Let’s try another tack:You have a misunderstanding of the terms “Son of Man” and “Son of God”.
If we compare Psalm 107:23-30 with Mark 4. There are parallels between the two that appear to imply intentionality on the part of the author of Mark.
Psalm 107:23-30:
Some went down to the sea in ships,
doing business on the mighty waters;
they saw the deeds of the LORD,
his wondrous works in the deep.
For he commanded and raised the stormy wind,
which lifted up the waves of the sea.
They mounted up to heaven, they went down to the depths;
their courage melted away in their calamity;
they reeled and staggered like drunkards,
and were at their wits’ end.
Then they cried to the LORD in their trouble,
and he brought them out from their distress;
he made the storm be still,
and the waves of the sea were hushed.
Then they were glad because they had quiet,
and he brought them to their desired haven.
In the Psalm, it is the LORD [the word LORD (all caps in the OT) represents the four sacred letters of the Tetragrammaton, the name יהוה] who stills the storm in Psalm. So in Psalm 107, YAHWEH stills the storm.
There are six points here:
Put those next to Mark 4 and the main parallel is that Jesus in Mark 4 does what YAHWEH does in Psalm 107.
- There are sailors and ships
- There is a stormy wind and waves
- The courage of the sailors melts away
- So they cry out to YAHWEH
- YAHWEH stills the storm
- The waves of the sea are quiet
The story in Mark is such a tight parallel to the Psalm, that it wouldn’t be far-fetched to infer that Mark was deliberately portraying Jesus as YAHWEH because Jesus does precisely what YAHWEH does in the Psalm and the stories are too closely paralleled to be a coincidence.
- There are disciples in the boat
- There are stormy winds and waves
- The disciples are afraid
- They cry out to Jesus as opposed to YAHWEH
- Jesus stills the storm (Notice Jesus doesn’t say, ‘LORD, still the storm.’ He just commands it. He doesn’t ask God, he doesn’t pray, he just commands.)
- There was a great calm.
Note: both this post and the next draw heavily from Brant Pitre’s The Case For Jesus.
We might grant you that gMark does not specifically say, “Jesus is God” anywhere, but that is not to say the writer of gMark isn’t leaving that impression throughout the Gospel.Nowhere does gMark say Jesus is God.
Fascinating!No Jew, then or now, regards the Son of Man figure as “a deity”
Nowhere does gMark say Jesus is God.
Keep making that assertion. Keep believing it. Keep refusing to respond to folks who demonstrate it’s not true.Translation: “I can’t sustain my faith position with actual reference to the textual evidence"
I think there is some first century Jewish writing that does suggest the Messiah might be God himself, but even so, Jesus appears to be addressing what the Jews of his time thought – i.e., the Messiah would be a human being – in his reference to David’s words in Psalm 110.Yes, as “the Son of Man”. That’s the Messiah. Jews did not regard the Messiah to BE God.
It’s a comment like that, which essentially renders anything else you say going forward sketchy in the eyes any knowledgeable, intelligent scholars. Bart is respected by most Christian apologists and scholars for his knowledge of early Christianity and for his ability to communicate it to both non-scholarly and scholarly audiences. You calling him a joke because I assume you disagree with him and probably his faith stance, shows an extreme bias from one side of the spectrum. It’s essentially a stance based on emotion, for which I can imagine many sheep are ready to meekly follow, without formulating their own opinion by considering the material, based on its own merit. I realize I"m on a Catholic forum, so I do not expect really anything different, but it’s awfully disappointing in a realm of supposed intellectual discussion.Bart Erhman is a joke. I even suspect I know what he is, but that is for another time/place.
I would think this statement isn’t exactly true. Admittedly, calling Ehrman “a joke” is a bold claim and it does create a huge burden of proof, but to say that, in itself, the statement renders anything else to be “sketchy” is a fallacy.ACrosSticks:
It’s a comment like that, which essentially renders anything else you say going forward sketchy in the eyes any knowledgeable, intelligent scholars.Bart Erhman is a joke. I even suspect I know what he is, but that is for another time/place.
That doesn’t render everything else he says about Carrier to be “sketchy.” It does put us on alert for bias, but the things he writes to critique Carrier are not to be judged by the statement by itself. They are judged by how provably true each statement is.Carrier is a joke.
How respected he is has very little to do with whether what he says on this point or that is correct, and he does have many critics on many of his claims.Bart is respected by most Christian apologists and scholars for his knowledge of early Christianity and for his ability to communicate it to both non-scholarly and scholarly audiences. You calling him a joke because I assume you disagree with him and probably his faith stance, shows an extreme bias from one side of the spectrum. It’s essentially a stance based on emotion, for which I can imagine many sheep are ready to meekly follow, without formulating their own opinion by considering the material, based on its own merit. I realize I"m on a Catholic forum, so I do not expect really anything different, but it’s awfully disappointing in a realm of supposed intellectual discussion.
Of course context is important. Calling someone a joke is inherently an emotional attack on that person, but the context may tell you something about specifically what the attack was attacking. The attack may be on someone’s character, or credentials, etc. However, as you mentioned later in the post, if the person’s credentials being called into question are more universally questioned by respected, knowledgeable people, then the likelihood of those credentials being a “joke” is higher.I would think this statement isn’t exactly true. Admittedly, calling Ehrman “a joke” is a bold claim and it does create a huge burden of proof, but to say that, in itself, the statement renders anything else to be “sketchy” is a fallacy.
Our esteemed Mr. O’Neill said precisely the same thing about Richard Carrier.
Agreed, however, on most of Ehrman’s views on the historicity of early Christianity, he claims them to be the majority held view, except the all important “belief” view. Of course he could be lying, I really haven’t found that to be the case.How respected he is has very little to do with whether what he says on this point or that is correct, and he does have many critics on many of his claims.
No, but I would most likely not read material from people who call well-respected-in-their-field intellectuals a “joke.” I believe the correct approach in reading scholarly material is to read respected scholars on all sides of the spectrum and formulate an opinion of your own, based on your interpretation. Of course, being open to shifting or even changing that opinion is important as well.You aren’t claiming that the sheep shouldn’t follow meekly when someone refers to someone else as “a joke,” but they SHOULD follow meekly when that person is spoken of as a “respected scholar,” are you?
I think Ehrman’s biggest beef with Carrier is that he does not consider his knowledge and views on early Christianity to be on par with scholars who have basically dedicated their entire lives in that specific field. When the ideas are so far outside the norm and you don’t fly within the circles of scholars of the field, your ideas will be rightfully questioned.Re: the sketchiness of Richard Carrier… Yeah, he’s nothing but sketchy. He’s not even trustworthy in the field he calls his own, the history of science, and even atheist sites keep finding places in his books that are nothing but lies. I might provisionally believe Bart Ehrman if he told me the sky was currently blue, but Richard Carrier would force me to look outside.
The amusing bit is that Bart Ehrman and Richard Carrier have been known to feud with each other about each other’s bad scholarship. A great example of the pot calling the kettle black!
Well, you do have that burden if you are trying to convince anyone else of your claim. The fact that Ehrman has many highly educated scholars who agree with him for a variety of non-trivial reasons, means that refuting all of those reasons places a high burden of proof upon you.HarryStotle:![]()
Oh, no, you, as others, misunderstand. I have no burden to prove what is ridiculous or foolish to me, or anyone else who so thinks based upon their own criteria for such an statement.Same thing with @ACrosSticks, who has a much higher burden to carry since so few people agree with him,
Probably true, but it is true of everyone including me and you.Said person, didn’t stand a chance at a real study of the text, being as they do not believe what the text says. Never was about texts and mss, etc, it was always about their heart.
I don’t find him a trusted theologian, but he’s never claimed to be a theologian. He is, however, respected by other historians regarding his knowledge of ancient cultures. I understand why a Catholic would not agree with Bart Ehrman or read him, but he is a respected scholar and Professor of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina. I respect his scholarship, but I don’t agree with all he writes.Re: the sketchiness of Richard Carrier… Yeah, he’s nothing but sketchy. He’s not even trustworthy in the field he calls his own, the history of science, and even atheist sites keep finding places in his books that are nothing but lies. I might provisionally believe Bart Ehrman if he told me the sky was currently blue, but Richard Carrier would force me to look outside.