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Erikaspirit16
Guest
So going back to my post #28, no one has told me which quotation is Bart Ehrman and which is the catechism…and no cheating by googling. Just look at what is said.
Pshaw. You’ve picked the most tame Ehrman quote out there. Yes, even a blind squirrel will find a nut, once in a while. But, Ehrman really does assert things that are in complete opposition to Church teaching!So going back to my post #28, no one has told me which quotation is Bart Ehrman and which is the catechism…and no cheating by googling. Just look at what is said.
You get a heart. You are correct! But other than “Sacred Scripture,” they are almost identical.The first quote is from the CCC since Ehrman is not going to refer to the Bible as Sacred Scripture.
It may be tame, but it’s also the core of the matter–inspiration and revelation. What Ehrman has to say is almost a paraphrase of the Catholic catechism. You may be right about him being in complete opposition to the Church in certain matters, although I’ve read five of his books, and I can’t recall anything offhand.Pshaw. You’ve picked the most tame Ehrman quote out there. Yes, even a blind squirrel will find a nut, once in a while. But , Ehrman really does assert things that are in complete opposition to Church teaching!
You may be right about him being in complete opposition to the Church in certain matters, although I’ve read five of his books, and I can’t recall anything offhand.
That’s what turned me off from him, too. He takes the approach of “Ancient Aliens” – throw something out for us to look at, without proving the veracity of the claim, and then in the next breath, he uses it as the factual underpinning for even more wild claims. Not. Good. Scholarship.That’s playing fast and loose with the truth.
That’s not how he frames up his discipline. He’s a New Testament scholar, by his own claims.Ehrman, it must be noted, is a historian.
If John just made it up then the entire bible is unreliable.Yes, but how can you concretely argue that John just didn’t make up his claim that Jesus was God eternal.
If I was going to write a book about someone I thought was God I would have mentioned it specifically and prominently, as John did.Among those in the know, would have heard that John said he was not fit to untie Jesus sandal strap. So this statement by Jesus would have caused confusion the answer of which is a revelation of Jesus’ divinity. In the following passage Jesus is revealing that He is not of the generation of Adam.
Matth, 11
11 Truly I tell you, among those born of women no one has arisen greater than John the Baptist; yet the least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he.
Given that Ehrman is, minimally, agnostic the first quote referring to what God speaks and wants to reveal wouldn’t be in alignment with Ehrman’s lack of theological belief.OK. Here’s a little quiz for you–and no cheating. No looking things up on the internet. Just from your very own memory and logic. Here are two quotations: one is Bart Ehrman, the other is the Catechism. Which is which? And can you see any essential difference between them?
In order to discover the sacred authors’ intention, the reader must take into account the conditions of their time and culture, the literary genres in use at that time, and the modes of feeling, speaking, and narrating then current. ‘For the fact is that truth is differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing, in prophetical and poetical texts, and in other forms of literary expression.’”
- “In Sacred Scripture, God speaks to man in a human way. To interpret Scripture correctly, the reader must be attentive to what the human authors truly wanted to affirm and to what God wanted to reveal to us by their words.
These authors were anything but disinterested, and their biases need to be front and center in the critics’ minds when evaluating what they have to say. But at the same time, they were historical persons giving reports of things they had heard, using historically situated modes of rhetoric and presentation.”
- “Their authors were human authors…they wrote in human languages and in human contexts; their books are recognizable as human books, written according to the rhetorical conventions of their historical period. They are human and historical, whatever else you may think about them, and to treat them differently is to mistreat them and to misunderstand them.”
Yup.What Ehrman has to say is almost a paraphrase of the Catholic catechism.
What’s your point?Then the devil took Him into the holy city and had Him stand on the pinnacle of the temple, and said to Him, “If You are the Son of God, throw Yourself down; for it is written, ‘HE WILL COMMAND HIS ANGELS CONCERNING YOU’; and ‘ON their HANDS THEY WILL BEAR YOU UP, SO THAT YOU WILL NOT STRIKE YOUR FOOT AGAINST A STONE.’ (Matt 4:4-7)
If you were a first century Jew, and you heard and saw the things that Jesus said and did in the Synoptics, you would have thought Jesus WAS claiming to be God “specifically and prominently” in his every word and deed as reported by Matthew, Mark and Luke.Benadam:![]()
If I was going to write a book about someone I thought was God I would have mentioned it specifically and prominently, as John did.Among those in the know, would have heard that John said he was not fit to untie Jesus sandal strap. So this statement by Jesus would have caused confusion the answer of which is a revelation of Jesus’ divinity. In the following passage Jesus is revealing that He is not of the generation of Adam.
Matth, 11
11 Truly I tell you, among those born of women no one has arisen greater than John the Baptist; yet the least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he.
Something to understand about belief and faith is to know that the act of discovery almost guarantees ascent. At the very least it allows one to make an interior decision without external noise. Consider this, if you were God could you go out and tell anyone and they believe it or would you have to let them discover that for themselves? The authors of the synoptics fit their accounts to the good of their audiences. As time granted it became fitting to proclaim Christ’s divinity more plainly. as John did.f I was going to write a book about someone I thought was God I would have mentioned it specifically and prominently, as John did.
So they knew Christ was God, they just decided to keep it a secret for a while? And Paul? Did he ever mention this?Something to understand about belief and faith is to know that the act of discovery almost guarantees ascent. At the very least it allows one to make an interior decision without external noise. Consider this, if you were God could you go out and tell anyone and they believe it or would you have to let them discover that for themselves? The authors of the synoptics fit their accounts to the good of their audiences. As time granted it became fitting to proclaim Christ’s divinity more plainly. as John did.
You must not have understood my post.So they knew Christ was God, they just decided to keep it a secret for a while? And Paul? Did he ever mention this?
Even Jesus kept his divinity secret through much of his ministry, in the sense that he enjoined silence on those who had figured it out. To everyone else he spoke in riddles and parables both revealing and concealing who he was. That is why he kept asking, “Who do you say I Am?” That in itself is a riddle since the sacred name of God is I Am.Benadam:![]()
So they knew Christ was God, they just decided to keep it a secret for a while? And Paul? Did he ever mention this?Something to understand about belief and faith is to know that the act of discovery almost guarantees ascent. At the very least it allows one to make an interior decision without external noise. Consider this, if you were God could you go out and tell anyone and they believe it or would you have to let them discover that for themselves? The authors of the synoptics fit their accounts to the good of their audiences. As time granted it became fitting to proclaim Christ’s divinity more plainly. as John did.
I’m thinking that including the chief priest’s assertion of blasphemy, upon hearing Jesus’ answer (in Mt 26:64-65, which sets Jesus as sitting at God’s right hand and coming down on the clouds) would be a clear enough indication that not only is Jesus declaring Himself to be God, but that the Sanhedrin recognized that He was making that claim.If you were a first century Jew, and you heard and saw the things that Jesus said and did in the Synoptics, you would have thought Jesus WAS claiming to be God “specifically and prominently” in his every word and deed as reported by Matthew, Mark and Luke.