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A9
Copyright 2002 by
Bob and Gretchen Passantino
This review
was first
published in the Christian Research Journal (www.equip.org). It was awarded the Evangelical
Press
AssociationsHigher Goals in Christian Journalism First Place
Award for
Critical Review in 2002.
Challenging
the
Verdict: A Cross-Examination of Lee StrobelsThe Case for
Christ
Earl
Doherty
(Ottawa,
Canada: Age
of Reason Publications, 2001)
Two features
of Earl
Dohertys Challenging the Verdict, a response to Lee
Strobels runaway
bestseller The Case for Christ, compel a critical review. First,
it is a
prime example of the sort of false attacks many skeptics bring against
Christianity. Such a review presents a good opportunity to address
faulty
arguments skeptics often raise against popular Christian sources on
Christ.
Second, it has gained notoriety on the coattails of Strobels book
because
skeptics have recommended it in customer reviews on The Case for
Christs
page on Amazon.com. This marketing ploy has probably generated more
publicity
for the book than, for example, Drew University professor Robert
Prices gushing
review of Dohertys book in Free Inquiry magazine (Summer
2002).
Lee Strobel presented his interviews of scholars in The Case
for
Christ as though he were a legal affairs journalist (which he was)
who is
researching the evidence in the case for Christ. He interviews leading
scholars
who gave evidence for the traditional orthodox Christian view of Jesus
as the
Christ, the miracle-working resurrected Son of God, and he concluded
that the
evidence supports its truthfulness.
Earl Doherty, author of Challenging the Verdict, chose a
similar
legal motif, but this time in a courtroom. Where Strobel used this motif
sparingly and effectively, Doherty uses it mockingly and unfairly.
Doherty
claims that he provides his opposing side the opportunity to
cross-examine the
scholars interviewed by Strobel. He neglects, however, to give the
cross-examined witnesses an opportunity to respond to his critical
statements.
What emerges is not a coherent collection of evidence and argumentation
but a
strange monologue by Doherty while his witnesses remain
silent.
Like Strobels The Case for Christ, Dohertys
Challenging the
Verdict is divided into three main parts. StrobelsExamining
the Record
becomes DohertysIs the Gospel Record Reliable? Strobels
Analyzing Jesus
is DohertysWhat Was the Nature of Jesus? and Strobels
Researching the
Resurrection becomes Dohertys9id Jesus Rise from the
Dead?
Neither Challenging the Verdict nor Dohertys Web site
tells us
the authors background. He was, in fact, once the president of the
Ottawa, a
Canadian skeptic group, and is an occasional contributor to a small
periodical
edited by Robert Price dedicated to denouncing the Bible, The Journal
of
Higher Criticism. Dohertys first book, The Jesus Puzzle,
argues
there is no credible evidence to believe Jesus existed as a historical
person, a
position that so contradicts the evidence that even most liberals he
quotes,
including the ultra-liberal members of the Jesus Seminar, disagree with
him. Virtually the only
current
view similar to his is in G. A. Wellss volumes discrediting Jesus
existence,
which have been soundly refuted by, among others, Dr. Gary Habermas in
his
critical review in the Journal.[1]
One of the problems responding to Doherty is that, like many
skeptics, he
uses a shotgun approach that at first glance seems overwhelming because
there is
buckshot everywhere. Only as one patiently removes one small
pellet at a time
is it evident that the attack has not been fatal. Thecase for
Christ, in
fact, emerges from the smoke of Dohertys attack virtually unscathed
except for
cosmetic complaints that could be said of any book dealing with complex
issues
in a popular manner.
Nothing New
under the
Sun. Most of the
arguments
in Challenging the Verdict have been used before, sometimes much
better,
by Christianitys detractors. Skeptics have sought to overturn the
evidence for
Jesus and the Resurrection since this historic event. The nonbelieving
Jews
unsuccessfully tried to argue that Jesus disciples must have stolen
His body
from the tomb while the guards were sleeping. Other arguments arose over
the
centuries, from the fourth-century emperor Julian the apostate to Robert
Ingersoll in the nineteenth century and Bertrand Russell in the
twentieth
century. All were capably answered by Christians employing good
history and
good thinking. For example, Robert Ingersoll immortalized his disdain
for the
Bible in his Some Mistakes of Moses, to which leading biblical
scholars
of his day replied convincingly with Some Mistakes of
Ingersoll.
The unsuspecting Christian reader who first encounters criticisms
of
Christianity in Challenging the Verdict should be encouraged by
the
wealth of counterevidence published both before and after Dohertys
book. This
volume, unlike his earlier one, does not presume that Jesus never
existed. He
does, however, argue that the New Testament is completely unreliable in
telling
us anything about any historical Jesus. To support this, he presents a
variety
of arguments, among them: the Jews never expected a personal Messiah;
the Jesus
story has more in common with mystery religion myths than history;
Christians
changed the simple morality tale of myth into a pseudo-history; the New
Testament borrows motifs from Old Testament stories and weaves them into
Jesus
stories that never actually happened; the Jesus Savior story is no
different
than pagansavior stories; the earliest Christian beliefs were
Gnostic, but
later Christians suppressed them; Pauls writings speak of a
spiritual, not
physical, resurrection of the mythic Christ; early Christianity was a
confusion
of bewildering and contradictory spiritual insights and mystical
revelations;
and so on.
The
interested reader
can find a wealth of information in books such as N. T. Wrights
The
Contemporary Quest for Jesus (Fortress, 2002), Darrell Bocks
Studying
the Historical Jesus (Baker, 2002), Paul Barnetts Jesus and
the Rise of
Early Christianity (InterVarsity, 1999), Gregory Boyds Cynic
Sage or Son
of God? (Bridgepoint, 1995), Ben Witheringtons The Jesus
Quest
(InterVarsity, 1995), and Ronald H. Nashs The Gospels and the
Greeks
(Probe, 1992). Several Internet Web sites have excellent information,
including
Leadership University (www.leaderu.com), the
Christian Think
Tank (www.Christian-thinktank.com), and
Tektonics
Apologetics ().
The
Skeptics Mythical
Jesus. Doherty
embodies some
of the subjective interpretive methods of the Jesus Seminar. He
incredibly is
able intuitively to discern thereal history behind the hopelessly
corrupted
New Testament texts to uncover the bare myth of spiritual enlightenment
he
claims underlies the phony historical and supernatural claims.
In other
ways, his
interpretive methods are novel. His assumption that from myth comes the
erroneous belief in a real, historical character or event is exactly
opposite
what most scholars of mythology observe. The reader, nevertheless, is
asked to
accept Dohertys fanciful suppositions uncritically. If the Christian,
however,
were to invent his own interpretive system and assert his own dogmatism
of a
supernatural Son of God from the text, Doherty would insist on objective
proof
of such an indisputable nature that no figure or event of ancient
history could
qualify.
This subjectivism seems to blind its adherents, who see nothing
incongruous in their insistence that Christians havent proved their
point while
at the same time they advance their own subjective theories. Jesus
Seminar
founder Robert Funk, for example, once told us that his interpretation
of Jesus
as a first-century Jewish cynic sage was based on little more than his
subjective "experience" of the New Testament.
We asked Funk, "If the New Testament text we possess led you to
discover
this George Carlin-type of Jesus, what kind of text would there have to
be for
you to discover a Son of God, resurrected Jesus Christ?" After we went
back and
forth asking the same question a couple of different ways, he responded,
"The
exact same text we have already."
"But," we pressed, "if the same text can give some readers a
divine
resurrected Christ and others a human rabbi Jesus, then you're saying
either
interpretation is subjective97 based on some 'inner experience' and
not on any
scientific, historic, linguistic, or rational investigation or
standard." In so
many words, he agreed, reminding us that with the New Testament were
dealing
with literature, not science, and therefore, strangely enough,
subjective
experience is valid.
Starting
with a Bias.
One
of Dohertys assumptions is that miracles cannot happen. Any
account of a
Bible miracle might be explained in a variety of ways, but not as an
actual
historical miraculous event. This argument is less sophisticated and
persuasive
than nineteenth- century philosopher David Humes popular treatise but
no less
dogmatic. He first quotes Gregory Boyd, one of Strobels experts,
concerning the
antisupernatural bias of the Jesus Seminar members. Doherty continues,
Well,
Dr. Boyd, I just wish we were all as biased as the Seminar in rejecting
the
supernatural as authentic in the Gospels any more than it is authentic
today
(80).
Nowhere does Doherty give a logical argument or empirical
evidence that
miracles cant happen, he just blindly pontificates.[2] He should
follow the
evidence wherever it logically leads him, even if it leads him to the
historical
fact that Christ rose from the dead.
Dohertys statement presupposes that the only legitimate
neutral approach
to the issue of Christs resurrection is one of disbelief
rather than
withholding of belief. He commits the common fallacy of
neutrality,
assuming that one who believes a proposition cannot be objective
and that
only one who disbelieves is neutral and
objective.
On the contrary, disbelief is a belief against and
therefore not
neutral. Neutrality would be to withhold belief, neither
excluding the
supernatural nor assuming it, but allowing the evidence to support it or
contradict it. Some scholars adopt conservative positions because
of their critical standards.
Doherty and other skeptics assume that evidence for the
Resurrection is
nothing more than partisan wish fulfillment. In other words, we wish it
were the
case that God became man, died for our sins, rose again, and reconciled
us to
God; therefore, we delude ourselves into believing despite the
evidence.
What if
it is the case, however, that evidence for the Resurrection is the
foundation of belief, not a stumbling block to belief? Contrary
to
Dohertys wish fulfillment idea, it is the evidence itself that led
Lee Strobel
to become a Christian and write The Case for Christ:The
atheism I had
embraced for so long buckled under the weight of historical truth. It was a stunning and radical
outcome,
certainly not what I had anticipated when I embarked on this
investigative
process. But it was, in
my opinion,
a decision compelled by the facts (266).
If anyone is guilty of overlooking the evidence in favor of wish
fulfillment, it is Doherty. In Challenging the Verdict Doherty
appears to
be biased, committed to a faith, and united with other skeptics in a
futile
attempt to promote his conviction that the Jesus Christ of the New
Testament
was, at best, a simple Jewish teacher with Greek Cynic pretensions, at
worst, a
figment of peoples imaginations. Doherty comes to the table with a
bias
against the Jesus Christ of the New
Testament.
Bias-Driven
Vocabulary. A sentence
in the
opening paragraph of Challenging the Verdict is a good example of
Dohertys bias:Not only have increasing numbers of the rank and
file in the
established churches rejected old standards of dogma and practice,
liberal
circles within New Testament scholarship have been bringing modern
critical
standards to the study of the Gospels and found them wanting in
historical
reliability (1). Thisloaded vocabulary implies that the
beliefs held by
Strobel andestablished churches are merely matters of dogma and
practice and
are not historical fact and that evangelicals have no standards, are not
critical, and are old-fashioned.
False Claims
of
Fairness. Dohertys
unfairness
is revealed in his refusal to consult the scholars published
materials. His
obligation to do so is greater than Strobels since Strobel allowed
them to
present their own material. Dohertys cross-examination is not merely
supposed
refutations of their evidence but criticisms on issues they didnt
even address
with Strobel. Doherty challenged the scholars with no acknowledgment of
their
other materials, which, in most cases, overturn the challenges and
affirm the
Christian claims for Christ.
A proper cross-examination seeks to overturn the testimony of the
scholars by showing that they made contrary statements elsewhere, or by
referring to the responses of other scholars to the exact same questions
with
contrary evidence and argumentation. By introducing completely new
questions and
challenges, Doherty launched an entirely new trial with no legal
impartiality or
rigorous standards of evidence. He silences the scholars, reinvents them
as
mutes, and then condemns them for not answering challenges never
contained in
their original testimony.
When it comes to the witness of history and evidence to the life
and
resurrection of Christ, Doherty argues that silence supports his
inventive
ideas. Because we dont have a full copy of the New Testament from the
first
century, then obviously, Doherty assumes, no New Testament existed in
the first
century. Because we dont have every early church father explicitly
quoting from
and affirming each book of the New Testament as Gods Word, obviously
they must
have been ignorant of the New Testament or didnt consider it
Scripture. Because
we dont have an explicit, comprehensive record of Jesus ministry,
death, and
resurrection in extant secular history of the time, obviously Jesus must
not
have existed! The Doherty-enforced silence of the scholars overturns
their
entire body of work, while the patchy silences of ancient history prove
everything for Doherty.
The Living
Line of
Eyewitness Testimony. Doherty
claims the gap
between the events of the New Testament and our earliest complete copies
contains such a discontinuity that the texts of the New Testament
documents are
hopelessly unreliable. There are at least two ways to approach this
claim: (1)
Show historical continuity, and (2) compare this gap with those of other
ancient
literature that Doherty does consider reliable.
First, we have an unbroken line from the eyewitnesses of the
Resurrection, through Paul and the other apostles, into the early second
century
with Papias, Polycarp, Ignatius, and the Didache (an early
apostolic
teaching document).
Even liberal critics such as those Doherty quotes agree that some
of
Pauls letters were written well within the lifetime of the
eyewitnesses to
Christ, including his testimony of the bodily resurrection in 1
Corinthians 15.
The apostle Peter, himself an eyewitness, commended Pauls letters and
includes
them with other Scripture (the Old Testament) as Gods Word:=85our
Lords
patience means salvation, just as our dear brother Paul also wrote
you with
the wisdom that God gave him. He writes the same way in all his
letters,
speaking in them of these matters. His letters contain some things that
are hard
to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort, as they do
the
other Scriptures94 (2 Pet. 3:15=9616, emphasis
added).
In his Acts of the Apostles, the evangelist Luke affirmed that
the
teachings of Paul agree with the teachings of the apostles, who were
eyewitnesses of Christs ministry, miracles, and resurrection. Paul
himself
acknowledged in his letter to the Romans that there were Christians
whose
conversions predated his. He pointed out that they agreed that the
gospel he
preached is the same gospel they believed from the same Christ they saw
resurrected. There is a continuity of teaching and testimony from the
eyewitnesses through Paul and the other apostles. Papias, Polycarp, and the
other earliest
church fathers claimed either to have known the apostles themselves or
to have
known those who knew the apostles.
To discount the testimony of the earliest fathers, who affirmed
the
apostles, who affirmed Paul, who themselves are affirmed by the liberal
critics,
is to discount the very critics to whom Doherty appeals! Should we
believe the
eyewitnesses who affirmed Paul, who was affirmed by the other apostles,
who were
affirmed by their immediate successors, whose words are preserved in our
earliest church writings; or should we believe Doherty, the skeptic who
undercuts ancient historiography by discounting the New Testament
texts?
Rules for
You, but Not
for Me. Doherty
dismisses the
textual evidence for the New Testament as too little, too late, and too
inconsistent. He claims we cannot trust them because there are not
enough copies
or citations that areearly enough; the fragments far outnumber
the complete
manuscripts, and the Scripture citations in the early church fathers are
fragmentary.
Such wholesale dismissal flies in the face of the standard
principles
used by genuine experts (including those interviewed by Strobel) to date
all
classical literature. To dismiss or replace these standards is to
disqualify the
authenticity of the texts of other ancient literature, including some
Doherty
uses to try to dismiss the supernatural Jesus Christ of the New
Testament!
Doherty assumes when an early writer uses a particular passage
from the
New Testament, one can infer only that the isolated passage was known to
the
writer, not the book in which the passage occurs, much less the New
Testament in
which the book containing the passage is found. With this standard, he
could not
affirm most of classical literature, including the teachings of
Socrates, whose
work is known to us only by references and quotations by others (such as
Socrates Apology). The standard approach is that when an
ancient author
quotes or refers to a distinctive teaching or saying of a predecessor,
and we
have the larger context of the quoted material in later copies, we
assume that
the larger context existed as the ancient writers
source.
Doherty, furthermore, assumes that unless the early writer
specifically
says a specific passage is Scripture, the writer must not consider the
passage
as Scripture. This ignores the context in which most of the passages
occur. The
context regularly affirms that the writer believes what he is writing or
teaching and that he believes Scripture is Gods revelation, of which
the
relevant quotation is a part.
Doherty argues that if there is any gap between the events
depicted in
the New Testament documents and our earliest citations, manuscripts, or
manuscript fragments, we cannot affirm any textual continuity. By
this
standard, Doherty should reject all the classics because the gaps
represented by
them are enormous compared to the New Testament.
The comparatively infinitesimal time gap between the New
Testament events
and our first copies and the overwhelming volume of manuscript evidence
we
possess far outweigh any similar evidence we have for other classics.
Geisler
and Nix list in their A General Introduction to the Bible (408),
for
example, that we have only 643 copies of Homers Iliad, 8 of
Herodotuss
History, 8 of Thucydidess History, 7 of Platos
works, 10 of
Julius Caesars The Gallic Wars, and 20 of Livys
History of
Rome. [3] Compare
those numbers
to 5,366 copies of fragments, portions, and complete books of the New
Testaments, the majority later than the seventh century but with some
significant copies from very early.
The difference in gaps is even more striking. The bulk of the
copies we
have for the classic authors come from the middle ages, a thousand years
or more
from the composition of the texts. For Herodotus its 1,350 years
(eleventh
century a.d.), for Caesar 1,000 years
(eleventh
century a.d.), and for
Livy 400
years (fifth century a.d.) for
one partial manuscript and 1,000 years (eleventh century a.d.) for the other nineteen.
The New
Testament gap, in contrast, is only 50 years for our earliest fragment,
100
years for our earliest complete books, 150 years for the majority of the
New
Testament, and 225 years for the complete New
Testament.
For Doherty to state we can have no assurance of the dating of
the New
Testament documents until we have the complete New Testament in
manuscript form
also ignores the standards used to date ancient documents. Aside from
its
physical characteristics and the archival setting in which the document
is
found, the content of ancient documents can help us date them by (1)
what it
claims for itself; (2) the style, vocabulary, grammar, and other
literary
features; and (3) the historical and geographical clues within the
document.
It would be possible to date the contents of the New Testament to
the
first century a.d. even
if we had
no citations from early church fathers and no comments from near
contemporaries
about when they believed the New Testament was composed. That is how
scholars
date the Iliad to the century of its composition even though our
earliest
copies of portions of it are dated nearly 1,000 years
later.
Dohertys
Dubious
Sources. Added to
Dohertys
woeful inadequacy as a textual critic is his wholesale acceptance of a
proposed
source document for the gospels, called Q (after the German
Quelle,
source). Regarding Q, we have no copies of Q, no copies of
portions of Q, no
references to Q in any of the early Christian writings, no references to
Q in
any of the early non-Christian writings, no references to Q in any of
the
gospels or the writings of Paul or the other letters; we have, in fact,
no
conclusive evidence whatsoever that Q ever existed.[4]
Christianity, the
Witness of History. Doherty
ignores one of
the strongest testimonies of the trustworthiness of the New Testament
documents.
Christianity is, as Sir Norman Anderson termed it,the witness of
history.
We call this a variation on the great-grandfather paradox.
Lets say
were discussing the existence of Earl Doherty, skeptic
extraordinair . We cant
find any biographical material about him other than his stint as
president of
the Ottowa skeptics group, his contributions to a small periodical, and
his Web
site attacking Christianity. We might suspect he is a figment of some
skeptic
groups collective imagination, an editorial ghost they have conjured
to plague
Christian authors such as Lee Strobel.
Then we meet Earl Doherty. He shows us his drivers license,
birth
certificate, and pay stubs where he works. We are confronted with the
real Earl Doherty. We cannot explain his existence away without a
story
about identity fabrication more incredible than believing there really
is
somebody named Earl Doherty who thinks he can overthrow the truth claims
of
Christianity. It would be ridiculous to argue that Earl Doherty
doesnt exist
merely because we dont possess his genealogical history back for
umpteen
generations. We would be laughed out of the academy of ideas if we were
to
argue,We cant verify the identity of Earl Dohertys
great-grandfather, so he
must not have had one. The very fact of the existence of Earl Doherty
is proof
that he must have had a great-grandfather even though no evidence may
exist
today for that great-grandfather.
The existence of the Christianity of the second or third century
that has
as its foundation a belief in the historical verification of its
founders miracle-working power, death-defeating resurrection, and
thus His
divine identity, could not have come into being from a source that
ignores
historical verification, conjures up a founder of mythic proportions,
and uses
miracle and resurrection fantasies as a mere motif of spiritual
enlightenment.
Todays history-based Christianity exists as the progeny of a
history-based
event.
If the founders never claimed a historical base, they could not
have
produced a history-based religion. Myth-propagating founders can produce
only a
myth-perpetuating
religion. There is no need for a myth religion to package itself as a
history
religion. The apostle Peter, in fact, declared,We did not follow
cleverly
invented stories [Greek muthos or myths] when we told you about
the power
and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of his
majesty (2
Pet. 1:16).
Even if there were no intact contemporaneous evidence of the
historical
facts of Christianitys founder, His miracles and His resurrection,
the
existence of Christianity as a history-based religion (not merely
a
religion that existed in history) argues for a historical origin.
Christianitys existence today argues for the existence of
Christianitys
great-grandfather,
the historic figure of Jesus Christ.
Dohertys challenge has fallen fatally short of its goal. The
Case for
Christ and the faith it examines remain the witness of history. 97 Bob and Gretchen
Passantino
[1] Vol. 22, no. 3, Winter 1999,
54=9656.
[2]
Contradicting himself, Dohertys first footnote states that
scholars
shouldfollow wherever the evidence leads
(239).
[3]
In each numbered case, the number refers to all full copies,
portions,
and fragments of a given work.
[4]
See our critique of Dohertys use of Q in The Mysterious
Case of the
Missing Q, http://www.answers.org/bible/missing_q.html.
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