sarcasm meter was broken.
Looks like mine wasn't working, either.
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Old 02-09-2011, 08:12 AM   #25
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I was already along my de-conversion path (which started more with science vs. literalism and logical and moral issues), but Ehrman's TTC lectures and those books were very enlightening in fixing a lot of misconceptions and/or complete gaps in my knowledge.

If you are raised as an evangelical biblical literalist then:

-that not all the epistles were written by Paul
-many of the changes in the manuscript tradition could actually be intentional
-the differences between the gospels actually represent different theological views

Are just a few ideas that literally shake the foundation of your beliefs.

If I'd been raised in a liberal denomination then my beliefs might have survived the contradictions with science, logic, morality, and history, but that's the problem with beliefs in absolutes.. they may appear stronger, but are more brittle and instead of bending, they shatter.

For myself, starting to critically examine these things has been an important part of my deconversion, but, well I think when I look at Ehrmans work, I think..M'eh.
They could be true but its all based on less than solid foundations, with lots of assumtions. So I find at least some of his points unlikely.
He keeps pumping out more books with, to me, sensationalist titles, with not a lot that is new.

i think also , for myself, it has been my own experience in life that has run counter to the nutty ideas of fundamentalist christians, and as I rely more on that, it matters little whether, for example, Paul wrote all the epistles credited to him.
Speculating about conspiracies to forge tests or change them, seems pretty unimportant, ot me anyway.
Does fundalmentalist christianity produce results that are any good, is amuch more important question,, for me.
Anyway thats my rave done.
It sounds like my story is almost identical to temporalillusion's. I had a very conservative Christian upbringing -- the kind that thought all other denominations were wrong and headed for Hell (a real fun group, as you can imagine). When I read Jesus, Interrupted, I was already heading down the path of deconversion, because I had come into contact with some online articles by people like Farrell Till. But Ehrman's book provided me with more information about contradictions and textual issues, and it's probably one of the main things that finally pushed me away from Christianity.

I agree that some of his arguments dealt more with interpretation of what the passages were saying, and I found those points to be the weakest. I didn't think they were bad points, or irrelevant, but I knew that they wouldn't mean much to fundamentalists. People who hold tightly to inerrancy won't be affected by what someone thinks a passage means. It has to be an obvious contradiction to even catch the attention of someone like that.

I read Misquoting Jesus just a few weeks ago, because I was looking for a book to recommend to my dad that would talk about the textual problems in detail (with supported evidence). I thought that book was pretty good, but I don't know that it's what I'm looking for. I think I need something that's still very readable, but goes into more detail about specific manuscripts. If anyone has any suggestions, please let me know.
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Old 02-27-2011, 12:21 PM   #26
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Review from James McGrath
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Old 02-27-2011, 06:25 PM   #27
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Even though McGrath did a really fine and detailed review, I think I'll just wait for the scholarly monograph.

It has been difficult for me to size up Ehrman. Having been an evangelical Jesus Person in the 1970s who eventually found Hictorical Criticism more satisfying, I can identify with the guy. In some ways he seems to be another Michel Foucault, trying to break down entrenched ways of thinking about the text of the NT, and in other ways he seems to be minimizing the textual evidence for the NT almost as if he has an agenda.

Back around 2003, I made a close study of an exchange of journal articles between him (JBL 109: "Cephas and Peter", 1990, 463-74) and Dale Allison (JBL 111 "Peter and Cephas: One and the Same", 1992, 489-95). Someone had claimed that Dale Allison overthrew every point made by Ehrman. Since I had independently come to the conclusion that Cephas and Peter were two seperate individuals, and this was Ehrman's position, I wanted to see if this was so.

While I was not convinced that Ehrman made an airtight case, I found that Allison had not in fact "overturned Ehrman's arguments point by point" (or something like that). IMHO, neither of them examined all reasonable possibilities. Ehrman came across as the cowboy shooting from the hip, while Allison seemed more interested in defending orthodoxy than really examining the issue. In the process, I mentioned that Allison's rhetorical skill was a bit more polished than Ehrman's.

I introduced my observations on Crosstalk2, where the original post praising Allison had occurred. While Ehrman responded to others as the subject of the identity/identities of Peter & Cephas had been discussed, he did not respond to me. I got the impression that he was not happy with my comment about his rhetorical style.

DCH

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Old 02-28-2011, 08:11 PM   #28
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So, if many of the books in the Bible were not in fact written by Jesus’s inner circle—
but by writers living decades later, with differing agendas in rival communities—
what does that do to the authority of Scripture?

Ehrman investigates ancient sources to:

• Reveal which New Testament books were outright forgeries.

• Explain how widely forgery was practiced by early Christian writers—and how strongly it was condemned in the ancient world as fraudulent and illicit.

• Expose the deception in the history of the Christian religion.

Decades later? This is what might be called an anticlimax.
Where does Ehrman get his ten year chronology from if not Eusebius
and the persistent examination of the manifestly forged texts ?
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Old 03-02-2011, 09:43 PM   #29
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Whatever did happen to the well-established maxim used by True Historians of giving ancient documents the benefit of the doubt?
Those are leading questions that you ask at Bart Ehrman Schools the Infidel Guy. There was one notable response ...

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Take a real historian like John Paul Meier.
On page 169 of ‘A Marginal Jew’ JP Meier writes about the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist that ‘the event simply never occurs in John’s Gospel’
Meier regards the baptism as historically certain, and gives the silence in John’s Gospel as part of the evidence for this certainty.
Of course the event is certain. Look , it simply never occurs in John’s Gospel. That is proof that it happened.
I didn’t read A Marginal Jew, but Ehrman makes the same argument in The New Testament and its a very sensible argument:

1. Jesus’ baptism is mentioned in other gospels than John.
2. Christians had motives to downplay John the Baptist.
3. Jesus’ baptism was (probably) not made up by christians (from 2).
4. Jesus’ baptism was probably historical (from 3).

The fact that John doesn’t even mention Jesus baptism is evidence for 2. So there you go… It’s not rocket science, just a very simple argument.

Bart makes a similar argument when he talks about Paul mentioning James (the brother of the lord) in Galatians.

When was Socrates critical questioning ever a menace to those inside the state of Christendom? Keep up the chrestos questions Steven Carr. It appears you have good support from other outsiders. And not without chrestos reason.
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