Bart D. Ehrman's Blog, page 217
May 26, 2019
When You Feel Like You’re Talking to a Wall
I wrote this post a while ago, and now that I reread it, I think I might be kicking a dead horse. (Something, in case you wonder, I’ve never actually done.) But, well, I suppose it’s sometimes OK to leave written twhat has been written, so to say. So here ‘tis.
There are times when I debate a committed evangelical or fundamentalist Christian on whether the Bible is reliable or not, and I feel like I’m talking to a Martian. Or maybe I’m a Martian. We are both educated human beings and...
May 24, 2019
Was Jesus Perfect? Then How Was He Human?? Guest Post: Jeffrey Siker
Another guest post by Jeffrey Siker, raising a very hard question with some peculiar answers and a provocative suggestion.
Jesus and Sinlessness: Metaphor and Ontology, Blog 3
In the two previous posts I have shown how the tradition developed that Jesus was sinless, namely, retrospectively in light of resurrection faith. If Jesus was raised to divine stature at the right hand of God, then surely he must have been God’s divine Son throughout his public ministry (even if hidden by a messianic...
May 22, 2019
Were Miracle Stories Originally in the Gospels?
Looking through old posts on the blog, I came across this very interesting and important question from seven years ago. It’s a question I continue to get on occasion, so I thought we all might profit by thinking about it again. (And now, older and wiser, I would answer almost exactly the same way!)
QUESTION:
I have looked up the content of all the papyri I’m aware of (off of links on wikipedia, so who knows if they’re accurate).
It is my understanding that although p52, p90, and p104 are da...
May 21, 2019
Being Willing to Accept the Truth
Here I’d like to add just a couple of more reflections on whether critical scholars *have* to claim there are contradictions in the Bible because of their beliefs. As I tried to state as strongly as I could in my previous post, I think the answer is absolutely not.
To begin with, let me stress that I started learning about serious contradictions when I was in a Christian theological seminary taking biblical studies courses with committed Christian teachers who were devoted to the church. B...
May 20, 2019
Do My Biases Mean I *Have* to Find Contradictions?
I have now had a week to reflect on my debate with Matthew Firth about whether there are contradictions in the Bible. Now I’d like to give my personal reactions. I don’t mean for this to be a continuation of the debate per se — I won’t be adducing more evidence or counter-evidence. But I thought it might be helpful to put some thoughts on paper (well, on screen) about what a debate like this can show or at least did show, in my opinion. Matthew is on the blog and he’s perfectly welcome t...
May 19, 2019
How Jesus Became Perfectly Sinless: Guest Post by Jeff Siker
Here is the second guest post by Jeff Siker on how Jesus came to be thought of as completely sinless in early Christianity, a view that probably no one entertained while he was still living. It’s intriguing and important stuff.
This particular post is available to everyone; to see most of the posts on the blog, and the other posts on this topic itself by Prof. Siker, you will need to join. Won’t cost much. Will pay huge dividends. And all money goes to those in need. So what’s the downs...
May 17, 2019
An Eyewitness to the Crucifixion? Another Modern Forgery
I’ve started to discuss several modern forgeries connected with the life of Jesus. These are all completely bogus, but they’ve nonetheless fooled a lot of people. I get emails from people maybe once a month who want to ask me about something they’ve “heard” about Jesus, and it usually turns out that it comes ultimately from one of these things, which someone has read, and then told someone else, who told someone else, who took it as Gospel truth.
The Essenes mentioned in this apocryphon ar...
May 15, 2019
Judging the Debate!
Now that my debate with Matthew Firth over the contradictions in the Gospels has ended, I would like to know your reactions. Any reactions are fine. There is the obvious question of which side you found more convincing, but also the less obvious question of why that is. What about the argument, or counter-argument, was compelling or not compelling?
Part of the problem, of course, is that virtually everyone listening in on the debate already had a pretty firm idea of what they think about...
May 14, 2019
When Did Jesus Become Sinless?
I recently received a question from a blog member about when it was in the Christian tradition that Jesus came to be thought of as “perfect,” without sin. I feel no great need to answer the question myself because my friend and occasional guest blog poster Jeffery Siker, long-time professor of New Testament at Loyola Marymount University, has written an entire book on the topic. And so I asked him to prepare some blogposts, and here’s the first one.
For what it’s worth, he and I both like...
May 13, 2019
Did Jesus Go to India? A Modern Gospel Forgery.
Last week I mentioned in passing the little-known fact that the apocryphal idea that Jesus travelled to India as a child to learn from the Brahmins, comes to us not from ancient forgeries but relatively modern ones. That raised some interest among readers, and I realized that I haven’t actually dealt with this intriguing issue on the blog before. But I did deal with it in one of my books on forgery, the one written for a general audience, Forged: Writing in the Name of God.
In that book...
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