Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Hays vs. Ehrman on the Da Vinci Code--- the Debate

On April 25th 2006 there was a dialogue on the Da Vinci Code and the issues, historical and theological it raises. The debate was held at the new chapel at Duke Divinity School (attendance about 500) and it goes an hour and 46 minutes counting the Q+A afterwords, which is not always audible. I found the discussion quite helpful, though some of you will find Ehrman not liberal enough perhaps, and Hays not conservative enough perhaps. It is a good model of a respectful and at times even humorous debate. Here is the link---- http://www.divinity.duke.edu/. Once you get to the Duke website you need to click on the full debate link which is provided on that page.

It will be interesting to hear your reactions.


As for me, I have just returned from two Da Vinci Code events, one in Burlington N.C. (2,000 came) one in Richland Washington, where over a hundred pastors and spouses came for the Evangelical UMC Convocation. There of course remains high interest in the subject matter, but also, high anxiety. May 19th is coming--- are you ready?

32 comments:

Sandalstraps said...

It is interesting to me that a work of fiction (not just a comment on the merit of the theories proposed by The Da Vinci Code but also a reminder of its literary genre!) can generate such discussion. It seems that, as a culture, we can only recapture the power of stories by forgetting for a moment that they are stories.

Ben Witherington said...

Ah, but there are true stories and untrue ones, and that requires that we have some discernment to tell which is which. Fiction is of course pure story, in the ordinary sense of the word, but a historical narrative with its truth claims is a different sort of story.

stc said...

I've listened to the debate and I was greatly impressed. Both men were very articulate, addressing huge issues succinctly and forcefully — the fruit of long scholarly study. Plus they were unfailingly respectful to one another; and there was a lot of humour, too. Belly laughs, even.

I also appreciated the pastoral sensitivity Hays demonstrated with the last questioner, who threw out the kind of curve ball question a speaker must dread. It would have been easy to make her look foolish, but Hays was very gracious in redirecting her.

Benson said...

BWIII says, "Fiction is of course pure story, in the ordinary sense of the word, but a historical narrative with its truth claims is a different sort of story."

Isn't fiction by it's very definition a "tale"--something not based on history? Won't we find The DaVinci Code (once it's off the best seller racks) on the same shelves as fairy tales? Why isn't our response as Christians, "The Da Vinci Code is exaclty what it claims to be--FICTION (or fairy tales)! Truth is not represented there!" Are Christians not adding much more to the issue than is really there by making such a big deal out of a fictional book?

Love your work Dr. Ben! (Just not understanding why so many are treating The DaVinci Code as if it were someone's account of history)

Ben Witherington said...

Benson:

The Da Vinci Code presents itself as historical fiction, though it is closer to hysterical fiction. When you present your work that way, it is natural for people to take the context at least as well grounded in facts, though the central characters are fictious. But furthermore, truth can certainly be conveyed in and by fiction--- look at the parables for example. Thus it is no surprise some people take the Da Vinci Code seriously.

Blessings,

Ben

Ben Witherington said...

Benson:

The Da Vinci Code presents itself as historical fiction, though it is closer to hysterical fiction. When you present your work that way, it is natural for people to take the context at least as well grounded in facts, though the central characters are fictious. But furthermore, truth can certainly be conveyed in and by fiction--- look at the parables for example. Thus it is no surprise some people take the Da Vinci Code seriously.

Blessings,

Ben

Ben Witherington said...

Well Rainsbrough, I suspect you may be right--- where I come from, they would call him a snake oil salesman :)

Ben

Ben Witherington said...

Well there is forced harmonization and then there is an attempt to get at the history behind the portraits, which is the task of every historian. If a forced and false harmonization is wrong, so is an attempt to see differences as disagreements or mistakes when they are not.

Blessings,

Ben

MWC said...

Dr. Witherington,
Thank you for the pointer toward this discussion. It is one of the best discussions/debates I've heard, especially in how each professor respected the other. I've listed to many of Dr. Craig's debates, and most of them come with much contention and vile namecalling, unfortunately. So thank you!

One point that Dr. Ehrman made seems to give away the game for him. He makes the claim that a historian is only to account for the facts, strictly as accounts of natural events. As I've read in Dr. Wright's "New Testament and the People of God", this positivism is problematic, and as Dr. Wright says, arrogant. As I understand it, this is especially problematic if this assumption is brought into the genre of the canonical gospels. Could it be that his certainty requirement disqualifies the reliability of the canonical gospels from the outset?

Another issue here--this type of discussion does not account for the bigger story, which is necessary to understand what is being said (especially when attempting to interpret the apocalyptic statements of Jesus). Isn't Dr. Ehrman just making a more sophisticated version of the Jesus Seminar's judgment of the gospels?

Richard H said...

On a related Issue: On p. 114 of The Gospel Code, I read: "Was there Rome Pope Damascus no such thing as orthodoxy before the fourth-century councils?" I know Pope Damsasus fits into the history of the canon, but surely there's a typo in this sentence isn't there?

Sandalstraps said...

mwc,

I'm not sure that it is fair to compare Ehrman to the Jesus Seminar, particularly to do it the way that you did.

This is because:

1. Your comment/question (Isn't Dr. Ehrman just making a more sophisticated version of the Jesus Seminar's judgment of the gospels? ) assumes a lack of "sophistication" on the part of the Jesus Seminar. Such an assumption is unwarrented, especially in light of some of the rigorous work of Seminar members (such as John Dominic Crossan).

In other words, if Ehrman's argument could be compared to the work of Jesus Seminar scholars, it would not deviate from their work in terms of sophistication.

2. Ehrman's work, however, cannot be compared to that of the Jesus Seminar without noting some important differences. Ehrman a priori rules out an apparent miracles. While many Jesus Seminar scholars may do the same, there are some who do not.

Marcus J. Borg, for instance, while a historical Jesus scholar and a member of the Jesus Seminar, in his work affirms that Jesus must have been a great healer, because that is the only reasonable explanation for the prevalance of healing stories in all of the literature (especially the cannonical Gospels) concerning Jesus. In other words, some miracle stories (those concerning healing, at least) are not simply tossed aside because we know a priori that they couldn't have happened.

That does not mean that Borg agrees that the healings happened exactly as described in the Bible, but neither does he reduce them to totally non-historic stories designed to "prove" the divinity of Christ.

3. Ehrman's understanding of Jesus as a escatological prophet who was profoundly and painfully wrong is also at odds with the understanding of Jesus posited by many members of the Jesus Seminar (but, as is the case with any relatively large group, certainly not all). Borg, again used as an example of a member of the Jesus Seminar, argues that the view of Jesus as a failed escatological prophet has been thoroughly discredited, and is in fact insulting to the religious tradition that has grown up from Jesus' followers. He sees Jesus as a "spirit person," one who has had an experience of God, and in his own way helps reveal God. While that view is certainly not orthodox, neither is it insulting to our religious tradition.

Other figures in the Jesus Seminar also disagree with Ehrman's view of Jesus. Robert Funk, the founder of the Jesus Seminar (and, again, by no means what you would call orthodox) sees Jesus as a sage and a social critic. John Dominic Crossan - perhaps the most rigorous of the members of the Jesus Seminar, though Dr. Witherington, who unlike me is actually in this field, may disagree with my amateur accessment - sees Jesus as a revolutionary peasant.

Each of these views of Jesus - like any historical reformulation - entails a certain amount of reduction. When you affirm some aspects of Jesus, of necessity you deny others. These authors have chosen to affirm that in Jesus which they can relate to, while offering up a dramatically different understanding of Jesus to that found in orthodox Christianity. (Borg, as a very serious Christian, comes the closest to the orthodox portrait, and in fact offers some compelling religious reasons to reimage the role of Jesus as Christ, though that is not here our concern.) But, unlike Ehrman, each of these authors affirm something useful and constructive in Jesus. While they may reduce the role of Jesus, they do not negate Jesus altogether.

While I am a bit of a fan of some of Ehrman's work, I cannot but say that his portrait of Jesus is not only reductionistic, but insultingly so. His notion that Jesus can be understood as a wild-eyed prophet who was simply wrong about when the world would end, and his view of Christianity as being principally founded on a lie (not a myth) in insulting, of limited scholarly worth, and entirely unhelpful.

At least insofar as it concerns his view of Jesus, he does not belong in the same sentence as the Jesus Seminar, whatever you may think of them.

MWC said...

sandalstraps,
Thank you for these thoughtful points.

I should have chosen my words more carefully. By more sophisticated I meant more along the lines of how history is to be done. While some involved in the Jesus Seminar may have quite sophisticated analyses individually, it appears that the Jesus Seminar voting methodology is quite reductionistic and unsophisticated. That's all I meant.

I do have a question--how does Ehrman's conclusions compare with Schweitzer's? Don't they come out in the same place? And it would seem that they might make the same mistake regarding the certainty required. Thoughts?

stc said...

Sandalstraps:
Ehrman a priori rules out an apparent miracles.

I don't think that's what Ehrman said. He said that miracles are, by definition, improbable events.

Therefore miracles can never measure up to the historian's measure, since a historian can only offer an opinion about what probably happened.

Therefore to claim that a miracle occurred (e.g. that Jesus was raised from the dead) is a theological claim, rather than a historical claim.

I don't entirely buy the argument. I think there is good historical evidence to support the resurrection (notably, Paul's first-hand testimony to the Lord's appearance to him).

I'm just clarifying what Ehrman did and did not say. I would describe his position as agnostic: miracles are outside his provenance as a historian.

MWC said...

Doesn't the conclusion show how invalid the assumption is about miracles being a priori improbable?

Here's the question I'd ask--but what if a miracle did happen? One wouldn't be able to account for it using the natural-only (which is actually a closed-system). And that history would not provide an account of what happened, meaning it is not true.

Seems to me that a wider definition of miracle is necessary, something along the lines of how Wright describes the intersection of earth and heaven, or at least some weaker form of the statement he makes that permits the possibility of miracles.

He is actually using rhetoric to preclude the miraculous as a viable conclusion. He is confusing two areas of philosophy, seems to me. He doesn't seem to be careful enough with his metaphysic and his philosophy of history. And if he assumes that anything beyond the miraculous is outside his purview as a historian, then even the statement that a historian cannot account for the miraculous is something he, by his own admission, should not say.

Ben Witherington said...

This is turning into a really worthwhile discussion-- I quite agree with the epistemological questions about naturalism. Now here is something to further ponder. Every historical event is unique and distinctive, just as every miracle is. The evidence to support a normal or a paranormal claim about a historical event is the same-- is their good testimony from reliable witnesses, preferably eyewitnesses. It is simply false for Ehrman to suggest that one kind of historical event can be ruled out ab initio 'because it is rare' or seems improbable to him! This is not scientific or historical reasoning this is methodological and presuppositional skepticism.

BW3

Joshua Luke Roberts said...

And in fact, couldn't we also say, that since miracle stories, or experiences beyond what we might consider normal, exist in the literature and accounts of peoples and religions all around the world, that it is more than likely than not that there is some level of basis to them being true?

Sandalstraps said...

While the arguments against naturalism's a priori ruling out of miracles, or reducing them to historically dubious "improbable events" is suspect on paper, honesty compels me to say I use similar assumptions every day, and I suspect that almost everyone else does, as well.

When, for instance, I read stories of a contemporary travelling miracle worker, I treat such stories with at least a little bit of suspicion. Why? Because I know that the stories describe that which is either:

a.) improbable; not part of the ordinary human experience, or

b.) outright impossible.

As Christians we give credence to the miracle stories of Christ because we have had a religious experience of Christ as our savior. Absent that experience, which is not a universal experience, and which isn't easily intersubjectively verified, I wonder how we would treat those stories.

Because of a unique experience we say that the epistemological assumptions of naturalism is flawed. We should keep that in mind when we form our rational critiques of naturalism.

MWC said...

Dr. Witherington,
What is your take on Dr. Ehrman's critique of the development of the canon? Any direct refutations of his skepticism-based questions you could point to?

sandalstraps,
I've got a couple thoughts here. I am usually of the same mind when I hear miracle stories. There are a couple reasons: (1) I assume a closed system in which God does not act and (2) I've been burned before by supposed accounts.

The first is probably unfounded, especially in light of Jesus' claim that God is involved even in the feeding of Ravens. Wright points to this, most recently in his "Simply Christian". This fits with what Lewis said about miracles, which, so far, I tend to think is right (the speeding up of what we perceive as "natural" processes).

The second is healthy critical thinking, knowing how dark the heart of man. That is a question of, to quote Dr. Witherington, whether the story is based on "good testimony from reliable witnesses, preferably eyewitnesses."

I'd recommend reading "Miracles and the Critical Mind" by Colin Brown if you are interested in the subject of how miraculous claims are to be accounted for and interpreted.

Ben Witherington said...

My critique of Ehrman's view of how the canon was formed can be found in the Gospel Code, the chapter entitled--- "Did the Canon misfire?"

Blessings,

Ben W.

MWC said...

Thanks, Dr. Witherington.

Camassia said...
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Camassia said...

I wrote a somewhat rambling reaction to it on my own blog, here.

Ben Witherington said...

Rainsbrough:

In the first place I would not say miracles are improbable. I would say they are unusual, out of the ordinary.

In the second place your example of Paul on Damascus Road is poorly chosen. Acts is perfectly clear this is a visionary experience well after the 40 days Jesus appeared in the flesh and in full tactile mode to various other disciples whom he touched, fed, ate with etc.

Yes Paul saw the risen Lord in a vision. No, this is not at all like how Mary Magdalene, or Peter, or James saw Jesus. The text distinguishes these sorts of experiences, and it will not do to say the earlier disciples simply had purely subjective visions.

So, while you are quite right that I think we would have seen a dumbfounded Paul and not Jesus on the Damascus Road DVD, it would be quite a different matter with the Upper Room encounters or by the shores of Galilee. This is one of the reasons, no doubt, that some Christians doubted Paul had really seen Jesus.

Blessings,

Ben

MWC said...
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MWC said...

I've been wanting to say this, but I've only got this in baby-thought form at present. Forgive me for that, but here goes...

I think the assumption that miracles are improbable and the conclusion that it is always safer to think that nothing miraculous occurred is a categorical mistake. I mean historical events cannot purely be assigned probabilities and then rejected or accepted based on their probabilities. Something qualitative about each event is lost, such as explanatory power, when they are reduced to mere chances based on all other events. Somehow there is a crossing of categories here that should not be made. I think, because they don't seem to do this, Dr. Bill Craig and Dr. Wright have something to their argument that there is historical evidence for the resurrection.

There might be a correlation between the categorical error and the certainty requirement--I'm haven't really thought that through yet.

However, it occurs to me that history should be done with the tools of history, including the likelihood of events given worldview and explanatory power, but possible conclusions should not be ruled out based solely on mere probabilities. It is question-begging, really.

Ben Witherington said...

Actually Paul does indeed make such a distinction. He says in 1 Cor. 15 that his appearance that made him an apostle was "out of due season".

Ben

Joshua Luke Roberts said...

Dr Witherington,

You said,

"Acts is perfectly clear this is a visionary experience well after the 40 days Jesus appeared in the flesh and in full tactile mode to various other disciples whom he touched, fed, ate with etc.

Yes Paul saw the risen Lord in a vision. No, this is not at all like how Mary Magdalene, or Peter, or James saw Jesus. The text distinguishes these sorts of experiences, and it will not do to say the earlier disciples simply had purely subjective visions."


I am wondering if you have heard of the rather interesting argument a very small amount of scholars make regarding the appearences of Jesus. It goes a little something like this:

The writings of Paul are considered the earliest New Testament writings. Paul's writings can not conclusively show that the early Christians believed in a bodily resurrection. For example, when Paul describes the appearence of Jesus he experienced on the road to Damascus, in 1 Corinthians 15:8, he first describes how Jesus appeared to the Apostles and, "last of all, as to one of untimely birth, He appeared to me also."
The argument goes that Paul is assuming that the Apostles had visionary experiences of Jesus rising, just as he did also. Then, as Christian doctrine was evolving in the 1st century, so too did doctrines like the bodily resurrection of Jesus come into existence.
Not an argument I agree with, but I am interested in your thoughts?

Ben Witherington said...

A few points should be added. N.Y. Wright's volume on Resurrection and the SOn of God makes perfectly clear that resurrection always meant something that happened to a physical body in early Judaism. Appearances of the risen Lord are another matter. They could be in the flesh or in a vision. It is of course true that there was extra mental phenomena on Damascus Road-- this is clear enough. No one in antiquity thought that visions were 'purely' mental experiences anyway. As for 1 Cor. 15, yes indeedy the verb means physically saw. Paul like the others did not see Jesus in a dream, but with his eyes. This does not settle whether it was in a daytime vision or not. One final important point about 1 Cor. 15. The 'spiritual body' phrase cannot mean a body made out of spirit, which would have been an oxymoron to a Pharisee like Paul anyway. When you have an adjective ending in -ikon, as here (pneumatikon) it must mean a body empowered or characterized by Spirit, not a body composed of spirit.

Blessings,

Ben

Celal Birader said...

As rainsborough pointed out "Ehrman quite effectively showed the large gap between the Mark's and Luke's accounting of the crucifixion."

And, they *both* seemed to make fun of harmonisation known as the "Seven Last Words of Christ".

Dr Witherington, with your conviction that that there is such a thing as legitimate harmonisation, is it possible to arrive at any account of the actual historical facts surrounding the SLofC which would have them reduced to the Six or Five or Four or even No Last Words of Christ ?

Ben Witherington said...

Cela:

There is no scenario I can imagine that would reduce the seven last words of Christ to some lesser number. The reason I say this is because we don't have a saying and its variant coming from Jesus, although the "surely this is the Son of God" and "surely this a righteous man" from an observer may be two forms of the same saying. I must say that I find that part of the Ehrman vs. Hays debate as not making much sense. Jesus was on the cross for some hours. We really cannot argue that he only had time to say one or another of these sayings. Nor can we argue that one or another conflicts either with each other, or with the larger portrait of Jesus. It is just that Luke and John are emphasizing different aspects of the last words of Jesus, than Mark and Matthew, and I would say earlier aspects of what he said on the cross, for the most part. If we see Jesus going through a process on the cross from feeling abandoned to finally accepting what has happened and releasing his life, then one can make sense of this without resorting to some sort of false harmonization.

Blessings,

Ben W.

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Sarah said...
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