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Which Gospel Would Jesus Read?

by Bart D. Ehrman Info

Bart D Ehrman
 
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BS Top - Ehrman Jesus Andrew Ward, Life File / Getty Images In an exclusive excerpt from his controversial best seller, Jesus, Interrupted, Biblical scholar Bart Ehrman argues that each gospel in the New Testament was meant to be its own good book.

The discrepancies in the Bible are important in part because they force us to take each author seriously. What Mark is saying may not be at all what Luke is saying; Matthew may stand at odds with John, and they both may conflict with what is said in Paul. But when we look at the contrasting messages of the different biblical authors, there is more involved than…detail and minutiae... There are much larger differences among these authors and books—differences not simply in a detail here or there, a date, a travel itinerary, or who did what with whom. Many of the differences among the biblical authors have to do with the very heart of their message. Sometimes one author’s understanding of a major issue is at odds with another author’s, on such vital matters as who Christ is, how salvation is attained, and how the followers of Jesus are to live.

We are in danger of misreading a book if we fail to let its author speak for himself, if we force his message to be exactly the same as another author’s message

Differences of this magnitude do not involve a simple contradiction here or there, but alternative portrayals of major importance. It is impossible to see these alternative portrayals if we do not allow each author to speak for himself. Most people do not read the Bible this way. They assume that since all the books in the Bible are found between the same hard covers, every author is basically saying the same thing. They think that Matthew can be used to help understand John, John provides insights into Paul, Paul can help interpret the book of James, and so on. This harmonizing approach to the Bible, which is foundational to much devotional reading, has the advantage of helping readers see the unifying themes of the Bible, but it also has very serious drawbacks, often creating unity of thought and belief where originally there was none. The biblical authors did not agree on everything they discussed; sometimes they had deeply rooted and significant disagreements.

The historical-critical approach to the Bible does not assume that each author has the same message. It allows for the possibility that each author has his own perspective, his own views, his own understandings of what the Christian faith is and should be. The discrepancies we have already considered are crucial for showing us that there are differences among the biblical writers. The major differences we are about to discuss should force us to recognize that the discrepancies are not merely a matter of minutiae but are issues of great importance.

I am not insisting that the historical-critical approach is the only way to read the Bible. Sophisticated theologians who are fully aware of historical-critical problems with the Bible have devised ways of treating the Bible as Scripture even though it is full of discrepancies… It is important to come to grips with what the historical-critical approach is and how it can affect the way the Bible is understood.

Jesus, Interrupted book cover Jesus Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible. 304 pages. HarperOne. $25.99. The approach is predicated, to some extent, on the idea that the “canon” of Scripture—that is the collection of the books into one book considered in some sense to be authoritative for believers—was not the original form in which the biblical books appeared. When Paul wrote his letters to the churches he founded, he did not think that he was writing the Bible. He thought he was writing letters, addressing individual needs as they came up, based on what he thought, believed, and preached at the time. Only later did someone put these letters together and consider them inspired. So, too, with the Gospels. Mark, whatever his real name was, had no idea that his book would be put into a collection with three other books and called Scripture; and he certainly did not think that his book should be interpreted in light of what some other Christian would write some thirty years later in a different country and a different context. Mark no doubt wanted his book to be read and understood on its own, as did Matthew, Luke, John, and all the other writers of the New Testament.

The historical-critical method maintains that we are in danger of misreading a book if we fail to let its author speak for himself, if we force his message to be exactly the same as another author’s message, if we insist on reading all the books of the New Testament as one book instead of as twenty-seven books. These books were written in different times and places, under different circumstances, to address different issues; they were written by different authors with different perspectives, beliefs, assumptions, traditions, and sources. And they sometimes present different points of view on major issues.

From Jesus, Interrupted by Bart D. Ehrman. Copyright © 2009 by Bart D. Ehrman. Reprinted by permission of HarperOne, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. For more information about Jesus, Interrupted please click HERE.

Bart D. Ehrman is the author of more than twenty books, including the New York Times bestselling Misquoting Jesus and God's Problem. Ehrman is the James A. Gray Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

 


March 24, 2009 | 7:12am
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Comments ()

Johnny-Boy

Personally, I believe the only texts that Jesus would be interested in reading at all, would be the vast majority of books that have been discarded all together by the various churches, because they did not "fit" into the dogma that controls and oppresses many for the benefit of few, in his name.

I believe he would be ashamed over the millions of people that have been tortured and murdered and looted over the past 2 thousand years, in his name.

I believe that he would toss to the side, the biblical texts in their current form as edited manipulations, not resembling the texts as they were written, but rather as they have been "constructed", in his name.

- let the flaming begin.

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10:36 am, Mar 24, 2009

genoftheheart

Very insightful, Professor Ehrman. I still side with the philosopher who said the only true Christian died on the cross.

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10:43 am, Mar 24, 2009

buffgbob

This method seems fine, except for the significant detail that the author, context, and time these things were written are not known to us as fact. At best, we have best guesses based on tradition. The weakest link in the chain of insight to these books is the tradition itself which ultimately is where the faith of millions is placed.

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12:04 pm, Mar 24, 2009

mhpdb60

Very insightful....and it goes along with another book I recently read called "The History of the End of the World" (I cannot remember the name of the author at this moment), about the book of revelation and how it should not have been included in the NT. The early so-called "church" did the world both a favor as well as a great disfavor by creating the so-called NT Canon. The premise of Prof. Ehrman's new book, from this review, seems to add to "the truth" that our Lord wanted his followers to know.

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2:03 pm, Mar 24, 2009

DavidBarron

Like all good fiction, we can get a lot from different workings of the same story, told from different points of view. I prefer Luke, as he focuses on a more socially responsible and more inclusive view. I think this is epitomized in The Good Samaritan story.

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3:07 pm, Mar 24, 2009

DavidBarron

Johnny-Boy: Like all old writings, there is a lot of things left out and manipulated. As fiction, I'll take the good parts. For academic purposes, I'd like to know where all the parts came from. In either case, I'd like to see as many of the old texts as possible.

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3:11 pm, Mar 24, 2009

dm10003

jesus, paul/saul, and the apostles were jews. american christians are outraged when they go to the holy land and find out jesus didn't have a christian burial. wills' "what paul meant" enlightened me about how paul has been misunderstood. i like ehrman's books, his lecture dvd's, and reading his frothing critics on his amazon book pages. this looks like more good reading for this indifferent agnostic who needs an adult alternative to all the screaming control-freak babies.

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5:57 pm, Mar 24, 2009

joymars

I remember once a "believer" looking at me in the eyes and saying, "The greatest proof of the Divinity of The Bible is that there are no conflicting statements in it."

I couldn't believe what I was hearing.

The pity is that the very people who need to read books like this never will.

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6:29 pm, Mar 24, 2009

scough

Yawn! What's new here? If this guy wants to start a discussion, start criticizing the Old Testament.

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7:08 pm, Mar 24, 2009

AgathaX

This fellow has one thing in common with fundamentalists: his primary concern is "them." Just as fundamentalists are concerned with all those other people (the abortion promoting, birth control pushing liberals); so too this fellow. His "them" is is comprised of all those "people do not read the Bible this way." A meaningful faith cannot be about "them."

Religion, at its best, has people sharing the stories of what gives their life meaning. Each person's story will either speak to someone or it won't. And explaining to people why they are wrong is seldom useful. This fellow breaks no new theological ground. Based on the above, it seems that his only twist is to attempt to throw it in the faces of the errant and garner the admiration of the like-minded. Oh goody.

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1:35 am, Mar 25, 2009

ciwiuk

Well said, AgathaX.
I agree completely with what you said.

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3:42 am, Mar 25, 2009

mhpdb60

AgathaX says, "Explaining to people where they are wrong is seldom useful"; and then goes on to explain why "all those" (= "them") who do not agree with her are all wrong - and in a most derogatory and inflamatory way. And here I am suckered into her ridiculous argument.

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8:29 am, Mar 25, 2009

SFGiants

"Jesus said:
'Become yourselves, while passing by.'"

(Paraphrase: "Become your true selves as your egos pass away.")

The Gospel of Thomas (Translator: Hugh McGregor Ross)

Now here's a version of Jesus for Buddhists!

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11:58 am, Mar 25, 2009

TimBarrus

There was no Jesus. There is no god. Get over it. http://le-too.blogspot.com -- Tim Barrus, Amsterdam

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9:18 am, Mar 27, 2009

aquamarine

I purchased Professor Ehrman's, "The Historical Jesus" on DVD from The Teaching Company (teach12.com), and I never tire of listening to them.

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8:33 pm, Mar 31, 2009
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