Explaining epistemology, how we know what we know, to New Atheists, feels a bit like rolling up a stone in Hades, only to have it slide back down, throughout eternity. Asking them to stop blindly worshipping "science," and start thinking about our sources of knowledge rationally, is like asking a cat to be kind to mouse-flavored straw men. (Sorry for the mixed metaphor: I have a cold, so make no guarantees even worse will not follow.)
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
How does John Loftus (or anyone) know anything?
Saturday, December 26, 2015
A Year with Great Old Books
So I haven't read as much in Chinese as last year. But I have found some wonderful and fascinating works -- also some solid duds.
Here are the ones I remember:
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
In Defense of "Christian" Civilization
Recently, I responded to Andy Rhodes, a former Christian with a lot of tough questions about Christian thought and the Christian record. In that post, I offered some ideas about the Problem of Pain. Andy responded with a couple dozen or so posts, which I don't have time right now to fully answer (or even read, because that will start me answering). Hopefully over the next few weeks I'll take the time to sift through and respond to those posts more completely, because we do welcome serious challenges.
But I would like to answer some of Andy's points on the relationship between Christianity and the western record. This begins by delving into politics, on which of course Christians have different opinions: as a conservative, I'll freely share my own. Then we get more specifically into the Christian record in reform.
But I would like to answer some of Andy's points on the relationship between Christianity and the western record. This begins by delving into politics, on which of course Christians have different opinions: as a conservative, I'll freely share my own. Then we get more specifically into the Christian record in reform.
Labels:
politics,
Secular Humanism,
slavery,
social reform
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Why the Christmas Tree is Christian
The following is a Christmas-related exerpt from my last book, How Jesus Passes the Outsider Test: The Inside Story. There I go on to tell the story of how early Christians began to make use of these analogies to present the Gospel story from within Germanic culture -- beginning with the Christmas tree. If you like this, read the rest of the book! It's not too late to put into someone's Kindle stocking. -- DM
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Answering Andy Rhodes on the Problem of Pain
On the Amazon page for a book by Hector Avalos about the "bad Jesus," an apparently sincere, and obviously thoughtful, reader posted a series of challenges to me. His name is Andy Rhodes, a former Christian who says he is open to returning to Christianity, if his questions can be answered. I will not pretend that I can answer them all to Andy's satisfaction or even, in some cases, to my own. But frankly, it is not every day that I come across skeptics whose challenges are this strong and internally coherent. So I'd like to give his arguments a shot. (He gave me permission to post them here and reply, not that I always ask.)
Andy's first post (of six in this bunch) is about the "Problem of Pain" or divine hiddenness, along with the Christian record. I've been known to duck and run from this former problem, but let's give it a bit of a shot now.
I'll respond to Andy's comments one paragraph or so at a time.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Andy's first post (of six in this bunch) is about the "Problem of Pain" or divine hiddenness, along with the Christian record. I've been known to duck and run from this former problem, but let's give it a bit of a shot now.
I'll respond to Andy's comments one paragraph or so at a time.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Sunday, December 13, 2015
Aslan and Ehrman make asses of themselves
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"We shall have an ass instead concealed in a lion's skin; and we shall detect in him a sophist in the truest sense, cadging for alms among the cities, and a wizard, if there ever was one, instead of a philosopher."
Perhaps this was a common metaphor of the day. Or maybe these very words of Eusebius' are the origin of the plot of C. S. Lewis' prize-winning finale to the Chronicles of Narnia, in which an evil ape dresses up a gentle donkey named Puzzle in a lion's skin. Dressed up to look like Aslan, the noble lion, Puzzle is paraded before the crowd of Narnians in the twilight (when he is hard to see clearly) by a cynical, often-drunk ape and his Calormene masters who wish to enslave Narnia.
Ironically, in Zealot, Reza Aslan falls for this original trick of the fake Aslan, and compares Jesus (the lion) to an ass (a fitting description of Apollonius of Tyana, as I began to show in my last post.)
Bart Ehrman does the same thing, in egregious and phony detail (again, see last post), in his recent book How Jesus Became God.
And so Eusebius was wiser than the present crop of NT scholars -- not just Erhman and Aslan, but the whole Jesus Seminar, Richard Carrier, Paula Fredriksen, the lot. C. S. Lewis had their number sixty years ago. All these scholars who are enamored of Apollonius are making asses of themselves, all over again. Because Eusebius was on the money: no one who looks at Apollonius in the light of day, can honestly make the mistake these "scholars" want us to all make.
So are they honestly "puzzled," or trying to fool people? I am beginning to suspect the latter. How could Bart Ehrman not know how stretched many of his analogies are? Why else would he take his "lion" out in the darkness, by obscuring so many details, covering others up, as he does? Are these sorts of scholars playing the role of honestly fooled Narnians, or the more pernicious role of the Calormenes or the drunk ape? (Or perhaps the overly-clever cat, Ginger?)
But how fitting, that Reza Aslan should be caught mistaking his Aslans, while Eusebius called him out for such foolishness, 1700 years ago.
Saturday, December 05, 2015
Bart Ehrman Scams his Students (Jesus vs. Apollonius of Tyana)
Bart Ehrman similarly accepts youth into his classrooms, but offers them a radically different message: The Kingdom of God, if there be a God, had nothing to do with Jesus. In fact, Jesus was "not unique:" there were any number of sages very much like Jesus. Take Apollonius of Tyana, for example!
But Ehrman tells numerous half-truths and even falsehoods, invents some facts and obscures others, so as to convince his kids and readers into accepting this alleged parallel. He is evidently hoping no one will actually read Life of Apollonius of Tyana, and see how badly such arguments regarding Apollonius have failed. They have been batted around since the 3rd Century, and have been pushed in recent times by figures as diverse as the Jesus Seminar, Reza Aslan, Paula Fredriksen, Robert Price and Richard Carrier (the latter two brought him up in debates with me).
My goal in this post, frankly, is to take Bart Ehrman and Apollonius down. I intend to expose Ehrman's slippery scholarship, and some of the facts that he does not seem to want his audience, young or old, to hear. I no longer think he deserves to be described as a respectable historian: he has, in my opinion, left the path of responsible scholarship, and veered onto the path of shameless advocacy. He is also overlooking what is really significant about the very texts on which he claims to be an expert. I am also presently writing a book which will make the case for the gospels, and against Ehrman and his ilk, in greater detail: here's an opening round.
(Update: an improved version of this argument can now be found in my new book, Jesus is No Myth.)
I. Ehrman's Argument
In his 2014 book How Jesus Became God, Bart Ehrman tells how he introduces Jesus to students in his introductory course on the New Testament at the University of North Carolina. Ehrman begins his main argument in that book by relating how he introduces Jesus to students. He doesn't start by talking about St. Paul, who wrote the earliest and largest portion of the New Testament. Nor does he begin with Mark, author of the first Gospel. Rather, he begins by telling his students stories about a traveling Greek sage named Apollonius of Tyana, by the Athenian writer Philostratus.
Here is the story Ehrman tells "his kids." I affix letters to points I will discuss below. I almost ran through the entire alphabet, but limited myself to twenty-five distortions or falsehoods in Ehrman's introductory pages on Apollonius and Jesus.
Besides these twenty-five, Ehrman commits two enormous sins of omission, which render his comparison worse than moot, but a travesty. I will discuss those two omitted facts briefly in Part III, then at more length in the upcoming book.
Ehrman begins by describing a certain messianic figure:
“Before he was born, his mother had a visitor from heaven(a)
who told her that her son would not be a mere mortal but in fact would be divine. His birth
was accompanied by unusual divine signs in the heaven(a)
As an adult he left his home to engage on an itinerant preaching ministry (b) . . .
He gathered a number of followers around him who became convinced that he was no
ordinary human, but that he was the Son of God (d).
And he did miracles (e)
to confirm them in their beliefs (f):
he could heal the sick, cast out demons (g),
and raise the dead (h).
At the end of his life (i)
he aroused opposition among the ruling authorities of Rome and was put on trial. But they could not kill his soul (j).
He ascended to heaven (k)
and continues to lives there till this day. To prove that he lived on after leaving this earthly orb, he appeared again to at least one of his doubting followers (l),
who became convinced that in fact he remains with us even now. Later, some of his followers wrote books about him, and we can still read about him today . . . ” (How Jesus Became God, 11-12)
who told her that her son would not be a mere mortal but in fact would be divine. His birth
was accompanied by unusual divine signs in the heaven(a)
As an adult he left his home to engage on an itinerant preaching ministry (b) . . .
He gathered a number of followers around him who became convinced that he was no
ordinary human, but that he was the Son of God (d).
And he did miracles (e)
to confirm them in their beliefs (f):
he could heal the sick, cast out demons (g),
and raise the dead (h).
At the end of his life (i)
he aroused opposition among the ruling authorities of Rome and was put on trial. But they could not kill his soul (j).
He ascended to heaven (k)
and continues to lives there till this day. To prove that he lived on after leaving this earthly orb, he appeared again to at least one of his doubting followers (l),
who became convinced that in fact he remains with us even now. Later, some of his followers wrote books about him, and we can still read about him today . . . ” (How Jesus Became God, 11-12)
The man Ehrman is referring to here is not Jesus, as readers or listeners might suppose, it is Apollinius of Tyana, "a pagan and a renowned philosopher!"
(a) “Before he was born, his mother had a visitor from heaven . . . "
Actually the visitor, Proteus, came not from heaven, but from an island of Pharos off the Nile Delta, where the great lighthouse had been built. He was the same god who, in The Odyssey, changes shapes until Menelaus forces him to answer various questions, including where Odysseus has gone. He was not an angel from God, as in the gospels -- the parallel Ehrman seeks to create.
(b)"Who told her that her son would not be a mere mortal but in fact would be divine. His birth was accompanied by unusual divine signs in the heaven."
Actually just one "sign" appeared, a thunderbolt going up. (My own son's birth, by the way, was accompanied by many signs in the heavens -- fireworks lit off in Nagasaki harbor, to celebrate the return of a cruise ship to the city where it had been built.) There were also dancing swans.
(c) "As an adult he left his home to engage on an itinerant preaching ministry . . ."
On the contrary, Apollonius seems to have first left home just as he went on a several-year period of silence. Later, he left for India because he felt "it was a young man's duty to go abroad to embark upon foreign travel," as Philostratus explains.
Apollonius did engage in occasional preaching, or hectoring, but it is misleading to describe his "ministry" as one of "itinerant preaching." Mainly he dialogues with the best sages he can find and with kings and the like, correcting priestly ritual wherever he goes. He seems to find preaching to the masses a bore, and requires a cold bath and a rubdown afterwards.
(d) "He gathered a number of followers around him who became convinced that he was
no ordinary human, but that he was the Son of God."
I have found no claim in Philostratus that Apollonius was "the Son of God," or even the son of a god. (Though that is, indeed, common in the ancient world - probably more than half the Argonauts are sons or grandsons of gods.)
Philostratus says that Proteus and Apollo both identify him as incarnations of themselves (not sure how that would work), but not that his followers saw him as "the Son of God." The book is long, however, and I may have overlooked such a claim -- it would be helpful if Ehrman offered footnotes here. (I might add that I once spent some time with a troubled young man in Taiwan who said a spirit lived inside him that called itself both the "son of Jesus" and the "son of Mazu" the sea goddess. He did not remind me of Jesus. Had Apollonius made such claims, one might suppose he had heard the Gospel story, as had that young man. But I don't think he did.)
(e) "And he did miracles (f) to confirm them in their beliefs"
This is questionable on two counts. I am not sure, first of all, that the wonders Apollonius allegedly worked (and there is no actual evidence that he worked any at all, unlike Jesus, as I shall explain later) should be called "miracles," or can be accurately compared to the works of Jesus. And secondly, it is not very apparent that he "did" them -- whatever they were -- to prove anything, as Jesus is said to do in John for instance.
Apollonius may be said to have healed one or two people, and he also sometimes declines to heal because the sick person had their illness coming to them. He often knows the future, and once he disappears from an emperor who wishes for an interview. (He seems to regard getting interviewed by kings much as Forrest Gump regarded his frequent visits to the White House.)
But Apollonius' "wonders" tend to be couched in pseudo-scientific terms. For instance, when a boy with rabies is brought to him, he tells the crowd to make the dog that bit him and gave him rabies drink water, then lick the boy's wounds. This heals both of them, not miraculously, but because Apollonius has allegedly used his wisdom to diagnose an effective cure for rabies. Similarly, he "cures" a satyr by getting it drunk, after which it stops chasing women. Or he tells a crowd in Ephesus to stone a beggar to death, and as the beggars is dying, his eyes glow, revealing that he is actually a monster. That's the kind of "miracle" you run into in Life of Apollonius of Tyana.
This is magic, or pseudo-science, not "semeion" or signs of God's purposeful and good action in a world He has created and desires to redeem, as in the Gospels. Ehrman may not recognize the difference, but he ought to, if he's a good scholar. The English word "miracle" fools modern readers into identifying things that are not, in fact, the same, but it is the job of scholars to tease out such clear differences.
(g), "and raise the dead."
In one town, Apollonius encounters a funeral procession for a bride who has suddenly died -- maybe. But Philostratus notices that a mist was still visible coming from her lips, even in the rain. So probably she had not really died, but again, the sage astutely recognized her true condition. So he probably did not "raise the dead."
(h). "at the end of his life"
Actually the event refers to here occurs two years before Apollonius passes away. Ehrman is, again, straining to make Apollonius' life parallel that of Jesus more closely.
(i) "he aroused opposition among the ruling authorities of Rome and was put on trial. But they could not kill his soul"
The judge was the emperor Domitian. Ehrman neglects to tell his readers, and presumably his students, that Domitian not only "could not kill his soul," but did not kill his body, unlike Pilate and Jesus, and, in fact, didn't even try. Domitian asked Apollonius four silly questions -- why did wear such odd clothing, why did his followers call him a god (because "good" = "god"), how did he know about the plague in Ephesus beforehand, and had he really engaged in an act of human sacrifice? The emperor listened to Apollonius' pompous rebuttals, as Domitian's own retainers cheered, and then Domitian feebly gave in and acquitted him on all charges. The "parallel" is completely phony, in other words, and Ehrman is skating perilously close to an outright lie.
(j). "He ascended to heaven"
No, he didn't. Philostratus notes that Damis says nothing about his sage's death, but that he has heard a variety of rumors. One of those rumors is that he went into a temple in Crete, and people could hear young maidens singing, "Hasten thou from earth, hasten thou to Heaven, hasten." So as obviously fradulent a biographer as "Damis" is, even he does not say anything about Apollonius' death. And NO ONE, even rumors from Crete, actually record him ascending to heaven, though that is no doubt implied. He just disappears. And plainly Philostratus does not even begin to believe this rumor, one among many.
(k) "and continues to lives there till this day."
I have yet to find any mention of this alleged fact. Again, footnotes would help.
(l) "To prove that he lived on after leaving this earthly orb, he appeared again to at least one of his doubting followers, who became convinced that in fact he remains with us even now."
In a dream. No one else could see him.
(m) "Later, some of his followers wrote books about him, and we can still read about him today . . . ”
Ehrman is wording things carefully, again, to deceive his students and readers without telling direct lies. The account (book, not "books") we can read today is not by one of Apollonius' followers, but by Philostratus, a court writer who lived 150 years later. Apollonius' "follower" Damis was the alleged author of most of the stories that Philostratus tells, but he was probably a complete fiction. (See below.)
So yes, we can read about Apollonius, but not by one of his early followers, nor by anyone nearly so close to the facts as any of the authors of the gospels were to Jesus' life and ministry. (As I shall also demonstrate in the upcoming book.)
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