Has Bart Ehrman Proven The New Testament To Be False
Has Bart Ehrman Proven The New Testament To Be False
Has Bart Ehrman Proven The New Testament To Be False
By Aaron Wentz
Bishop J.C. Ryle once wrote, “The men who wrote the Bible had no special
advantages. They lived in a remote corner of the civilized earth. They had, most of
them, little leisure, few books, and no learning- such as learning is reckoned in this
world. Yet the Book they composed is one which is unrivalled! There is but one way of
1
accounting for this fact. They wrote under the direct inspiration of God.” 1 Though many
people believe the Bible is unique and one of the most important books ever written, the
idea that the words in the Bible are directly from God is losing ground. One such strong
attack comes from Bart Ehrman, professor of Religious Studies at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. In his book Misquoting Jesus, Ehrman admits, “the Bible is, by
all counts, the most significant book in the history of Western civilization.”2 Though
Ehrman admits the significance of the Bible, like many scholars today, Ehrman sees the
uniqueness of the Bible as simply a work of great human effort alone. Interesting though,
Ehrman did believe at one point that the Bible was from God and inspired. What
While a student a Princeton University and into his professional career, Ehrman
was able to study many of the vast ancient Greek, Coptic and Syriac manuscripts of the
New Testament. To his shock, he found that the manuscripts were full of scribal errors,
some intentional and some non-intentional. Eventually, this led Ehrman to seeing the
Bible as simply a human book. His final conclusion, and thesis of his book is: “Given the
circumstance that he didn’t preserve the words, the conclusion seemed inescapable to me
that he hadn’t gone to the trouble of inspiring them.” Though Ehrman is correct that in
the tens of thousands of hand written copies of the New Testament there are many scribal
errors, his evidence however does not discredit the life of Jesus, the Gospel, the overall
integrity of the Scriptures, and the fingerprints of God upon the writings of the New
Testament. Overall, Misquoting Jesus actually makes the Gospel shine forth as still
historical and trustworthy, not fraudulent and made-up by the work of well-meaning men.
1
J.C. Ryle, How Readest Thou? (Charles Nolan: Moscow), 9.
2
Bart Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why (New
York: Harper Collins, 2005), 208.
2
In writing in response to the claims that the Bible is no longer credible because of
manuscript evidence to paint a true picture of the historical Jesus, scholar, Christian
author and pastor Dr. John Piper wrote “It helps to be sixty years old. I have watched the
cards collapse over and over.”3 In the introduction to his book, What Jesus Demands
from the World, Piper explains briefly the waves of attack upon the New Testament
through higher criticism starting in the seventeenth century with Benedict Spinoza and
ending with Albert Schweitzer and Martin Kahler in the early to middle twentieth
century. The second wave of critics came in 1953 and the early 1970’s with Rudolf
Bultman and Ernst Kasemann. The third wave started in the 1980’s with new
archaeological and manuscript evidence claiming scholars have new data on the gospels.4
Despite the constant wave of attacks on the Bible, Piper says the challenges that have
come against “the historical validity of the portrayal of Jesus in the Gospels are not
Though John Piper was probably not referring to Ehrman specifically, his
illustration of the new evidence against the historic Jesus falling down like a deck of
cards is correct in regards to Misquoting Jesus. Through the book, Ehrman educates the
reader on the how the New Testament was copied, complied and preserved. Along the
way, Ehrman gives his knowledge on how many of the copies of the New Testament
have been corrupted, and how many verses are up-for-grabs on the original meaning.
Like a wake turning into a small wave, Ehrman does his scholarly best to convince his
readers at the end of the book that the New Testament has been so distorted, it should no
3
John Piper, What Jesus Demands from the world (Wheaton: Crossway, 2006), 31.
4
Ibid., 31-32.
5
Ibid., 33.
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longer be viewed as God’s Word, but a fragmented piece of human writing. What is his
tidal wave of new evidence to persuade followers of the Bible? Here is his climatic
defense in the conclusion section of his book: “Was Jesus an angry man? Was he
completely distraught in the face of death? Did he tell his disciples that they could drink
poison without being harmed? Did he let an adulteress off the hook with nothing but a
mild warning?...The questions go on and on…” Are these his greatest objections? Are
the discrepancies in the Greek manuscripts over whether Jesus at one point was angry or
trustworthy? Ehrman says the questions go on and on. If so, what are they? What
evidence is there greater than the problems with Jesus being angry, or the woman being
What kind of major blow to the New Testament would a skeptic be looking for in
Ehrman’s book? Some very compelling damage to the New Testament and the historic
Jesus would be something like this: First, there are so few New Testament manuscripts
left in the world, that to believe Jesus lived, died on the cross, and body no longer
remained in the tomb would be to believe in a myth, not on historical facts. Second, the
New Testament manuscripts have been so changed by scribes over the years, that to piece
together an accurate picture of what truly happened in the life, death, and missing body of
Jesus is impossible. Third, the numerous, accurate, and historical data surrounding the
events of Jesus in the first century so contradict the writings of the New Testament that
the New Testament, though numerous in its manuscripts, is considered hyperbole and
Does Misquoting Jesus present anything close to the above statements? Not at all.
Instead, Ehrman goes on in the conclusion of his book to say that all English Bibles are
“based on texts that have been changed in places” and then lists a few more such as Mark
1:41 (an angry Jesus ), Luke 22:43-44 (Jesus in agony thinking about his crucifixion) and
Hebrews 2:9 (Jesus dying apart from God).6 Do any these arguments about the Greek
text change the historical Jesus in regards to his birth, miracles, perfect life, death, burial
and the empty tomb three days later? Obviously, no. In fact, Ehrman admits that in
many of the disputed Greek texts such at the ones above, many good scholars take issue
on both sides.7 As John Piper said, the evidence to portray a different Jesus, and a
Again, the most damaging blow to the New Testament and gospel of Jesus Christ
would be to say that there is not enough evidence to piece together a clear life of Christ,
or that Greek and Latin texts are so fragmented, changed, and distorted, that to ever
believe Christ died on a cross by the Roman government, was buried, and then seen alive
by His disciples would be a fairly tale. Instead, Ehrman never even comes close to
saying anything of the sort. His absence is telling. Even very liberal and highly skeptical
New Testament scholar like John Dominic Crossan has admitted: “That he was crucified
is as sure as anything historical can ever be.”8 Likewise, former chair of history at
Oxford and Roman historian Thomas Arnold says “…I know of no one fact in the history
of mankind which is proved by better and fuller evidence of every sort, to the
6
Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus, 209.
7
Ibid., 208.
8
Quoted in Gary R. Habermas, The Risen Jesus and Future Hope (Lanham MD: Rowman and
littlefield, 2003), 17.
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understanding of a fair inquirer, than the great sign which God hath given us that Christ
Jesus, Ehrman takes a philosophical stance against the resurrection, not an argument
based on the corruption of the Greek text. If Jesus has been so misquoted because of the
corruptions of the Greek texts, now was Ehrman’s time to pull out his expertise and make
his case. But instead, he mentioned alleged contradictions of the resurrection story in the
gospels (such as how many angels were there at the tomb) and then his main point that
because miracles don’t happen in everyday life, to say a miracle happened to account for
the resurrection of Jesus is unlikely.10 When Misquoting Jesus is read, the gospel of
Jesus Christ in His death and resurrection for lost humanity is upheld and unmoved.
What seems to be lacking from Ehrman is what Jesus asks of all people: do you believe?
One of the most shocking statements by Ehrman in his book is his reporting to the
public that the New Testament contains 200,000 to 400,000 variants or changes in the
thousands of manuscripts documented.11 This is not new news, but to the common
person who wants to know more about the Bible, this report by an expert is damaging to
any persons trust in the New Testament. What do other experts say to this alarming
claim?
9
Quoted in The Best of Josh McDowell: A Ready Defense (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1993),
216.
10
www.youtube.com/
11
Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus, 89.
6
The place to start is the man who taught Ehrman, the late Dr. Bruce Metzger from
surprising due to the fact that Dr. Metzger came to a very different conclusion from
Ehrman when studying the manuscripts and all the variants. When Metzger was
interviewed by Lee Strobel on this subject in the book, The Case for Christ, the interview
Strobel: “So,” I started to say, “scholarship has not diluted your faith-“
He jumped in before I could finish my sentence. “On the contrary,” he stressed, “it has
built it. I’ve asked questions all my life. I’ve dug into the text, I’ve studied this thoroughly, and
today I know with confidence that my trust in Jesus has been well placed.”
He paused while his eyes surveyed my face. Then he added, for emphasis, “Very well
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placed.”
What information did Ehrman not share in his book that Metzger and others are so
confident in?
First, the belief that there are 200,000 to 400,000 unique errors is misleading.
Metzger says, “If a single word is misspelled in two thousand manuscripts, that’s counted
as two thousand variants.”13 Therefore, to possibly promote that the New Testament has
400,000 unique transmission errors is not honest. Second, the majority of all the counted
variants are misspelled words. Dr. Bruce Wallace, director of the Center of New
Testament manuscripts says seventy to eighty percent of all the variants are misspelled
words. Meaning, if the high number was chosen of 400,000 variants, 280,000 to 320,000
would inconsequential differences.14 After Ehrman’s shock value on page 89 of his book
of the many variants, he actually agrees with Metzger and Wallace in his conclusion that
“To be sure, of all the hundreds of thousands of textual changes found among
12
Lee Stobel, The Case for Christ (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1998), 71.
13
Quoted in Strobel, The Case for Christ, 64-65.
14
Lee Strobel, Finding the Real Jesus (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2008), 38.
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for anything other than showing that scribes could not spell or keep focused any better
Third, many of the remaining variants are errors that are correctable. Metzger
says many of the remaining variants are words out of place, or the right words in the
wrong sequence. One example given by Metzger is in English if someone says dog bites
man or man bites dog, the word order obviously changes the meaning. In Greek however
one word stands as the object in the sentence despite where it is in the sentence.16
Therefore, though there can be many scribal errors due to copying mistakes, correcting
these mistakes and finding the original meaning is not impossible or difficult like it
would be in English. Metzger even says these kind of scribal mistakes are actually
inconsequential.17
Fourth, there are more manuscripts of the New Testament than any other work of
antiquity. If any one argument knocks the ball out of the park for validity of the New
Testament, it is this one. According to Ehrman and Wallace the current number of Greek
manuscripts is 5,700. Wallace comments: “There are another 10,000 copies in Latin.
Then there are versions in other languages- Coptic, Syriac, Armenian, Georgian, and so
on. These are estimated to number 10,000 and 15,000. So right there we’ve got 25,000
to 30,000 handwritten copies of the New Testament.”18 What makes the number of
manuscripts so important to the validity of the Bible? If historians only had one copy of
the gospel of John, who would know if it was accurate? If historians had 2-3 copies of
the gospel of John, and each of them had a slight variance of John 3:16, who would know
15
Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus, 207.
16
Strobel, The Case for Christ, 64.
17
Ibid., 64.
18
Strobel, Finding the Real Jesus, 34-35.
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what is the original meaning of John 3:16? But if historians have hundreds of copies of
the gospel of John, any variances that would arise can all be checked and cross-checked
to find the original meaning. Therefore, the New Testament stands alone as the superior
Because of the overwhelming manuscript evidence, the New Testament is not myth but
well-attested history. Dr. Bruce Wallace says the large number of variants is due to the
large amount of manuscripts circulating. Realistically he says, due to the high number of
manuscripts the potential for variants could be in the tens of millions! So, to understand
the New Testament in as many times as it has been copied to only have 200,00 to
400,000 variants, which the majority are spelling is actually quite a accomplishment
considering what could be the case. What about the minority of textual variants that
19
Kenneth Samples, Without a Doubt: Answering the 20 Toughest Faith Questions (Grand
Rapids: Baker, 2004), 93.
20
McDowell, A Ready Defense, 45.
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Fifth and last, only a small amount of variances in the manuscripts effect the
original meaning of some verses, but in the verses that are affected by scribal changes, no
major doctrine of the Christian faith is affected. Is Ehrman right that there are some
verses in the New Testament that scholars have a hard time knowing the original
meaning? The answer is yes. But again, according to Dr. Bruce Metzger, the small
amount of verses in question tend to minor, and have no bearing any doctrine of
Christianity.21 Dr. Wallace says “only about one percent of variants affect the meaning
of the text to some degree…but most of these are not very significant at all.”22 One New
Testament verse that both Ehrman and Wallace mention as an example is Romans 5:1.
English Bibles today say because of being justified by faith, “we have peace with God”
(Romans 5:1). Because of the differences in some of the Greek manuscripts by one letter,
scholars are split over if it should be translated, “We have peace” or, “Let us have peace.”
But is any Christian doctrine jeopardized because of this variant? The answer is no,
along with some other verses that scholars say are up-for-grabs on their original
meaning.23 Even scholar Norman Geisler would say the variants would add up to one-
half of one percent.24 Whether it be one percent or one-half of one percent, manuscript
authority expert Sir Fredric G. Kenyon, former principal librarian of the British Museum
needs to be heard loud and clear when he writes, “No fundamental doctrine of the
21
Strobel, The Case for Christ, 65.
22
Quoted in Strobel, Finding the Real Jesus, 39.
23
Ibid., 41.
24
Quoted in McDowell, A Ready Defense, 46.
25
Ibid., 46.
10
It is interesting that Bart Ehrman tried to convince his readers that the Bible was
purely a human book, but yet nothing was mentioned about the prophecies fulfilled by
Jesus. If just one prophecy was fulfilled by Jesus Christ, then the fingerprints of God are
Jesus Christ lived in Israel, performed miracles, died by Roman execution on a cross,
was buried in a borrowed tomb, and then was seen three days later by His disciples. The
New Testament is the best attested work of antiquity, with more manuscripts to compare
one to another for accuracy than any other ancient work. Plus, the New Testament alone
has documents going back to the first and second century, making it the document closest
to the original in comparison to all others. The New Testament can be trusted and no
doctrine, especially the doctrine of salvation is comprised in any way. Has the gospel of
Jesus Christ been comprised and not preserved as to reject the belief of the inspiration of
the Scriptures and them being the Word of God? According to Bart Ehrman, the answer
is yes, but according to clear evidence as stated above, God has preserved his message for
Works Cited