Richard Carrier and the Mythical Jesus (Part 3): The Mythicist Argument–Welcome to Bizarro World (i.e. A Lesson on How Not To Interpret the Bible)

We now come to the third post of my series on Richard Carrier and the “mythicist movement” which claims there was no historical person named Jesus, and that the Gospels are just myth. Of course, as I said in my first post, Carrier doesn’t define “myth,” and it becomes apparent that what he means is…

Continue reading →

Richard Carrier and the Mythical Jesus (Part 2): Sophomoric Silliness in Bible Reading

In my last post, I began to look at Richard Carrier’s claims that Jesus probably never existed and that the Gospels were, in fact, a myth. I noted that several problems with those claims: not only did he fail to even properly define “myth,” his interpretation of various biblical texts smacks of wooden literalism and…

Continue reading →

Richard Carrier and the Mythical Jesus (Part 1): How a Twitter Battle Roped Me Assessing the Absurd

Last week I got into a little bit of a “Twitter war” over the issue of whether or not Jesus was a historical person. As often happens on social media like Twitter or Facebook, you might intend to just make one comment, but then you find yourself roped into the equivalent of WWE’s Royal Rumble,…

Continue reading →

It’s a YouTube Video…and I’m Talking In It!

I wanted to share this with anyone interested. I was just interviewed by SJ Thomason on her YouTube channel. We discussed a variety of things from Biblical Studies in general, to YECism, Genesis 1-11, Bart Ehrman, and Richard Carrier. I also give a little bit of background about myself. So if you have an hour…

Continue reading →

Bart Ehrman’s “How Jesus Became God” (Part 4): More Claims How the Jews Held Pagan Beliefs!

In my last post, I began to go through chapter 2 of Bart Ehrman’s book, How Jesus Became God. It is in chapter 2 that Ehrman attempts to argue that within Judaism there was a “divine-human continuum” similar to that of the pagan world. What does that mean? Basically, it is the belief that there…

Continue reading →

Bart Ehrman’s “How Jesus Became God?” (Part 3): Did Judaism View the Divine-Human Realms Pretty Much Like Paganism? (Spoiler Alert–No)

Bart Ehrman’s second chapter in his book, How Jesus Became God, is entitled, “Divine Humans in Ancient Israel.” Having spent his first chapter taking about pagan concepts of what he calls a “divine-human continuum,” Ehrman then turns his attention to ancient Judaism and proceeds to basically argue that even though Judaism was monotheistic, it wasn’t…

Continue reading →

The Jewish War Series (Part 11): The Idumeans’ and Zealots’ Reign of Terror in Jerusalem

With the Idumeans now in the city, they and the zealots began to unleash a reign of terror in Jerusalem. The first order of business for the Idumeans was to go directly to the temple, slaughter the temple guards, and free the zealots who had been holed up in the temple. The fighting was vicious,…

Continue reading →

Bart Ehrman’s “How Jesus Became God” (Part 2): Jesus you say? Take me to the Greek!

In Bart Ehrman’s book, How Jesus Became God, he argues (as the title suggests) that the historical Jesus was just a man—an apocalyptic prophet who expected the end of the world within his lifetime, but who was crucified by Rome. We’ll call this Point A. Yet that gradually over the years, his followers ended up…

Continue reading →

Bart Ehrman’s “How Jesus Became God” (Part 1): A Book Analysis Series

Over the past decade or so, Bart Ehrman has made quite a name for himself, having written numerous books about Jesus and early Christianity that, to say the very least, have stirred up some controversy. Just a quick look on Amazon turns up books by Ehrman whose titles scream, “Let’s freak people out!” –Misquoting Jesus,…

Continue reading →

The Jewish War Series (Part 10: The Idumeans Come to the Aid of the Zealots)

In actuality, Eleazar ben-Simon and Zacharias ben-Phalek, two of the zealot leaders who, along with the rest of the zealots, were trapped in the Temple, smuggled out a letter to the Idumeans. In it, they told the Idumeans that Ananus had betrayed Jerusalem and the Jews, had already sent word to Vespasian and the Romans…

Continue reading →