By
Mike Robinson
Bart Ehrman in his new book How Jesus
Became God asserted: “What can we say about how Jesus most likely understood
himself? Did he call himself the messiah? If so, what did he mean by it? And
did he call himself God? Here I want to stake out a clear position: messiah,
yes; God, no.” Clearly Bart Ehrman denies that Jesus was aware of
His divinity. Of course, as an atheist/agnostic, Ehrman rejects the deity of
Christ as an ontological reality. Bart
Ehrman’s scholarship rests upon skeptical presuppositions.
Bart
Ehrman in his new book How Jesus Became God asserted: “What can we say about how Jesus most likely understood
himself? Did he call himself the messiah? If so, what did he mean by it? And
did he call himself God? Here I want to stake out a clear position: messiah,
yes; God, no.” Clearly Bart Ehrman denies
that Jesus was aware of His divinity. Of course, as an atheist/agnostic, Ehrman
rejects the deity of Christ as an ontological reality.
Bart
Ehrman’s scholarship rests upon skeptical presuppositions. Selected scholars
suggest that one must put aside the authority of Scripture and analyze the
Gospels as "literature." Yet, the Bible doesn’t allow skeptical
criticism since it is the revealed word of God. Milton’s Paradise Lost may reach lofty levels of beauty and magnetism, but
it isn’t God’s word, its directives are not binding and lack “the power of God
unto salvation.”
In
the Eighteenth century the search for the historical Jesus began in Europe.
Some of the critical scholars tried to remove all supernatural references of
miracles, revelation, and the deity of Christ. This naturalistic method led
many liberal churchmen to reject the core of Christian doctrine. Numerous books
alleging exotic identities of Jesus Christ followed including contemporary
works of the Jesus Seminar, Bart Ehrman, and Reza Aslan. Nevertheless, despite
scholars' self-assured verdicts that Jesus is not God, those who read the New
Testament accounts of Jesus are often swept off their feet in adoration and
worship—Christ and His words change everything.
Much
of hyper-critical biblical scholarship begins with the presupposition (an
assumption taken for granted) that the Bible’s portrayal of the divinity of
Jesus cannot be true since it is outside the bounds of naturalistic thought.
The rejection of the anything beyond the realm of atheistic naturalism1
is an intellectual pre-commitment; it is not a view based upon proof or
evidence. Even so, if one attempts to remove the supernatural elements from the
New Testament, one is left without a Savior who speaks with celestial
authority. Moreover, deny Christian truth and one has a worldview that lacks
the ontological capacity to account for intelligibility. This is so because a
worldview that denies Christianity cannot supply the universal operational
features2 required for intelligibility.
Worldview Issues
Worldview
principles deliver a devastating blow to critical scholars who seek to
undermine the authority and reliability of the New Testament picture of Jesus. After
applying scrutiny to their rational foundations, it becomes very apparent that Bart
Ehrman and other hypercritical authors are far from scholarly in their
treatment of Jesus of Nazareth. They rest upon shattered ground that cannot
account for rationality. They are purely ideological writers forming their own
deeply biased portrait of Jesus—then they read their revisions back into the
New Testament.
The most heretical faction involved in this type of scholarship has received a massive amount of media exposure in recent years. A popular example of this movement is Bart Ehrman. His lectures and books on textual criticism make it appear as if the church has almost no inkling what God originally revealed in Scripture. Additionally, his work leaves the reader with little reason to believe what the Gospels make known about Jesus Christ.
Indeed,
the truth regarding Jesus has been assailed by an anti-biblical book variety that
is groundlessly critical of core biblical beliefs. This hypercritical agenda is often sounded
in caustic and overbearing ways that twist and isolate facts from the entire
truth. Besides, they are without a rational foundation that has the ability to
supply the a priori conditions
required for all critical endeavors. Thus, they lack any grounds to launch
their critical attacks against Scripture.
A
vigorous quest for the Jesus of history cannot be engineered by atheistic or
skeptical thought, since these views fail to provide the truth conditions
necessary to make historical research possible.3 In contrast, the
Gospels provide a clear depiction of Christ and His unique claims of deity. Herein,
I defend the only coherent portrayal of Jesus. It is the lone accurate picture of
Christ because it is revealed by God in the Gospels—a representation that is
entrenched in history, yet it has fashioned history and culture.
Confronting God?
God Comes to the Earth
The Lord God sent the heir of all things to toil in a
carpenter's shop: to drive the nail, and push the plane, and use the saw. He
sent him down amongst scribes and Pharisees, whose cunning eyes watched him,
and whose cruel tongues scourged him with base slanders. He sent him down to
hunger, and thirst, amid poverty so dire that he had not where to lay his head.
He sent him down to the scourging and the crowning with thorns, to the giving
of his back to the smiters and his cheeks to those that plucked off the hair.
At length he gave him up to death—a felon's death, the death of the crucified.
Behold that Cross and see the anguish of him that dies upon it, and mark how
the Father has so given him, that he hides his face from him, and seems as if
he would not own him! "Lama
sabachthani" tells us how fully God gave his Son to ransom the souls
of the sinful. He gave him to be made a curse for us; gave him that he might
die "the just for the unjust, to bring us to God" (Charles Spurgeon).
Jesus as the Son of Man and the Son of God
has two natures found in one person—Christ is God the Great I AM in human flesh
(Exodus 3:14; John 8:58). The Bible reveals the dual nature of Christ and
humanity’s salvation demands that be the case. It’s a mystery, but a mystery
that in selected ways not only makes sense, but is necessary for redemption.
Jesus, in the incarnation, did not lose His divinity. He did not lose His
authority or His deity. He voluntarily came to the earth as a human baby to
live perfectly as He fulfilled the Law—He took on our humanity in order to die
in our place (Isaiah 53:4-6; 2 Cor. 5:21; and 1 Pet. 2:24). All the newfangled
views of Christ fail to overturn such truths.
Jesus
Christ is too intriguing and commanding to be falsely captured by skeptics like
Ehrman and Aslan. Yet, Jesus is not elusive. It’s not hard to know who He is.
What is Jesus like? He’s God.
Jesus
always flourished, always in command, never trivial or incapable. He did not
appear worried, hollow-eyed, apprehensive, shrunken—never an object of distrust
to His friends and never capricious to others—Christ never lost a gem of His
charm. He would withdraw to pray and return with power and insight. He understood
the weaknesses of His humanity and always controlled His appetites. He achieved
maturity as a youth discussing the law with Rabbis in the Temple. Jesus was
born without sin—He had no flaws, was not infected with dark passions, and was
always victorious over fleshly temptations. As the Master, He overmastered all
sin and perfectly obeyed and fulfilled the Law of Moses. He was ferociously
gracious and blessed with inherent divine love—the sort of person one either
hated or absolutely adored.
Over
the course of His short ministry, Christ built structures for the church upon
His divine nature and work. He preached to the crowds and mentored His close
intimate disciples. He called His church His children and lived a life aimed at
His crucifixion. He engaged in penetrating stretches of outreach, healing
people and casting out demons. He distrusted clergy and politicians, but loved
the outcast. In the Sermon on the Mount He delivered a moral code for His
community and interpersonal relationships. In the discourse He attacked
selfishness, vengeance, greed, and hatred within social relationships—He talked
about the need for grace, mercy, forgiveness, and going the extra mile.
For
more see my book How Jesus Became God in
the Flesh HERE Amazon
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or see the new book Risen: Proof for the Resurrection of Jesus HERE
NOTES
1.
Universal
operational features required for knowledge, intelligibility, and critical
analysis: laws of logic, specific properties, fixed mathematical truths,
selected attributes, induction, etc.
2. The truth of
Christianity is understood and proved by way of truth and presupposition. The
Christian must uphold Scripture as the ultimate source of light and
knowledge—all light and knowledge stem from God. The assured proof of Christian
theism: except a man build upon its ontic ground as he presupposes the truth
that flows from God, in principle, there is no proof of anything. Christian
theism is proved as the ontological ground for the very notion of evidence and
proof. What is needed is a first principle that has the ontological endowment
to not only ground knowledge, but to account for it and its preconditions. The
loss of the immovable point of reference, in principle, leaves the ungodly
bereft of a resource necessary to construct the critical and analytical
enterprise. Without God, one cannot hoist the necessary a priori operation features of knowledge. The Christian worldview
supplies the fixed ontic platform as the sufficient truth condition that can
justify induction, immutable universals, and the uniformity of the physical world.
But materialistic atheism lacks such a fixed ontic platform. Consequently, it
fails to provide the sufficient ground required to justify textual criticism
and the investigation of literature and history. When anyone attempts to escape
the truth that God exists, he falls in a trap he cannot escape. This point is well
made in Van Til’s illustration of a man made of water, who is trying to climb
out of the watery ocean by means of a ladder made of water. He cannot get out
of the water for he has nothing to stand on. Without God, one cannot make sense
of anything. The atheist has nothing to stand on (an ontic Archimedean locus of
reference) and he lacks a rational apparatus to scale an epistemic ladder that
would allow him to view reality with clarity. God and His revealed word supply
men their only possible ground with the explanatory clout needed to account for
critical and analytical pursuits. The ontological barrenness of atheistic
materialism is just one reason the Christian should never grant the natural man
the right to determine the criteria for testing truth claims—atheistic naturalism
lacks an ontology with a shard of explanatory power. Christianity rests upon
God and His Revelation as the ontic Archimedean locus of reference for textual
criticism and proof.
3.
“Naturalism holds that the physical universe is
ultimate. The universe (nature) is the only reality. It is eternal,
self-activating, self-existent, self-contained, self-dependent, self-operating,
self-explanatory. The universe is neither derived from nor dependent upon any
supernatural or transcendent being or entities. Natural phenomena cannot be
'interfered' with, ‘violated’; 'suspended.' There is no supernatural realm.”
(Parrish: God and Necessity). Naturalism
is defined by Dawkins as the view that nothing exists “beyond the natural,
physical world.” One commonly hears
secular people identify themselves as naturalists. But what do they mean when
they label themselves such? Some claim that they believe only material things
exist. Others believe that modern science is the only way to obtain real
knowledge. Selected naturalists believe everything that exists is material or
supervenes on material elements. There are numerous academic as well as colloquial
definitions of naturalism. Additionally, many lettered and unlettered men often
comingle or fuse the definitions.
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