''Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don't Know About Them)'' is a book by
Bart D. Ehrman, a
New Testament scholar at
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This work includes a narrative of Ehrman's own progression in Biblical studies and beliefs, an overview of the issues raised by scholarly analysis of the Bible, details of a selection of findings from such analysis, and an exhortation regarding the importance of coming to understand the Bible more fully.
Regarding the importance of Biblical study, Ehrman says in the preface, "This kind of information is relevant not only to scholars like me, who devote their lives to serious research, but also to everyone who is interested in the Bible – whether they personally consider themselves believers or not. In my opinion this really matters. Whether you are a believer – fundamentalist, evangelical, moderate, liberal – or a nonbeliever, the Bible is the most significant book in the history of our civilization. Coming to understand what it actually is, and is not, is one of the most important intellectual endeavors that anyone in our society can embark upon."
One particular statement from early on appears to summarize the development of the subject matter that Ehrman attempts to cover in this volume: "Scholars of the Bible have made significant progress in understanding the Bible over the past two hundred years, building on archaeological discoveries, advances in our knowledge of the ancient Hebrew and Greek languages in which the book of Scripture were originally written, and deep and penetrating historical, literary, and textual analyses."
Reception
''Jesus, Interrupted'' became a
''New York Times'' best-seller, joining Ehrman's previous popular work of textual criticism ''
Misquoting Jesus''. Critics applauded Ehrman's writing ability.
Michael J. Kruger
Michael J. Kruger an American theologian and the President and the Samuel C. Patterson Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC. He is ordained in thEvangelical Presbyterian Church
Educat ...
, Associate Professor of New Testament at
Reformed Theological Seminary reviewed the book in the ''
Westminster Theological Journal
''Westminster Theological Journal'' is an evangelical theological journal published by Westminster Theological Seminary and edited by Vern Poythress
Vern Sheridan Poythress (born 1946) is an American philosopher, theologian, New Testament schol ...
'', calling it "a book full of ironies" and "intellectual schizophrenia," stating that "it purports to be about unbiased history but rarely presents an opposing viewpoint; ironic that it claims to follow the scholarly consensus but breaks from it so often; ironic that it insists on the historical-critical method but then reads the gospels with a modernist, overly-literal hermeneutic; ironic that it claims no one view of early Christianity could be 'right' (
Walter Bauer) but then proceeds to tell us which view of early Christianity is 'right'".
Another criticism raised, which was also raised over ''Misquoting Jesus'', is that Ehrman implies that the information being presented is new, or groundbreaking.
United Methodist bishop
William H. Willimon
William Henry Willimon (born May 15, 1946) is a retired American theologian and bishop in the United Methodist Church who served the North Alabama Conference for eight years. He is Professor of the Practice of Christian Ministry and Director of th ...
says that "He keeps presenting this stuff as if this is wonderful new knowledge that has been kept from you backward lay people and this is the stuff your preachers don't have the guts to tell, and I have."
Rich Barlow wrote in ''
The Boston Globe'' that "he repeatedly stresses that historical-critical study need not kill faith. And, honest scholar that he is, he admits that some of his contentions can be challenged."
James F. McGrath
James Frank McGrath is the Clarence L. Goodwin Chair in New Testament Language and Literature at Butler University and is known for his work on Early Christianity, Mandaeism, criticism of the Christ myth theory, and the analysis of religion in ...
(
Butler University) wrote on ''
Patheos'' that the book was "a readable overview presenting information about the Bible and early Christianity that ought by now to be common knowledge. The reason it is not probably is due largely to the belief that such critical study of the Bible is antithetical to the Christian faith, and that the appropriate Christian stance is to affirm the Bible's inerrancy rather than allow one's view of the Bible and other matters to be shaped by the Bible's actual contents."
Bibliography
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References
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External links
Jesus, Interruptedfrom
HarperCollinsA review of ''Jesus, Interrupted'' by New Testament scholar Michael J. Kruger.A review of ''Jesus, Interrupted'' by David Harding.NPR interview with EhrmanCNN article on ''Jesus, Interrupted''
2009 in Christianity
2009 non-fiction books
Biblical criticism
Books about Jesus
Books by Bart D. Ehrman
English-language books
HarperCollins books