April 18, 2024

From Jesus to Constantine: A History of Early Christianity by Bart Ehrman

Bart EhrmanFrom Jesus to Constantine: A History of Early Christianity
The Great Courses audio class
By Bart Ehrman
Rating: 8 of 10

Ehrman is one of the best-known and most persuasive scholars on the history of early Christianity.  I have read other books of his and written about him here.  This audio class, distributed by The Teaching Company, is Ehrman’s Early Christianity course taught at The University of North Carolina, a stone’s throw from my own seminary, Duke Divinity School.  While UNC and Duke are so close geographically, this course and the one I took at Duke are worlds apart.  The distance was particularly helpful to me.

The expanse between my own early Christianity course and Ehrman’s is one of confession.  My professor, Warren Smith, is a Christian; Ehrman is not.  Ehrman presents the course material as a way of explaining why what is called today “Orthodox Christianity” won out over all the other “Christianities” that were competing in the first and second centuries.  Warren Smith presented the history of Christianity as one who believes that Orthodox Christianity was right to win out in the competition!

There are too many differences between the two courses to highlight them all here, so I will focus on two.  First, Ehrman highlights the variables in early Christianity that contributed to a very hostile stance between Jews and Christianity.  Much of this side of Christian history is deplorable.  In many ways Christians totally forgot that their spiritual roots lay in the Hebrew people with a Jewish messiah.  When this animosity moves from being a kind of sibling rivalry of two minorities to a huge power difference as it did with the conversion of Constantine and the Christianization of the West, the end of the story is not a good one for the Jews.

Second, Ehrman presents the classical theory of the relationship between Orthodoxy and heresy as explained by the first church historian, Eusibus, and a counter thesis first proposed by Walter Bauer, a German scholar 1600 years later.  The classical theory states that there was broad consensus of orthodoxy in the early church that was occasionally willfully corrupted by small groups of heretics.  Bauer suggests a very different picture.  He studied the earliest known sources in various regions of Christendom and according to Eherman, “In most of the places for which we have evidence, the earliest evidence is of forms of Christianity that were later deemed heretical.”  Furthermore, Ehrman adds, “It appears that in most places…heretical forms of Christianity were in evidence before orthodox forms and were the majority view in the earliest stages.”

I must admit that this picture of Orthodox Christianity is disheartening.  I am reminded of a statement by Irenaeus of how some of the early Gnostics have taken the mosaic of a king and turned it into a picture of a fox!  But then again, Irenaeus is in the line of orthodoxy.  I’m very interested in exploring this further and intend to look further in Bauer’s thesis.  I’m thankful for a quick response email from Ehrman suggesting some follow-up resources.

One thing that I noticed in Ehrman’s presentation that he seemingly neglected to mention was that while there were competing theological perspectives for Christianity, they all agreed upon at least one thing: the importance of Jesus.  I am no expert on all these early “Christanities” but it also appeared to me that while they all disagreed upon the details of the conception of what it meant for Jesus to be the Son of God, they all agreed that he was the Son of God.  If this is the case, then it begs the question, which one really was the best conception of what that meant?  They can’t all be right if they disagree on their answer to this question.

I am in the end humbled again by the boundaries of my own knowledge.  There is much that I do not know, and likewise, there is much that we don’t know about the mysteries of the Son of God in Jesus Christ.  It would behoove us to approach those with whom we disagree with an openness to hear what they have to say and consider it carefully.  I continue to do this with Bart Ehrman and his writings.

Currently Reading/Listening:
The Shack
by William P. Young
Following Jesus in a Culture of Fear
by Scott Bader-Saye
Documents in Early Christian Thought
edited by Wiles and Sante
Generation to Generation
by Edwin H. Friedman
Turning Points
by Mark Noll
Sacred Parenting by Gary Thomas
From Jesus to Constantine
by Bart Ehrman
Essential Church by Thom S. Rainer and Sam S. Rainer
unChristian by David Kinnaman and Gabe Lyons
Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand

Speak Your Mind