Why Faith Fails The Christian Delusion

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by John W. Loftus

InterVarsity Press, 2009). Unfortunately, the apocalyptic view of Jesus did not

  get a chapter of its own, probably because the editors are evangelicals and they

  tend to ignore it.

  6. In AMarginalJew, vol 1, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1991),

  pp. 22-23.

  7. (New York: Penguin Books, 1993), especially pp. 169-204.

  8. (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1998).

  9. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999).

  10. 2nd ed. (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000). A discussion/

  debate on these issues can be found in The Apocalyptic Jesus: A Debate, ed.

  Robert J. Miller (Santa Rosa, CA: Polebridge Press, 2001). Probably the best

  resource to consult about the quest for the historical Jesus is Gerd Theissen and

  Annette Metz, The Historical,Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide (Minneapolis, MN:

  Fortress Press, 1996).

  11. Allison,,Jerus of Nazareth, pp. 36, 45. As an aside, I think establishing

  such a framework is also important for dating the books the NT. With an

  improper framework, people will date the books incorrectly. It's at least part of

  the solution.

  12. Such a context for the life of Jesus is shown in John Dominic Crossan,

  The Historical Jesus: The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant (New York:

  HarperSanFrancisco, 1991), pp. 3-226.

  13. Paula Fredriksen, From ,7esus to Christ The Origins of the New Testament

  Images of Jesus, 2nd ed. (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000), pp. 88-

  90.

  14. Mark 6:14, 8:28; Matthew 11:7-19; Acts 5:35-39. Cf. Josephus,

  Antiquities of the Jews 18:5, 20:97-98, 169-72; and Wars of the Jews 2:261-3,

  6:284-85.

  15. Allison lists nine other major themes on that same descending scale: (9)

  God as Father; (10) loving/serving/forgiving others; (11) special regard for the

  unfortunate; (12) intention as to what matters most; (13) hostility to wealth; (14)

  extraordinary requests/difficult demands; (15) conflict with religious authorities;

  (16) disciples as students and helpers; (17) Jesus as miracle worker. According

  to Allison, items (9)-(11) tell us that Jesus "was a teacher of compassion"; items

  (12)-(15) tell us he was "a moral rigorist"; items (15)-(16) tell us he was a

  "wellknown teacher"; and item (17) "probably explains in great measure ... why

  people paid attention to what he had to say." Allison, Jesus of Nazareth, pp. 46-

  49 (see also pp. 61-69, 78-94).

  16. Ibid., pp. 51, 96.

  17. Ibid., p. 154.

  18. It should be noted that Robert Price disputes that this "Little Apocalypse"

  actually comes from the lips of Jesus in his book, The Paperback Apocalypse:

  How the Christian Church Was Left Behind (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books,

  2007), pp. 101-107. If he's correct, then the synoptic Gospels are probably not

  even somewhat reliable. Nonetheless, even though Price and others can object to

  the authenticity of "The Little Apocalypse" because most apocalyptic literature

  was written anonymously, not all of it was. And unless we're willing to say the

  whole NT tradition is inauthentic, the original founder of the Jesus cult was not

  the apostle Paul. For according to him he persecuted Christians, which means the

  Jesus cult, in some form or other, already existed prior to his conversion (see

  Galatians 1:13, cf. Acts 8:1-3, 9:1-19, 23:3-16, 26:9-18).

  19. Edward Adams, The Stars Will Fall From Heaven: Cosmic Catastrophe in

  the New Testament and Its World (New York: T & T Clark, 2007), p. 164.

  20. Paperback Apocalypse, p. 160.

  21. It's quite clear in Paul's' genuine letters that he expected the apocalyptic

  end of the world. This is just one of the reasons why the Pastoral letters are

  rejected by most scholars as genuinely Pauline (i.e., 1 and 2 Timothy, and Titus),

  for which see Paul Tobin's chapter in this book. In one Pastoral Epistle we find

  the author altering what Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians (7:17-31), urging instead

  that unmarried women should marry and bear children (1 Timothy 5:14). In

  another we find the author making provisions for his death without having

  personally experienced the coming kingdom of God, which Paul had predicted

  he would see (1 Thessalonians 4:15-17, cf. 2 Timothy 2:1-14). It's also argued

  that since the letters of Colossians (3:18-41) and Ephesians (5:21-6:9) include

  household rules detailing the duties of members in a household, this goes against

  what Paul said in 1 Corinthians 7, so they must be forgeries as well (cf. also 1

  Peter 2:13-3:12). See Bart D. Ehrman, The New Testament A Historical

  Introduction to the Early Christian Writings, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University

  Press, 2003), pp. 372-94.

  22. Ehrman, Jesus: Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium, p. 244. Dale

  Allison would find fault with Ehrman's characterization here, since Jesus was

  mostly speaking to his disciples who were told to leave everything to follow

  him. They had no need to be instructed about a fulfilling career precisely

  because they had chosen to follow him. See Allison's chapter, "The Problem of

  Audience" in Resurreetiongjesus (New York: T & T Clark, 2005), pp. 27-55.

  However, the fact remains that Jesus did not offer advice to anyone to pursue a

  fulfilling career, nor did the evolving church think it was important to

  incorporate any such advice into the Gospels.

  23. As Paula Fredriksen argued, "No human society could long run according

  to the principles enunciated in the Sermon on the Mount." From Jesus to Christ,

  p. 100. On the ethic of Jesus, see Michael Martin, The Case against Christianity

  (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 1991), pp. 162-72; and Dan Barker,

  Godless, How an Evangelical Preacher Became One of America :c Leading

  Atheists (Berkely, CA: Ulysses Press, 2008), pp. 178-202.

  24. James Charlesworth, "Jesus Research Expands with Chaotic Creativity," in

  Images of.7esus Today, eds. James Charlesworth and Walter P. Weaver (Valley

  Forge, PA; Trinity, 1994), p. 10.

  25. David B. Gowler, What Are They Saying about the Historical Jesus? (New

  York: Paulist Press, 2007), p. 142. On this, one need look no farther back than

  Marcus J. Borg, Jesus: A New Vision: Spirit, Culture, and the Life of

  Discipleship (New York: HarperSanFrancisco, 1987). Borg fleshes out this new

  vision in a subsequent book, Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time-The

  Historical Jesus & the Heart of Contemporary Faith (New York:

  HarperSanFrancisco, 1994). In this later book he claimed that the "pre-Easter

  Jesus was noneschatological" (p. 29). Borg's precise denial is found in these

  words: "what is being denied is the notion that Jesus expected the supernatural

  coming of the Kingdom of God as a world-ending event in his own generation."

  (p. 29).

  26. In Apocalyptic7esus.• A Debate, pp. 31-48.

  27. Ibid., p. 85.

  28. Historical Figure of Jesus, p. 183.

  29. Charlesworth, Historical Jesus, p. 97.

  30. Ibid., p. 104.

  31. Ibid., p. 99.

  32, Idid, p. 101.

  33. Dale Allison, The Historical Christ and the Theological Jesus (Grand

  Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2009), p. 113.

  34. Quoting a preview draft of Dale A
llison's forthcoming Constructing Jesus:

  Memory and Imagination (Grand Rapids, MI : Baker Academic, 2010).

  35. Jesus Remembered (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003), p. 479.

  36. For arguments that a different author wrote Zechariah 9-14, see the entry

  written by David L. Petersen, professor of Old Testament, Iliff School of

  Theology, Denver, CO, in The Anchor Bible Dictionary, ed. D. N. Freedman,

  (New York: Doubleday, 1996): "Zechariah, Book of."

  37. To see this argued even by an evangelical scholar, see Kenton L. Sparks,

  God's Word in Human Words: An Evangelical Appropriation of Critical Biblical

  Scholarship (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2008), pp. 116-18. Sparks argues

  that when we consider the prophecies in the book of Daniel, it becomes clear

  that they are "amazingly accurate and precise" up until a certain point where they

  "fail." He wrote: "Scholars believe that this evidence makes it very easy to date

  Daniel's apocalypses. One merely follows the amazingly accurate prophecies

  until they fail. Because the predictions of the Jewish persecutions in 167 BCE

  are correct, and because the final destiny of Antiochus in 164 BCE is not, it

  follows that the visions and their interpretations can be dated sometime between

  167 and 164 BCE" (p. 117).

  38. Understanding the Old Testament (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall,

  1957), pp. 525-26. See also the commentary on this passage in Andre Lacocque,

  The Book of Daniel (Atlanta, GA: John Knox Press, 1979).

  39. Sparks, God's Word in Human Words, p. 225.

  40. For instance, when God intervenes on "the Day of the Lord," He will

  either "lead the battle against the forces of Evil (Zechariah, Assumption of

  Moses), or else he will send his prophet Elijah to anoint his Messiah, who will

  lead the Army of God. Or perhaps he will send his Messiah himself (2 Baruch),

  or delegate the military duties to a nonhuman hero figure, the Son of Man (2

  Esdras)," Fredriksen, From,7esus to Christ, p. 84.

  41. Since this sermon is the key that the author of Luke uses to characterize

  the ministry of Jesus, it seems a bit improbable to think some kind of tradition

  like this does not stem from the founder of the Jesus cult himself.

  42. Fredriksen, From Jesus to Christ, p. 135.

  43. Ibid., p. 170.

  44. Ibid., p. 165.

  45. Ibid., p. 169. See also pp. 165-70.

  46. On this see Randel McCraw Helms, The Bible against Itself Why the

  Bible Seems to Contradictltself, (Altadena, CA: Millennium Press, 2006), pp. 15

  3-65.

  47. E. P. Sanders tells us: "An unfulfilled prophecy is much more likely to be

  authentic than one that corresponds precisely to what happened, since few

  people would make up something that did not happen and then attribute it to

  Jesus," in Historical Figure of Jesus, p. 182.

  48. To read a very helpful description of the cognitive dissonance of the early

  disciples and their need to resolve it concerning the unexpected death of Jesus,

  see Kris Komarnitsky, "The Belief That Jesus Died for Our Sins and Was

  Raised," in Doubting Jesus' Resurrection: What Happened in the Black Box?

  (CreateSpace, 2009), pp. 48-76. If this can happen with the death of Jesus, it can

  surely happen with regard to his failed prophecies of an imminent apocalypse.

  49. Ehrman, Jesus Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium, p. 130

  [emphasis original].

  50. Ibid.

  51. Ibid., p. 177.

  52. Historical Figure of,jesus, pp. 176-77.

  53. See Richard Valantasis, The Gospel of Thomas (New York: Routledge,

  1997), pp. 12-21. I recommend Paul Tobin's discussion of this in The Rejection

  of Pascals Wager, pp. 464-67.

  54. Historical Christ and the Theological Jesus, p. 100.

  5 5. Historical Figure of Jesus, p. 180.

  56. In The New Testament-Historical Introduction to the Early Christian

  Writings, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), pp. 469-70 Erhman

  writes: "most investigators think that parts of the book were written during the

  60s of the Common Era, soon after the persecution of the Christians under

  Nero." And yet there are important clues suggesting the book wasn't completed

  until around 95 CE during the rule of Domitian. The earliest external evidence is

  provided by Irenaeus in Against Heresies 5.30.3, who said Revelation was seen

  at the end of the reign of Domitian, so this implies a date of 95-96 CE. The most

  important internal clue is that the code word Babylon, which is used to signify

  Rome, "came to be used by Jews to designate Rome as the chief political enemy

  of God only after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE (e.g., 4 Ezra 3, 2 Baruch

  10), claims Ehrman. Adela Yarbro Collins argues the solution that best explains

  all of the internal evidence is that "an older tradition" was "incorporated and

  reinterpreted by the author of Revelation." For a more detailed discussion, see

  Collins, "Revelation, Book of," in The Anchor Bible Dictionary, vol. 5, ed. D. N.

  Freedman (New York: Doubleday 1996), pp. 700-708; and her book Crisis and

  Catharsis: The Power of theApocalypse (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster Press.

  1984), pp. 54-83.

  57. Says Ehrman in New Testament, p. 472: "Historians have long known of a

  group of ancient Jewish books called the Sybilline Oracles, which predict that

  one of the most hated of the Roman emperors, Caesar Nero, will return from the

  dead to wreak havoc on the earth-making him comparable to the one who

  recovers from a death-inflicting wound" (see Rev. 13:3). Thus the eighth beast

  "who was and is not" spoken of in Revelation 17:11 "alludes to the return of

  Nero as eschatological adversary," argues Collins in "Revelation, Book of," in

  The Anchor Bible Dictionary, vol. 5, p. 701.

  58. On this see Ehrman, New Testament, pp. 376-78.

  59. On the Dating of 2 Peter, see Ehrman, New Testament, pp. 456-58.

  60. See Price, Paperback Apocalypse, pp. 123-43.

  61. Jesus of Nazareth, p. 94

  62. Ibid., p. 64.

  63. The Paperback Apocalypse, pp. 159-60. This, of course, is part of the

  Problem of Miscommunication, which I wrote about in chapter 7 of this book.

  64. (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1996).

  65. 4th ed. (Atlanta: GA: Vision Books, 1999).

  66. Jesus of Nazareth, p. 157.

  67. Ibid., p. 161.

  68. In 7esus and the Restoration of Israel: A Critical Assessment of N.T.

  Wrights `Jesus and the Victory of God," ed. Carey C. Newman (Downers Grove,

  IL: InterVarsity Press, 1999), pp. 138-39.

  69. (New York: Continuum International, 2008).

  magine someone said to you that English provided the only basis for

  grammar. After you overcame your shock, you would respond that English is

  certainly not the only language with a grammar. You would add that grammar is

  not limited to language: understood broadly as rules for combination and

  transformation, many phenomena have a grammar, from sports to baking. Nor is

  grammar the sole or essential component of language: language also includes

  sound systems, vocabularies, genres, and styles of speech. And you would

  remind the speaker that grammar does not depen
d on human language at all:

  some nonhuman species, including chimps and parrots, can produce

  grammatical-that is, orderly and rule-conforming -short sentences. Ultimately,

  you would want to explain that English does not "provide a basis" for grammar

  at all but rather represents one particular instance of grammar. English grammar

  is definitely not the only grammar in the world and even more definitely not the

  "real" grammar.

  The person who utters a statement like "English provides the only basis for

  grammar" either understands very little about English (and language in general)

  or grammar, or the person is expressing his or her partisanship about language

  (i.e., pro-English)-or, more likely, the speaker is doing both. Thus, the person

  who utters a statement like "Christianity provides the only basis for morality"

  either understands very little about Christianity (or religion in general) or

  morality, or the person is expressing his or her partisanship about religion (i.e.,

  pro-Christianity)-or, more likely, the speaker is doing both. But, as a savvy

  responder, you would answer that Christianity is certainly not the only religion

  with morality. You would add that morality is not limited to religion: understood

  broadly as standards for behavior, many phenomena have a morality, from

  philosophy to business. Nor is morality the sole or essential component of

  religion: religion also includes myths, rituals, roles, and institutions of behavior.

  And you would remind the speaker that morality does not depend on human

  religion at all: some nonhuman species demonstrate moral-that is, orderly and

  standard-conforming-behavior. Ultimately, you would want to explain that

  Christianity does not "provide a basis" for morality at all but rather represents

  one particular instance of morality. Christian morality is definitely not the only

  morality in the world and even more definitely not the "real" morality.

  In this chapter, then, we will first explore what religion and morality actually

  are. We will show that other religions have their own moralities and that

  morality does not depend on Christianity. Further, we will show that nonreligion

  can also provide "a basis" for morality, that morality does not depend on

  religion. We will even show that nonhumans can have a sort of, or a precursor to,

  morality-that morality does not depend on humanness. Finally, we will clarify

  how religion is related to morality and why it often appears that morality

  depends on religion but that this is part of the ideology of religion, not the nature

  of morality.

  WHAT Is RELIGION? WHAT IS MORALITY?

  Not surprisingly, much of the confusion and (what passes for) debate about

  religion and morality boils down to a misunderstanding of both. There have been

  many attempts to define each term, most not so much wrong as highly biased.

  Accurately understanding religion and morality separately will help to make the

  relationship between them more comprehensible and will automatically dispense

  with the notion that morality depends on or is "provided by" any particular

  religion-or any religion at all.

  Perhaps it is easiest to approach the problem of what religion or morality is by

  establishing what it is not. Let us start with religion. Many people, Christian or

  under the influence of Christianity, define religion as "belief in God" or, only

  slightly more generally, "belief in one god." This is, of course, not a definition of

  religion in any way but rather a description of their particular religion. It is

  reminiscent of the opinion of Parson Thwackum in Henry Fielding's novel The

  History of Tom Tones, who said, "When I mention religion I mean the Christian

 

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