A new book by a major
New Testament scholar is sure to make mincemeat of many people’s faith.
Needlessly.
The scholar is the
iconoclastic Dr. Bart Ehrman, who teaches religion at the University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
The book is called
Forged:
Why the Bible’s Authors Are Not Who We Think They Are. Ehrman said
on a radio broadcast that major portions of the New Testament documents
are supposedly forged. They’re frauds.
Dr. Sam Lamerson is
a conservative New Testament scholar who teaches at Knox Seminary in Ft.
Lauderdale. (By way of full disclosure, I earned a theology degree there).
He heard Ehrman on a radio broadcast say words to this effect: "I want
to be the scholar that uses the F-word about the Bible. I want people to
know that these books were forged."
"Forged" is a strong
word. Several of the New Testament books claim no authorship at all. Church
tradition has attributed them to various writers, but the biblical text
itself does not claim authorship for these particular books. For instance,
none of the four Gospels (of which tradition names the writers as Matthew,
Mark, Luke, and John) actually have the names of the authors at the beginning
of their documents.
But if a document is anonymous,
how could it be a forgery?
Dr. Mike Licona, a rising
star in New Testament scholarship, has been reading an advanced copy of
Forged. He told me that the most prolific biographer of antiquity
is widely held to be Plutarch (as in Plutarch’s Lives), yet of all the
50 or so existing manuscripts we have of Plutarch, none of them are signed.
Were they forgeries? By
Ehrman’s definition, it would seem so. But no serious scholar holds that
view.
Dr. Licona, who has debated
Ehrman twice, told me, "What we’re seeing from Ehrman [in Forged]
is not new information.
It may be new to many readers
who aren’t used to looking at the academic stuff, but it’s not at all new."
Ehrman goes on to assert that many New Testament books that do claim
authorship within the text, such as Ephesians, Colossians, and the letters
of Peter and James, are not written by the claimed authors. It should be
noted that this is not based on manuscript evidence. It’s based largely
on the style of the text, and there are many conservative scholars who
are not convinced by these arguments. Thus, Ehrman is stating liberal opinion
as fact.
Ironically, Ehrman even
states in his own book, "Virtually all of the problems with what I’ve been
calling forgeries can be solved if secretaries were heavily involved in
the compositions of the early Christian writings." [p. 134]
But that’s exactly what
happened.
Conservative scholars note
that many of Paul’s writings begin with his name…and that of a co-author,
such as Timothy, Silas, or Sosthenes.
Dr. Lamerson, who interestingly
worked his way through seminary by doing magic tricks, knows sleight of
hand when he sees it (or in this case, hears it). He said, "Of course,
being forged is very different from having a secretary or having someone
help you with the text or not knowing who wrote the text because their
name simply isn’t included."
Ehrman likes to tout
that he’s a former evangelical, who went to Moody Bible Institute and Wheaton
College. (I went to Wheaton Grad School and met my wife there 33 years
ago.) Ehrman then went on to Princeton Seminary where he began to have
some doubts about his faith. That faith finally shattered when he was teaching
at Rutgers University. Now, he’s an agnostic.
So why are Bart Ehrman
and other liberal scholars even concerning themselves with this stuff if
they don’t believe it?
Amazingly, Jesus made
a warning that fits here (if the Gospel of Matthew is to be believed—and,
no, it wasn’t forged; it just wasn’t signed). He admonished those who "shut
the kingdom of heaven in men’s faces." He said, "You yourselves won’t go
in, but you prevent others from going in."
I’m concerned that
many people will hear Bart Ehrman and think that he speaks for all the
scholars. He does not.
Many people might
miss the Gospel because they take Ehrman’s word as Gospel. It is not.
It is liberal opinion
repackaged well for a mass audience.
For anyone needing
a scholarly rebuttal to Bart Ehrman’s 2011 book, feel free to read Terry
L. Wilder's excellent article called "Pseudonymity and the New Testament,"
which appears in a 2001 book, Interpreting the New Testament: Essays
on Methods and Issues. (Indeed, Ehrman's arguments aren’t new.)
Dr. Paul Maier, a professor
of ancient history at Western Michigan University and a first rate scholar
of the New Testament and its history, told me, "Both [Ehrman] and his publisher
[HarperOne] are guilty of cheap sensationalism with little or no regard
for the truth."
Ehrman’s book went
on sale today (March 22, 2011). Just in time for Easter, he, his publisher,
and the lackeys in the media who go for all the anti-faith iconoclasm get
another chance to try and cash in. What a friend we have in Jesus.
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