catsmate
No longer the 1
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 34,767
Yes it's impossible to really show either way.To be fair though, there is nothing illogical or unsupportable about an intenerant preacher named Jesus (or the local variant) existing at the time that later had legends draped upon. While I haven't read the book in question, I've read two of Ehrman's other books and that's what it seemed to me to be his postion. Whether the sources of the legends came from other preachers, other myths or just made up out of whole cloth can be discussed endlessly, but to say categorically that there was no one named Jesus at the time isn't supported.
What annoys me about Ehrman's latest book is the poor quality of the scholarship and his resorting to dubious tactics to try and make his case; it's terrible stuff after his previous quality output. He almost addresses a number of potentially interesting points, and then shys away. For example he fails to justify, or support, his dating of the oral tradition of the gospels to the thirties CE.
Really for a capable scholar to reduce himself to this mass of begging the question, circular reasoning and logical fallacies is quite shocking.

