It is not as if everyone within academia agrees with Bart Ehrman. There is no issue for those that do agree with him, even those outside of academia, but his view is not consensus. In fact Bart Ehrman makes claims and a claim is not the same as stating fact that everyone will accept.
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Bart D. Ehrman is an American New Testament scholar and textual critic of early Christianity. He is is the James A. Gray Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He attempts to discern the original wording of the gospels, epistles, and other ancient texts. He claims that his research demonstrates that not only was the Biblical text unintentionally altered by scribes, but sometimes was done intentionally for a variety of reasons such as to make them more uniform and bring them into conformity with changing beliefs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bart_EhrmanThere are other noted scholars that disagree with Ehrman's conclusions and claims.
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Ben Witherington III is an evangelical Biblical scholar, and lecturer on New Testament Studies.
Witherington is Professor of New Testament Interpretation at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky. He is a graduate of UNC, Chapel Hill and holds an M.Div. degree from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and a Ph.D. from the University of Durham in England. He is an elected member of Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas, a society dedicated to New Testament studies.
Witherington is an author and speaker. He has written over thirty books, and has made many appearances on radio interviews, and on television programs featured on the History Channel, Discovery Channel, and other major networks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Witherington_IIIAnd from Witherington's personal blog he states the following:
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I am however glad Bart is honest about his pilgrimage. If only he could be equally honest and admit that in his scholarship he is trying now to deconstruct orthodox Christianity which he once embraced, rather than do 'value-neutral' text criticism. In my own view, he has attempted this deconstruction on the basis of very flimsy evidence-- textual variants which do not prove what he wants them to prove.
Witherington offers some great insight here into both him and Ehrman since they were both students of Bruce Metzger. He also hints at another view accepted by many that through textual criticism others find that 90% of the NT's historicity is not in question.
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As I remember Bruce Metzger saying once (who trained both Bart and myself in these matters) over 90% of the NT is rather well established in regard to its original text, and none of the remaining 10% provides us with data that could lead to any shocking revisions of the Christian credo or doctrine. It is at the very least disingenuous to suggest it does, if not deliberately provocative to say otherwise.
And no one should believe Witherington is simply oppose to Ehrman for he writes respectfully of him and even agrees on some points:
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I want to turn around now and say something about one thing Ehrman is right to complain about. Ehrman is right that later pious scribes sometimes over-egged the pudding, to use a British phrase. Sometimes they did revise the text to better highlight Christian doctrine including the notion of the Trinity and other such truths. This is really quite irrelevant because when one stripes away the later accretions one still has a portray of Jesus that involves: 1) the virginal conception; 2) the atoning death of Jesus; 3) the bodily resurrection of Jesus; 4) the raw stuff of Trinitarian thinking, and we could go on. Ehrman's so-called evidence that these are later ideas imposed on the text by scribal corrupters is frankly false-- historically false, text critically false, theologically false.
And Witherington ends his review, which focuses on many other individual points, with general commentary.
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I am glad we have a book like 'Misquoting Jesus' to tease our minds into active thought, though ironically very little of the book as anything to do with the actual sayings or teachings of Jesus himself. The title like the book is more of a tease, than really providing substantial evidence for 'the orthodox concotion of the Christian faith'. I would simply say to the reader-- caveat emptor. This author has a strong ax to grind, and the fact that he grinds it well in fluid prose makes it all the more beguiling. As my granny used to say-- Don't be so open minded that your brains fall out!
http://benwitherington.blogspot.com/2006/0...icism-bart.htmlDaniel Wallace also has vast credentials and disagrees with Ehrman to a degree:
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Daniel Baird Wallace is a professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary where he has been tenured since 1995.
Wallace was born in California in 1952. He graduated from Biola University in 1975 and later attended Dallas Theological Seminary where he graduated in 1979 with a Master of Theology in New Testament Studies. He taught at Dallas Seminary from 1979-81 and afterward at Grace Theological Seminary from 1981-83. In 1995, he earned his Ph.D. from Dallas Theological Seminary where he continues to teach full time.
Wallace is considered an authority on Koine Greek grammar and New Testament textual criticism [1] among New Testament scholars. He has published largely in these fields and has presented many papers at The Society of Biblical Literature as well as The Evangelical Theological Society conferences.
Wallace published his first edition of Greek Grammar Beyond The Basics in 1996. It has since become a standard work in the field. Two-thirds of schools that teach the subject use the textbook.[3] He also served as senior New Testament editor for the NET Bible and has founded the Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts. The purpose of the institution is to preserve the Greek text of the New Testament by taking digital photographs of all extant Greek New Testament Manuscripts.[4]
Wallace, along with DTS colleague Darrell L. Bock, has been an outspoken critic of the alleged "popular culture" quest to discredit orthodox, evangelical views of Jesus--including the writings of Elaine Pagels and Bart Ehrman.[2] Wallace critiqued Ehrman's Misquoting Jesus: The Story of Who Changed the Bible and Why for misrepresenting commonly held views of textual criticism, especially in Ehrman's view of the "orthodox corruption of Scripture."[3] Wallace and Ehrman are scheduled to dialogue at the Greer-Heard Point-Counterpoint Forum in April, 2008.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_B._WallaceHere are some more thoughts from Wallace:
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More importantly, this book sells because it appeals to the skeptic who wants reasons not to believe, who considers the Bible a book of myths. It’s one thing to say that the stories in the Bible are legend; it’s quite another to say that many of them were added centuries later. Although Ehrman does not quite say this, he leaves the impression that the original form of the NT was rather different from what the manuscripts now read.
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Chapter 2 (“The Copyists of the Early Christian Writings”) deals with scribal changes to the text, both intentional and unintentional. Here Ehrman mixes standard text-critical information with his own interpretation, an interpretation that is by no means shared by all textual critics, nor even most of them. In essence, he paints a very bleak picture of scribal activity6, leaving the unwary reader to assume that we have no chance of recovering the original wording of the NT.
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Chapter 3 (“Texts of the New Testament”) and chapter 4 (“The Quest for Origins”) take us from Erasmus and the first published Greek NT to the text of Westcott and Hort. Discussed are the major scholars from the sixteenth through the nineteenth century. This is the most objective material in the book and makes for fascinating reading. But even here, Ehrman injects his own viewpoint by his selection of material. For example, in discussing the role that Bengel played in the history of textual criticism (109-112), Ehrman gives this pious German conservative high praise as a scholar: he was an “extremely careful interpreter of the biblical text” (109); “Bengel studied everything intensely” (111).
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On the other hand, Ehrman instead mentions J. J. Wettstein, a contemporary of Bengel, who, at the tender age of twenty assumed that these variants “can have no weakening effect on the trustworthiness or integrity of the Scriptures,”9 but that years later, after careful study of the text, Wettstein changed his views after he “began thinking seriously about his own theological convictions.”10 One is tempted to think that Ehrman may see a parallel between himself and Wettstein: like Wettstein, Ehrman started out as an evangelical when in college, but changed his views on the text and theology in his more mature years.11 But the model that Bengel supplies—a sober scholar who arrives at quite different conclusions—is quietly passed over.
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Besides the selectivity regarding scholars and their opinions, these four chapters involve two curious omissions. First, there is next to no discussion about the various manuscripts. It’s almost as if external evidence is a nonstarter for Ehrman. Further, as much as he enlightens his lay readers about the discipline, the fact that he doesn’t give them the details about which manuscripts are more trustworthy, older, etc., allows him to control the information flow. Repeatedly, I was frustrated in my perusal of the book because it spoke of various readings without giving much, if any, of the data that supported them. Even in his third chapter—“Texts of the New Testament: Editions, Manuscripts, and Differences”—there is minimal discussion of the manuscripts, and none of individual codices. In the two pages that deal specifically with the manuscripts, Ehrman speaks only about their number, nature, and variants.12
Second, Ehrman overplays the quality of the variants while underscoring their quantity. He says, “There are more variations among our manuscripts than there are words in the New Testament.”13 Elsewhere he states that the number of variants is as high as 400,000.14 That is true enough, but by itself is misleading. Anyone who teaches NT textual criticism knows that this fact is only part of the picture and that, if left dangling in front of the reader without explanation, is a distorted view. Once it is revealed that the great majority of these variants are inconsequential—involving spelling differences that cannot even be translated, articles with proper nouns, word order changes, and the like—and that only a very small minority of the variants alter the meaning of the text, the whole picture begins to come into focus. Indeed, only about 1% of the textual variants are both meaningful and viable.15 The impression Ehrman sometimes gives throughout the book—and repeats in interviews16—is that of wholesale uncertainty about the original wording,17 a view that is far more radical than he actually embraces.18
Next Wallace states that in the last three chapters of "Misquoting Jesus" that Ehrman displays an agenda and is also engaging in the fallacy of non sequitur.
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But these criticisms are minor quibbles. There is nothing really earth-shaking in the first four chapters of the book. Rather, it is in the introduction that we see Ehrman’s motive, and the last three chapters reveal his agenda. In these places he is especially provocative and given to overstatement and non sequitur. The remainder of our review will focus on this material.
Further Ehrman asks an engaging question but fails to actually answer it to the satisfaction of a contemporary scholar. In the rest of this article Wallace focuses solely on the material of the book "Misquoting Jesus".
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He notes that the study of the NT manuscripts increasingly created doubts in his mind: “I kept reverting to my basic question: how does it help us to say that the Bible is the inerrant word of God if in fact we don’t have the words that God inerrantly inspired, but only the words copied by the scribes—sometimes correctly and sometimes (many times!) incorrectly?”20 This is an excellent question. And it is featured prominently in Misquoting Jesus, being repeated throughout the book. Unfortunately, Ehrman does not really spend much time wrestling with it directly.
Wallace finally criticized "Misquoting Jesus" as fostering an alarmist mentality and appealing to emotion which is counterproductive to actual scholarship. It should be noted that this is not a criticism of Ehrman himself but rather in his motives for authoring this book and the reaction it would receive by those not well versed in textual criticism. In the end Wallace states that scholarly textual critics would not seriously accept some of the assertions in which Ehrman attempts to steer the reader. In my personal view perhaps the material was packaged in the form it was knowing it would sell better than if being a book that textual critics scholars themselves would be able to accept and praise.
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And that approach resembles more an alarmist mentality than what a mature, master teacher is able to offer. Regarding the evidence, suffice it to say that significant textual variants that alter core doctrines of the NT have not yet been produced.
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Scholars bear a sacred duty not to alarm lay readers on issues that they have little understanding of. Indeed, even agnostic teachers bear this responsibility. Unfortunately, the average layperson will leave Misquoting Jesus with far greater doubts about the wording and teachings of the NT than any textual critic would ever entertain. A good teacher doesn’t hold back on telling his students what’s what, but he also knows how to package the material so they don’t let emotion get in the way of reason. The irony is that Misquoting Jesus is supposed to be all about reason and evidence, but it has been creating as much panic and alarm as The Da Vinci Code.
The article is rather lengthy and anyone who is interested in Ehrman's book could read it if they want to develop a more balanced view on the issue.
http://www.bible.org/page.php?page_id=4000Overall this is not about demonizing Ehrman because these two scholars speak respectfully of him and it is noted that Ehrman himself is respectful of his beliefs and with those whom he discusses them with who might disagree. What no one should lose sight of is that Ehrman's work are only his claims and there is nothing wrong with those who accept them but they should not be viewed as a sole fact of scholarship or even as consensus for when it comes to contemporary scholars some completely disagree with Ehrman.
It is also equally important to know how other scholars view anyone else's work. Do his peers accept his work or not? Overall they have not but let us see how this progresses throughout history and if Ehrman's work will be more readily accepted by other scholars as time goes on.
Also the study of textual criticism is not highly accessible to lay people and those outside of scholarship but the brilliance of Ehrman is that he has packaged his work for the lay audience. That though means that many of the more scholarly aspects of his work are not transferred to this popular audience.
Most importantly if someone is truly interested they would want to have a balanced view of this topic regardless of what they conclude to subscribe to in the end.