Bart D. Ehrman's Blog, page 236
August 6, 2018
Blog Dinners Next Month. Interested?
I would like to host two dinners for anyone on the blog who would like to attend. My idea is to have at least three, but no more than seven, people at each one. This would be a chance for some direct, personal contact with me and with each other, to have some good food, good drink, and good conversation for a couple of hours. I will have no agenda – simply talking about things (presumably related to the issues addressed on the blog) that people want to talk about.
The only requirements for...
August 5, 2018
Is There Sarcasm in the New Testament?
Here is an unusually interesting question I have received:
QUESTION:
During the time that the New Testament was being written, especially during Paul’s time, did they have in society what we consider sarcasm? Sometimes certain sentences pop out to me as they could have meant them in a sarcastic tone. I know it is probably just me since I am a sarcastic person.
RESPONSE:
Now *that’s* an interesting question that I, literally, have never been asked before! But it’s something I’ve though...
August 3, 2018
Jesus and His Miracles: Some Interesting Features
In my discussion of whether the historian can deal with the category of miracle, I’m now at the point where I can deal directly with the miracles ascribed to Jesus. This is an issue that I have dealt with in several books, including, most recently, Jesus Before the Gospels. It will take three posts for me to cover the waterfront here. This is how I began dealing with the issue in the book.
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The Miracles of Jesus
When one disc...
August 2, 2018
Did the Original Gospels Describe Jesus’ Miracles?
While I’m on the topic of miracles, here’s a particularly interesting question I received a long time ago, and my response.
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 dated around 125-150 AD, they contain fragments of John 18 and Matt 21 only, and that it’s not until 200 AD that manuscripts emerge which actually contain accounts of superna...
August 1, 2018
More Free Memberships Available
Thanks to the incredible ongoing generosity of members of the blog, I am happy to announce that there are still a limited number of free one-year memberships available. These have been donated for a single purpose: to allow those who cannot afford the annual membership fee to participate on the blog for a year. I will assign these memberships strictly on the honor system: if you truly cannot afford the membership fee, but very much want to have full access to the blog, then please contact...
July 31, 2018
More on the Historical Problem of Miracles
I continue my reflections on the historical problem of miracles with another “blast from the past”:
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Yesterday I started to talk about why historians cannot demonstrate that a miracle such as the resurrection happened because doing so requires a set of presuppositions that are not generally shared by historians doing their work. Over the years I’ve thought a lot about this question, and have tried to explain on several occasions why a “...
July 30, 2018
History is not the Past! Proving Jesus’ Resurrection and Other Miracles
Last week I finished a thread on the criteria scholars use to establish what happened in the life of the historical Jesus. That series of posts raises an important question: what do historians do about the fact that throughout the Gospels Jesus does lots of miracles — and at the end the greatest miracle of all happens, he is raised from the dead as an immortal being, never to die again? Can such miracles be demonstrated to have happened historically?
That’s a question I’ve dealt with on the...
July 29, 2018
My First Taste of Critical Scholarship
In this week’s mailbag I deal with an interesting question about how knowing about a topic is not the same as understanding the scholarship on it. The question begins by quoting something I said on the blog a while back
QUESTION:
Quoting me: “That’s because serious scholarship is itself hard. It’s not an easy read. It’s not like reading your favorite novel.” Can you recall the first book of serious scholarship that you had to read? Did you think, “Gosh. Maybe this course of study ain’t fo...
July 27, 2018
Upcoming Speaking Events, Fall 2018
I will be doing several speaking gigs hither and yon in the coming fall. These are the ones that are set in stone, if all goes to plan. All of them are open to the public, but may require tickets. I’ve included websites when I have them. I ope to see some of you at them. I’d like to schedule a blog event at the ones that will be in the States, if possible, probably a lunch or dinner. But I’ll let you know!
September 8
Smithsonian Associates, Washington DC
Four Great Controversie...
July 26, 2018
Did Peter Use a Secretary for his Writings? A Blast from the Past
Looking through some posts of blogs-past I came across this interesting one from six years ago now! I think it’s an intriguing question, and the answer is not what most people would probably think.
QUESTION:
What do you make of the author’s reference to a Silvanus in 1 Peter 5:12? Could it be that this really is Peter saying he used a secretary to write this letter? I know you said there is little to no evidence that people used secretaries, but what do you make of this reference to a Sil...
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