Ehrman and The NT
Ehrman and The NT
Ehrman and The NT
Introduction
Ehrman’s view of the historical origins of Christology can be found, mainly, in his book How
Jesus Became God: The exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee,1 published in 2014. In it,
he answers how Christians began to see Jesus as a divine figure. For Ehrman, the beginning of
Christology has to be found in the belief of the resurrection of Jesus and it was an early
development. For him, however, the question is not when Jesus was seen as God but in what sense
he was seen as a god. The development of Christology, for him, was a process in which Jesus was
considered a divine figure in different ways. In his view, these different stages of the Christological
development can be seen in the New Testament, and have their parallels in the Greco-Roman
religious beliefs. That is, in a nutshell, Ehrman’s view of the historical origins of Christology and,
in the next pages, I will briefly analyze it and criticize it.
1
Bart Ehrman, How Jesus became God (New York: Harper Collins, 2014)
2
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 4
In any case, incarnation was not, by any means, the most common example of divine and
human encounters in the ancient world. Ehrman notes that perhaps the most common view was
the belief of divine beings born from a god and a mortal.3 There are several examples in Greco-
Roman literature of gods having intercourse with humans that later gave birth to divine beings.
Nevertheless, the similarities of the Jesus’ narratives and such myths are too distant to establish
any connection. Barth himself acknowledges that the Christian stories do not include any kind of
sexual intercourse between divine figures and humans, and the Greco-Roman tales do not refer to
the virginity of the woman as an important feature.
Moreover, I maintain that it is not helpful to refer to the Greco-Roman mythology to
explain the origins of Christology without considering the particular context of the New Testament
documents as well. Ehrman fails in relying too much on parallels between the New Testament and
the Greco-Roman mythology without considering the difficulties of doing so. Not every parallel
means a direct connection or literary dependency. Even more, not every similarity proves a shared
worldview. While there can be found similarities between the ways in which the ancient Greeks,
Romans, and Jews saw the human and the divine encountering, it is fundamental to consider their
particularities as well.
According to Ehrman, the third model to understand divine humans in Greek and Roman
circles is humans who become divine. For him, this was the “most important conceptual
framework that the earliest Christians had for conceiving how Jesus could be both human and
divine.”4 It is shocking for me that Ehrman considers the Greco-Roman view even more important
than the Jewish context to explain the origin of the beliefs of Jewish-Christian communities about
the Jewish Messiah. Nevertheless, in his exposition of the origins of Christology, Ehrman mentions
several examples of humans who became divine by their own merits.
Ehrman tries to accommodate the story of Jesus to these ways in which the ancient world
pictured how the divine and the human encountered. The question is whether he is really having
right the way in which the New Testament speaks of Jesus as divine. Is he really understanding
the context of ancient Judaism? Is it useful to rely on the divine pyramid of the ancient Greco-
Roman worldview to explain the Christological development? Through this paper, I will try to
answer these and other questions. To start doing so, now I will criticize Ehrman’s use of the Greco-
Roman worldview.
Based on some similarities, Ehrman builds a context in which Romans and Jews shared a
whole worldview. As I have said earlier, he overemphasizes these, sometimes forced, similarities
and ignores the distinctiveness of the Christian beliefs. He assumes that the view of God as the
only one God was an invention of the fourth century. Before that, most people believed that the
divine and the human were a continuum. He says that “this view of the divine realm did not change
significantly until later Christians changed it. It is hard to put a finger on when exactly it changed,
but change it did.”5 Ehrman himself acknowledges that the view on the divine and human realms
changed because of the influence of the Judeo-Christian worldview. But he is unable to recognize
that, in spite of the common ground that could share with the Greco-Roman world, the Jewish
monotheism had its own particular beliefs since the first century.
In ancient Judaism existed already the belief that Yahweh was the only true God. Ehrman
seems to slightly recognize this particularity saying that “Apart from Jews in the ancient world
3
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 22
4
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 25
5
Ehrman, How Jesus became God ,43
[…] everyone was a polytheist.”6 And he even acknowledges that such belief was shared by
Christians, saying that “…the monotheistic Christians had far too an exalted view of God to think
that he could have temporarily become human to play out his sexual fantasies. The gods of the
Greeks and Romans may have done such things, but the God of Israel was above it all.”7
Nevertheless, he argues that “Jews also believed that divinities could become human and humans
could become divine.”8 In the next section, I will show how this description of the Jewish view
misguides his analysis of the Christological development.
6
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 39
7
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 24
8
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 45
9
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 45
10
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 54
11
Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel, (Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdman, 2008) 182
For Bauckham, the Jews distinguished clearly between Yahweh and any other earthly and
heavenly beings. The “divine figures” referred by Ehrman should be distinguished between those
that were creatures of God and, therefore, different from him, and the divine figures that actually
participated in the divine identity. Exalted patriarchs and angels were clearly creatures of God,
even when they were highly exalted beings. They never participated in the creation and did not
share the dominion over the world which belongs only to God. On the other hand, the personified
attributes of God did participate in the creation and sovereignty of God, therefore, were included
in the divine identity. According to Bauckham’s argument, for the Jewish monotheism, it was
crucial the distinction between God, the only creator and sovereign over the heaven and earth, and
any other being. In that sense, the early Christian included consciously and deliberately Jesus in
the divine identity when they saw him participating with God in creation (e.g. 1 Corinthians 8:6)
and dominion of the world (e.g. Acts 2:35).
Furthermore, for Larry Hurtado, the Jewish monotheism of the Second Temple period had
an exclusivist character. For him, one of the distinctive of the Jewish faith was the rejection of the
worship of any other god. Interestingly, this is a fact that Ehrman hardly considers. Moreover,
Hurtado argues that the development of Christology is to be compared to an explosion rather than
to an evolution. For him, the origin of Christology is to be found in the context of the exclusivist
monotheistic Judaism. According to Hurtado, the origin of Christology was a binitarian mutation
of that monotheistic faith in which Jesus was worshipped together with God.12
12
Larry W. Hurtado, Lord Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans, 2005)
13
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 118
14
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 119
15
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 132
16
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 174
Two chapters of Ehrman’s book are dedicated to discussing the resurrection of Jesus. In
them, he affirms that it is not the task of historians to prove false or true theological affirmations.
Therefore, Jesus’ resurrection is not an event in the field of historical studies.17 However, at the
same time, Ehrman argues that the resurrection of Jesus is not a likely historical event. For him,
the resurrection narratives in the gospels are not historically reliable because they present so many
un-harmonizable contradictions. The traditions of the empty tomb were independent of and later
than the tradition of the apparitions. The empty tomb is not present in Paul’s account of Jesus’
resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15. Indeed, for Ehrman, it was not the empty tomb but the visions of
the resurrected Jesus what led the disciples to believe in his resurrection. Even in the gospel
narratives, no one believes in the resurrection because of the empty tomb but because of the
apparitions of Jesus.
Thus, the belief in the resurrection, explains Ehrman, came to be because some of Jesus’
followers had visions that convinced them Jesus was alive. Based on some studies on social
psychology, Ehrman argues that the situation of Jesus’ disciples after the death of their master was
likely to produce a condition in which hallucinations are common. Jesus had died in a violent,
painful, and unjust way, he was betrayed, and some of his disciples flew away. His followers loved
him and his death may have caused them feelings of guilt, anger, and anguish. Therefore, argues
Ehrman, some of them experienced hallucinations of their master alive. The gospels portray Peter
and Mary Magdalene as those who mainly received the visions, and also there is a strong tradition
of doubt among some disciples. Thus, says Ehrman, some disciples hallucinated the resurrected
Jesus and tried to convince the others of the reality of their experience.
The resurrection of the bodies, continues Ehrman, was a present theme in the Jewish
apocalyptic ideas. Therefore, it was natural for Jesus’ followers to interpret their hallucinations
according to their religious beliefs. For them, the resurrection of Jesus was the beginning of the
coming of the kingdom of God that Jesus preached. And the belief in the resurrection was what
led them to see him as an exalted figure. However, says Ehrman, not as God in an absolute sense
yet.
I could not agree more with Ehrman’s statement that the belief of the resurrection is at the
heart of the Christian faith. Paul himself said that “if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is
useless and so is your faith” (1 Cor 15:14 NIV). However, I find some weaknesses in Ehrman’s
argument besides the fact that it is highly speculative. First, he states that the visions could have
happened years after Jesus’ death.18 But he gives no explanation on why the followers of Jesus
remained as a community before the belief in the resurrection was consolidated among them.
Moreover, he argues that “these three people—Peter, Paul, and Mary, as it turns out—must have
told others about their visions.”19 For Ehrman, Paul is to be counted among the first who had
visions. Nevertheless, he never explains why Paul had visions if he was not a follower of Jesus,
nor why the earliest Christian community seems to be already existing before Paul’s own visions.
Paul himself tells how he persecuted Christians, but Ehrman still counts him as one of the first
people who had visionary experiences. If, according to Ehrman, the belief in the resurrection was
not spread until some years after Jesus’ death, even after Paul’s conversion, what did the earliest
Christians believed and why did they remain as a community? There are no answers to these
questions in Ehrman’s argument.
17
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 173
18
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 196
19
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 192
What Ehrman argues is that the beginning of Christology was the belief in Jesus’
resurrection. Once some of his disciples were convinced that their master was resurrected they
began to see him as an exalted figure, a heavenly being. However, they did not consider that Jesus
was God in an absolute sense, but only a god. Ehrman emphasizes that Jesus was not seen as the
incarnation of God the Father in the earliest years after his death. For him, the development of
Christology was a process which I will analyze and criticize in the next section.
these particular preliterary traditions are consistent in their view: Christ is said to have been exalted to heaven
at his resurrection and to have been made the Son of God at that stage of his existence. In this view, Jesus
was not the Son of God who was sent from heaven to earth; he was the human who was exalted at the end of
his earthly life to become the Son of God and was made, then and there, into a divine being.20
20
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 218
21
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 226
Paul himself agreed with other Christian groups, to the point of using their creeds, and that he tried
to establish connections with them. In other words, the possible different beliefs about Jesus were
not radically different and did not stop Paul from creating fellowship with other Christians. Unlike
Ehrman’s view, the evidence shows that the Christological differences in the New Testament were
not necessarily opposed views but different ways of expressing the significance of Jesus among
communities that shared a common faith in spite of their differences.
In any case, Ehrman acknowledges that the view of Jesus exalted is a remarkable
development. He argues that the earliest Christians
believed that Jesus had been exalted to the highest status that anyone could possibly imagine. He was elevated
to an impossibly exalted state. This was the most fantastic thing anyone could say about Christ: he had
actually been elevated to a position next to God Almighty who had made all things and would be the judge
of all people. Jesus was THE Son of God. This was not a low, inferior understanding of Christ; it was an
amazing, breathtaking view.22
For Ehrman, this is even the origin of the worship of Jesus, for “if the earliest Christians held such
elevated views of Jesus as the exalted Son of God soon after his resurrection, it is probably already
at this early stage that they began to show veneration to him in ways previously shown to God
himself.”23
The view that Jesus was a simple human who was exalted to a divine status is what Ehrman
calls “exaltation Christology”. He prefers this term better than the traditional “low Christology”
because, in his view, there is nothing low in the earliest Christology where Jesus is viewed in a
high exalted level of divinity next to God. However, what I must stress here is that there is no
independent evidence of any group that considered Jesus a simple human that was exalted later in
his life. We only have vestiges contained in sources from some decades later, when the Christian
communities already saw Jesus’ life as divine and with no “previous lowly existence” as Ehrman
wants. In other words, if Paul and Luke took preliterary traditions and included them in their
writings to express their beliefs about Jesus it means that they did not consider such traditions
containing a drastically different Christology from the one they themselves held.
The development of Christology continues with what Ehrman calls a “backward
movement”, which means that the Christological moment of Jesus’s exaltation was progressively
seen in an earlier moment of his life. This movement is found in the gospels. Accordingly, “the
oldest Gospel, Mark, seems to assume that it was at his baptism that Jesus became the Son of God;
the next Gospels, Matthew and Luke, indicate that Jesus became the Son of God when he was
born; and the last Gospel, John, presents Jesus as the Son of God from before creation.”24 However,
Ehrman acknowledges that this is not necessarily a chronological development for “views of Jesus
did not develop along a straight line in every part of early Christianity and at the same rate.”25
Ehrman argues that there were two fundamentally different Christological views, the
exaltation Christology and the incarnation Christology. I have already explained what he means
by exaltation Christology, and I will explain now what he means by incarnation Christology. It is
the view that Jesus was a divine being who became a human being. For Ehrman, this is the view
present in Paul and the Johannine literature. He contends that “the earliest exaltation Christologies
very quickly morphed into an incarnation Christology, as early Christians developed their views
22
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 231
23
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 235
24
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 236
25
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 237
about Jesus during the early years after his death.”26 Therefore, exaltation and incarnation
Christologies where present in contemporaneous communities since the beginning.
The catalyst to pass from exaltation to incarnation Christology, argues Ehrman, was the
view of Jesus as an angelic figure. He maintains that “exaltation Christologies became transformed
into incarnation Christologies as soon as believers in Jesus came to see him as an angelic being
who performed God’s work here on earth.”27 According to Ehrman, this view is seen in the Pauline
letters. He builds a whole argument out of one single, isolated, and debated verse in Paul’s letter
to the Galatians. In Galatians 4:14 Paul says to the Galatians “you did not scorn or despise me, but
received me as an angel of God, as Christ Jesus” (ESV). For Ehrman, it shows that Paul saw Jesus
as an angel from heaven. However, the passage has been interpreted in other ways. In any case,
what must be noted here is that is the only passage in Paul that may refer to Jesus as an angel.
Ehrman analyzes the pre-Pauline tradition in Philippians 2:6-11. For him, this is an already
known poem that Paul included in his letter. According to Ehrman, the poem contains the
combination of exaltation an incarnation Christology where Jesus was a pre-existent angelic being
who became human and was exalted after “he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point
of death, even death on a cross” (v. 8). Jesus existing “in the form of God” (v. 6) does not mean
equality to God the Father but being a lesser divine being. That Jesus “did not count equality with
God a thing to be grasped” (v. 6) does not mean that Jesus was equal to God but that he did not
look for such equality. Finally, at his exaltation Jesus was made equal to God receiving his very
name (v. 9-11).
This interpretation of the poem in Philippians 2 is only plausible within the context Ehrman
has built in which Jews, as well as Romans and Greeks, believed in the heavenly realm as a
continuous pyramid in which there were different levels of divinity and in which God the Father
was the top of the pyramid. I argue, in agreement with Bauckham, that for Jews the one God of
Israel cannot be counted as part of a continued pyramid of divine beings. He was in a completely
different level to which no other being had access. Therefore, the view of Jesus as equal with the
God of the monotheistic faith cannot be seen as an escalation process in which Jesus was seen
progressively with a higher divine status until he was seen as equal to God the Father.
Finally, the best example of incarnation Christology in the New Testament is the gospel of
John. For Ehrman, this gospel presents a completely different Christology from the synoptic
gospels and was the one that became dominating in Christianity. However, according to Ehrman,
Jesus is not seen as the incarnation of God himself but as the incarnation of the Logos of God, a
different being who, nevertheless, existed with God from the beginning and revealed his glory.
Indeed, Ehrman argues that the view of Jesus as God in an absolute sense is not found in the New
Testament but was a development of later Christians theologians who dealt with the issue of the
relationship with God and Jesus. My analysis of Ehrman’s argument, however, ends here.
26
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 249-250
27
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 250
gods and vice versa. A closer look to the Jewish context and the New Testament evidence will
show that such view is simplistic and misguided. Paul’s letters show that he, as most Jews,
considered the pagan cult of idols as something foolish (e.g. 1 Thessalonians 1:2-10). Therefore,
for Ehrman’s view to be plausible, he would need to offer a better argument to explain how the
Jews and the first Christians could include in their faith the beliefs of a system that they consciously
and deliberately rejected. Moreover, Ehrman uses the words “divine” and “god” in a confusing
way. He uses them indistinctly to speak of any non-human being. Perhaps it would be useful in
the context of the Greco-Roman view, but in the Jewish monotheism it is crucial to distinguish
between any heavenly figure and the one true God of Israel, only creator and sovereign of the
world.
According to Ehrman, in the pre-literary traditions Jesus was seen as a mere human being
who was exalted at some point in his life. What should be stressed here is that even if Ehrman is
right in pointing that the Christological development started with a stage in which the death and
resurrection of Jesus were the emphases to understanding who he was, such process developed
really fast to the point that we do not have independent sources to attest the earliest stages of such
development. We only have vestiges contained in sources from some decades later, when the
Christian communities already saw Jesus’ life as divine and with no “previous lowly existence”.
Therefore, a stage of the Christological development based on the preliterary traditions is only
speculative. And, the fact that Paul used those traditions shows that there was no rupture in the
process but, rather, continuity.
Ehrman’s sketch of the exaltation and incarnation Christologies as two different views
misguides our understanding of the origins of Christology. While it is true that the New Testament
contains different ways to express who is Jesus, there is no evidence of different communities that
held these different views in opposition to each other. There are no hints that what Ehrman calls
exaltation and incarnation Christologies were two radically different views. What we have, instead,
is that earliest Christian communities used both views to express who Jesus was for them and how
they understood his divinity. Paul, who according to Ehrman held an incarnation Christology, used
preliterary traditions that supposedly contained an exaltation Christology. And there is no evidence
that Paul tried to oppose such Christology. It does not seem that Paul regarded such a way to
express who Jesus was as a radically different view that should be opposed or amended.
One of the weakest points in Ehrman’s argument is his claim that the Christology of the
actual followers of Jesus was radically different from the Christology developed later. He says that
if one of his disciples would write a gospel just after Jesus died it “would look very different from
the ones we have now inherited—and its view of Jesus would not at all be the view that came to
be dominant among later theologians when Christianity became the official religion of the Roman
world.”28 Against this view and in agreement with James Dunn, I argue that the development of
Christology is better explained as a process of continuity rather than a process in successive stages
that supersede each other.29 There are simply no conclusive evidences to argue for competing
Christologies in the first century. Hurtado argues for the silence of Paul regarding any
Christological differences within the churches. Instead, it seems that the Pauline churches shared
a general common Christology even with the churches in Jerusalem. For example, the fact that
Paul used the Aramean invocation “Maranatha” (1 Corinthians 16:22).30
28
Ehrman, How Jesus became God, 245
29
James D. G. Dunn, Christology in the Making (Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans, 1996); Did the First
Christian Worship Jesus (Louisville, Kentucky: John Knox Press, 2010)
30
Hurtado, Lord Jesus Christ, 113
In general, I see that the analysis of Ehrman is simplistic and incomplete. In his argument,
he ignores so many Christological evidence in the New Testament. 1 Corinthians 8:6 is regarded
by many scholars as a reformulation of the “Shema”, and it is highly important for a study of the
origins of Christology. Nevertheless, Ehrman rarely mentions it. There are several passages in the
New Testament that quote the Old Testament referring to Jesus instead of Yahweh (e.g. Rom
10:13; 1 Cor 1:10; Rev 1:8, 17; 21:6; 22:13). Ehrman does not even mention such fact. Also,
Ehrman does not mention some important features of the gospel narratives that would put into
question his argument that the synoptic gospels saw Jesus as a mere human who was exalted. For
example, the fact the in the gospel of Mark Jesus has the attribution of forgiving sins that belonged
only to God (Mk 2:7-10). Unlike Ehrman’s view, it does not seem that the gospel writers were
concern about the specific moment in which Jesus was exalted but about his identity. The list could
go on but I am already over the number of words allowed. Suffice it is to say that in spite of being
an excellent scholar, Ehrman’s account of the origins of Christology presents many weak
arguments, is misguided in his presentation of the context, and ignores many pieces of evidence in
the New Testament. Therefore, a better understanding of the historical origins of Christology
would be needed.
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