Dovekin:
Ehrman looks like he is repeating Raymond Brown’s description of the Christologies of the gospels
Yes. If you know anything about Ehrman, you know he is constantly quoting and referring to Raymond Brown, a Catholic priest, author, and renowned Catholic expert on the Bible. He explicitly says over and over that Brown has had a great influence on him.
The business about the divinity of Jesus and exactly how all that works is something it took the Church about 500-600 years to work out so that what we believe today became the dominant orthodoxy. And of course all you have to do is look at the Jews, Muslims, and a lot of Protestant denominations, not to mention various Eastern churches, to see that the orthodox Catholic view is not held exclusively–even 2,000 years later.
No, actually, it didn’t take 500-600 years to work it out. It is in the Gospels, – all of them – it is in the Old Testament embedded in the Prophets and Wisdom literature, in the Psalms, and in other books. It is necessary to see the cumulative case to be made and how the words of Jesus and books of the New Testament bring out the relevant passages from the Old, but it is there.
It is also a predominant theme in the writings of the Church Fathers.
But mostly, it is in the words and acts of Jesus, himself, especially when he asks the question following some key event or other, “Who do you say
I am?” He is God, riddling those around him.
Raymond Brown was writing when text criticism had done, arguably, its worst damage because it was a relatively novel approach and there was uncertainty in terms of how to answer the issues it raised, and that relying solely upon what could be shown from the text of Scripture alone. A great deal more work has been done since then.
Much of Fr. Brown’s work needs to be read as demonstrating what could be shown from the text itself, and not from the perspective of what he believed as a Catholic priest. So, you can’t claim what his work states or reflects his beliefs as a Catholic. It reflects only what he thought could be demonstrated using the tools of text criticism.
Ehrman’s claims aren’t as supportable as he (or you) think they are. He is trusted as a scholar largely because his books were widely used and he went unchallenged for a long time. That has changed in the past decade or so, and it will change much more in the next decade or two.
It might be true that the Church took several centuries up to the Council of Nicea to articulate how Jesus could be both God and man, both divine and human, but it is also true that the Church knew very early on that Jesus, the man, was God. Explaining how that could be possible to a Jewish and pagan audience was a different matter, however.
So don’t confuse the claim that Jesus was God with the working out of what that meant or how it was to be properly understood. The first was present from the get-go, the second required some time to unpack and articulate.