Monday, April 13, 2009
Stephen Colbert the Unlikely Apologist
"If it walks like a duck and talks like a duck and raises the dead like a duck, it probably is a duck."
Bart Ehrman, New Testament Scholar and Textual Critic, has published a new book entitled Jesus Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions of the Bible (and Why We Don't Know About Them). It contains no really new data, but instead apples-to-oranges comparisons based on poor hermeneutics and flawed presuppositions. In any case, it's popped on my radar a number of times today, so I thought I would blog about it.
My buddy George posted this video on his blog, and I noticed that Dr. Albert Mohler also posted a response and some brief analysis on his blog. So I decided to bring them both together here, for your enjoyment.
First the ridiculous...
Now the sublime...
Fighting Words about the Bible?
R. Albert Mohler
The Monday "On Religion" feature in USA Today is consistently interesting, even if often expasperating. That is what should be expected of an opinion column -- strong opinions in both the column and the reaction it prompts. Well, get ready to form your own opinion about today's feature, for it is likely to make a lot of waves.
Tom Krattenmaker, a Portland, Oregon based member of the paper's Board of Contributors, levels a broadside attack on the unity, inspiration, and veracity of the Bible as the Word of God in his column, "Fightin' Words".
Krattenmaker first celebrates what he describes as "a year of retreat and retrench" for conservative Christianity. Now, he says, "here come more challenges to traditionalist views of the Bible and Christian faith from a lineup of big-name, liberal-leaning scholars and theologians."
First up on Krattenmaker's list is Bart Ehrman of the University of North Carolina. As Krattenmaker explains, Ehrman "mounts evidence against literalist conceptions of the Bible as factual history and a divinely transmitted testament to an afterlife-focused religion called Christianity."
Further:
If the Bible is the literal word of God, Ehrman asks, how could it be inconsistent on so many details large and small? Let's start with an example appropriate to the just-concluded Easter season marking the Savior's death and resurrection: As Jesus was dying on the cross, was he in agony, questioning why God had forsaken him? Or was he serene, praying for his executioners? It depends, Ehrman points out, on whether you're reading the Gospel of Mark or Luke. Regarding Jesus' birthplace of Bethlehem, had his parents traveled there for a census (Luke's version) or is it where they happened to live (Matthew's version)? Did Jesus speak of himself as God? (Yes, in John; no, in Matthew.)
Bart Ehrman has established himself as the media's go-to professor in terms of denying the truthfulness and unity of the Bible, especially the New Testament. Ehrman, who has written several best-selling books seeking to debunk and discredit the New Testament and classical Christianity, is a popularizer for many accusations long alleged against the Bible. He takes passages (such as the passion passages from Mark and Luke) and sees contradictions where the church has always seen complimentary accounts. Christ did indeed utter the cry of God-forsakenness recounted by Mark, but this was itself a citation of the Psalms that points to a much different purpose and meaning than Ehrman implies. Which is the true account, Mark or Luke? It takes very little imagination to understand that, in the crucible of the crucifixion event, Jesus experienced both the agony of the God-forsakenness he experienced (and knew He was meant to experience on behalf of sinners) and the serenity that He also experienced, given his faith in the Father's purposes and power to raise him from the dead.
Of course, if you are coming to the Bible from the perspective of one who has rejected Christianity, you are likely to see the kind of pattern Ehrman alleges. Of course, if he did see the Bible as the perfect and completely truthful Word of God, he would not remain a rejecter of the Christian Gospel.
No one comes to the Bible without presuppositions and a basic intellectual disposition. That is true for Bart Ehrman, and it is no less true for the evangelical believer. In both cases, the presuppositions assign the way each will read the Bible. Krattenmaker simplistically cites Ehrman as his authority for suggesting that Jesus spoke of himself as God in John's gospel but not in Matthew. But this facile assertion, offered without any supporting argument, does not take in to account that throughout the Gospel of Matthew Jesus speaks and acts as God. When Jesus delivers the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew, He cites Scripture with the formula, "you have heard it said." When Jesus then continues by saying, "but I say unto you," He speaks as God in a way that any first-century Jewish person would have readily understood. Nature obeys his command, and he performs miracles (even bringing the dead back to life) that show his providential control over the created order.
The believing church has always understood that we need all four gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, in order to understand all that we need to know about Jesus, his words, and the events of his earthly life and ministry. What sets the church apart from Bart Ehrman (and others who make such arguments) is that the church sees these four witnesses as complimentary and mutually supportive. Where we have difficulty understanding how one gospel relates to another we face a basic question -- one tied to the presuppositions we bring to our reading of the Bible. We will see the problem as lying either in our inability to understand the Bible or in the Bible's inability to offer a consistent and consistently truthful message.
The crux of Krattenmaker's argument comes here:
Ehrman's book has met with a fierce reaction from some quarters, which is understandable. Who among us isn't inclined to fight back when our deepest, most cherished beliefs are challenged? But there is no need to demonize him as a "wolf" on the prowl against the church, as one critic has. His ideas, like so many other new thoughts and new insights that keep coming around with the surety of the seasons, need not be regarded as insults against God or bids to prove the Bible false.
Krattenmaker argues that Ehrman's efforts to debunk the New Testament, along with other "new thoughts and new insights," "need not be regarded as insults against God or bids to prove the Bible false."
This claim makes sense if, and only if, Krattenmaker does not believe that "false" is the opposite of "true." Ehman openly and extensively makes his claim that the Bible is filled with error -- false information. Krattenmaker may wish to use euphemisms ("varying perspectives and changing interpretations"), but there is no way to reconcile Bart Ehrman's proposals with any claim that the Bible is, in any meaningful sense, true. Just in case anyone missed this point, Krattenmaker circles back to assert that "there is no denying the inconsistencies [Ehrman] surfaces between the various Gospels and letters that form the New Testament."
Krattenmaker also warns that defenders of "the conservative faith" face yet more -- including a new book by Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan. Again, Krattenmaker signals his glib affirmation of the argument put forth by Borg and Crossan by stating that the authors "point out that Paul didn't really write the more conservative teachings attributed to him." Point out? This is the kind of expression appropriate for some settings ( such as "Professor Smith pointed out that deceased people are dead") but not to the simple assertion that these two authors -- both of whom reject classical Christianity -- "point out" that Paul didn't write many of the letters assigned to him.
Borg and Crossan don't like what Paul writes in his letters about the roles of men and women, about homosexuality, and any number of issues. So, they propose that Paul actually didn't write those letters, and that a conservative conspiracy within the early church successfully changed Paul into a conservative himself. Like the infamous Jesus Seminar did with Jesus, Borg and Crossan do with Paul -- they create him in their own image, ready for tenure review at the local college's religious studies faculty.
The agenda of the biblical revisionists is clear. If the Bible is a collection of merely human documents that are internally contradictory, indicating an underlying diversity of conflicting interpretations of Christ and the Gospel, we are left with no authority for knowing what Christianity is. Accordingly, we can now make it in our own image.
USA Today bills the "On Religion" column as a means of "illuminating the national conversation." Well, Tom Krattenmaker's column is certainly illuminating. But what it illuminates is what Tom Krattenmaker, Bart Ehrman, Marcus Borg, and John Dominic Crossan believe about the Bible, and thus about Christianity. Consider yourself illuminated.
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8 comments:
Actually, I'm a quite a fan of Ehrman, I don't agree with him on everything, but I think to group him with Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan is quite unfair. To disagree with Ehrman on his basic view of the Bible is one thing, but to compare or put him in the same category of the Jesus Seminar "gurus" just seems patently slanderous to me.
Rather than attack a scholar, why not do a little experiment: Look at the end of Luke's gospel and consider that the Ascension of the Lord took place, according to Luke, on the same day as the Resurrection. Then, look for the Ascension in Acts, which should be considered as volume 2 of Luke's gospel. In Acts, the Ascension happens forty days after Easter. So, which is right? Could it be that there is something underlying the true of these two volumes that is greater than superficial historical accuracy?
It's time to consider being fed on 'meat' rather than 'milk'. ;-)
George, I don't really follow your logic. Just to clear things up I didn't post the anonymous comment, and maybe the anonymous person has particular reasons, like for instance, they may not have a Google or Blogger account, which I do by the way. Also people post anonymously all the time on things, does that mean they are ashamed of their beliefs or don't really believe what they are saying. That is assuming a lot and is kind of unfair. Maybe the person is someone of note and they don't want to be harassed by those who disagree with them, which is one of the many reasons I've posted anonymously or with a screen name on many blogs and sites. I don't think what the anonymous person said either is that unreasonable. Instead of engaging in ad hominem attacks, maybe we should investigate what Ehrman's saying about the passages and see if there is any merit. If you don't agree with him in the end then that's completely okay, but to make assumptions about Ehrman or this anonymous person without investigation or knowing the anonymous person seems massively counterproductive.
Matthew: I think you're misreading the article. The implication is not that Ehrman=Jesus Seminar, but that in the case of all of these, certainly to different extremes and in different ways, this modern textual critical method begins from presuppositions that lead to the rejection of Scripture as revelation from God. All of those mentioned think of Scripture in these terms, and their conclusions tend to lead to further and further diminishing of the primacy of Scripture. This is true of all of them, and I will say that from what little I have read of each of these guys, their hermeneutic and literary presuppositions cause them to make a number of errors just in reading the basic meaning of the text. They’re not all the same in their conclusions, but they all basically start from the same place and utilize the same historical-critical methods.
Anonymous: I am not sure where the implicit argument is here. Certainly I see where you are coming from, but there's definitely not an open and shut case here for a "contradiction." In fact, there’s not really one at all, unless you really want it. There are numerous examples of passages of time in texts that are barely noted or not even referenced at all in the New Testament. Paul often preaches in one area or another for an extended period of time based on the historical data, but the text may summarize his ministry very briefly. Furthermore, Luke was the author of both, so unless you're holding to a different understanding of authorship, it doesn't seem problematic at all that Luke would focus on different aspects of the time between the resurrection and ascension, and thus the "contradiction." Luke and Acts take different approaches and deal with different ideas, so it makes sense that he wrote about the same event in two different ways, emphasizing different aspects. The church has always viewed these accounts as complimentary, and I don’t see any reason why they are clearly contradictory. There's no "meat" to feed upon if the revelation of God is as error-filled as Ehrman alleges.
As to the anonymous post, I did not have a google account and I didn't think it really mattered. However, look at the smoke screen that was built around that... the point I made was circumvented to talk about Spice Girls. What happened to the scholarship that would at least grab a bible and check out whether the Luke and Acts point was valid?
Has anyone checked on that? Found anything interesting there?
Now, as for Ehrman... how about reading something of his before making these wild claims about his scholarship? Or is someone's faith too shallow to read something from a world class scholar?
JonathanG:
Do you recall the story of the tortoise and the hare? Now, everyone knows that no such race ever took place, but there is a truth behind the 'story'. So it may be with some biblical 'stories'. Is a parable necessarily the historical record of an historical event or does the parable tell an underlying truth? Is it possible for the bible to include fables? The Jewish people consider the story of Job to be such a fable, yet it tells an underlying truth. I think maybe you can get the picture. Are you familiar with the various genres of literature contained in the bible? For instance, a "gospel" is a piece of "Good News", not an historical biography by an eye witness.
Why must everyone bash the spice girls?
Sincerely,
Ehrman Spice
"There's no "meat" to feed upon if the revelation of God is as error-filled as Ehrman alleges."
I think you are using a term that is inaccurate."Error-filled"? No, the discrepancies are differences in perception across the decades in which the gospels present theological development over time. Ehrman is not presenting biblical literature as "error-filled", but presenting a development. If one were to read his "The New Testament" this would be a non-issue. He's showing how theological premises evolved across the various books, and this is good information for any Christian since it gives a truer perspective on the early church.
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