Opinion
The Christian Post on MSNOpinion

Bart Ehrman wants Jesus’ morality without Jesus’ God

Ehrman rejects this because he discards the concept of a good and perfect God from whom comes objective right and wrong.
Even skeptical scholars who don’t believe that Jesus really worked miracles acknowledge that, during his lifetime, he had a reputation as a healer and an exorcist. The numerous reports of Jesus’ ...
(RNS) Set side by side, the book jackets look almost like matching woodblock prints of a bearded, haloed figure. The titles mirror each other, too, featuring the same trio of names: Jesus, God, Bart ...
UNC-Chapel Hill religion historian Bart Ehrman's latest book, mounting a historical proof for the existence of Jesus, is so convincingly argued that many readers will conclude Ehrman also proves many ...
(RNS) The New Testament scholar wonders what happened between the time Jesus died and the time the gospel writers wrote about him. (RNS) New Testament scholar Bart Ehrman, a professor of religious ...
It’s almost Easter, which can mean only one thing: it’s time for the blockbuster Bible bestsellers. Last week, Bart Ehrman promoted his new book, How Jesus Became God, on NPR’s Fresh Air. Ehrman ...
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (RNS) As Christians prepare to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus, Bart Ehrman, an agnostic, convincingly demonstrates there was a historical Jesus. As for the "mythicists" who ...
Mark Pinsky recently introduced Sentinel readers to Bart Ehrman’s latest book, Misquoting Jesus. Books like these seem calculated to antagonize certain kinds of Christians, exposing their treasured ...
It’s usually clear to Bart Ehrman who loves him and who hates him. Evangelical Christians have been raking Ehrman over the coals for years for his rejection of biblical inerrancy—and atheists and ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. The bible, theology scholar Bart D. Ehrman writes in his new book ...
A religious studies scholar at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has become a hot-selling author, thanks to his accessible account of how scribes changed the Bible as they reproduced it.
I’ve been a fan of Bart Ehrman’s work for a while now. He’s a New Testament scholar who has an uncanny ability to make the consensus of biblical scholars understandable and interesting. He has five ...