Jesus before the gospels How the earliest Christians remembered, changed, and invented their stories of the Savior

Bart D. Ehrman

Book - 2016

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Subjects
Published
San Francisco : HarperOne 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Bart D. Ehrman (author)
Physical Description
326 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780062285225
9780062285201
  • Introduction
  • 1. Oral Traditions and Oral Inventions
  • 2. The History of Invention
  • 3. Eyewitness Testimonies and Our Surviving Gospels
  • 4. Distorted Memories and the Death of Jesus
  • 5. Distorted Memories and the Life of Jesus
  • 6. Collective Memory: Our Earliest Gospel of Mark
  • 7. The Kaleidoscopic Memories of Jesus: John, Thomas, and a Range of Others
  • 8. In Conclusion: A Paean to Memory
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With his typical humor, passion, and vivacity, Ehrman (How Jesus Became God) explores the ways that memory shapes, distorts, changes, and preserves the stories of Jesus passed along by the Christian community. He points out, for example, that the numerous accounts of Jesus circulating before and after his death each portrayed a very different man, one shaped by the tellers' own religious and cultural concerns. Ehrman locates the empirically verifiable memories of Jesus that inform the gospels-he was an itinerant teacher; he had a number of followers; he was born and raised a Jew-and then examines the ways that early Christian literature preserves or invents its own memories of Jesus. Engaging in a close reading of Matthew's account of the Sermon on the Mount, he illustrates that the event represents a "collection of sayings of Jesus that the writer of the gospel has shaped into a long and memorable sermon." Before readers get too uncomfortable, Ehrman convincingly points out that the remembered Jesus-the figure whose existence is shaped by the memories of him handed down through time-is the one who made history. Ehrman's provocative book raises engaging questions that drive readers back to the sources of our information about Jesus, challenging them to read the gospel with fresh, skeptical eyes. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

Understanding the role of memory in the formation of the Christian Gospels. In his latest work on the historical Jesus, Ehrman (Religious Studies/Univ. of North Carolina; How Jesus Became God: The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee, 2014, etc.) delves into the oft-neglected role of memory in the context of the early Christian church. The author argues that memory is of paramount importance to understanding such basic Christian writings as the four Gospels, since these arose from remembered events and were written decades after the life of Jesus. Ehrman demonstrates the widely accepted view of scholars that none of the Gospels were written by people who actually knew and followed Jesus personally. As such, each is based upon the memories of others, often transmitted through unnumbered sources in the early Christian community. Understanding the science behind memory, therefore, helps students of the Bible to understand the origins of, and differences among, the Gospels. Ehrman provides an intriguing overview of memory studies over the past century and introduces readers to a variety of important pioneers and studies in the field. The author finds that memory constructs the past. No matter if the topic is ancient history, recent news events, or personal happenings, the human understanding of all things past is constructed via memory. Furthermore, memories are often flawed or "distorted." This fact is simply a reality of the human condition; nevertheless, distorted memories lead to distorted history. Readers of the Bible can, however, assume that "gist memories" are based in solid reality. Gist memories reflect the basic situation (e.g., Jesus was crucified) without potentially distorted qualifications (e.g., dialogue at the site of the crucifixion). Despite the fact that his work is highly critical of the Bible as history, Ehrman concludes that it is still important, just as Shakespeare and Dickens are important. "The historical Jesus did not make history," he writes. "The remembered Jesus did." An intriguing new angle on the well-worn field of "historical Jesus" studies. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.