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The Birth of Christianity (My Other Class): Check Out the Writing Assignments!

I am (also) this semester teaching one of my favorite undergraduate courses, The Birth of Christianity, which more or less covers the history and literature of Christianity from just after the New Testament period up to the mid to end of the 4th century, focusing mainly on issues of the second and third centuries.  For that class students have a short writing assignment every week; they come up with a 2-page response to a set of prompts usually based on reading they've done of ancient texts, and then we discuss their views in class. I've always had students do "position papers," as I call them, in which they have to take a stand on a somewhat controversial issue connected with a topic, as a way to get them to THINK about the issue ahead of time.  For these papers I'm not looking for "the right answer," and simply mark them Satisfactory (if they've clearly thought about the issue and established some views about it) or Unsatisfactory (if they more or less blew it off).  Students [...]

The Bible and Suffering: My NEW Course at UNC This Term

For the first time since roughly the Pleistocene Age, I am teaching a new and different undergraduate course at UNC this semester.  It's a course I taught in a very different form when I was just starting out at Rutgers, in probably 1986 or so; I haven't taught it since, and actually don't remember how I set it up then.  But now that I am no longer teaching PhD seminars at UNC or the large Introduction to the New Testament course (Hugo Mendez is doing both of those now), I have free spots in my schedule.  And the course I taught all those years ago (39?) made a big difference to me -- eventually leading to my book God's Problem: How the Bible Fails to Answer our Most Important Question -- Why We Suffer. At Rutgers the course was called "The Problem of Suffering in the Biblical Tradition," but to teach it here -- since I didn't submit it as a new course -- I have to teach it under one of the current course titles [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:07-04:00August 30th, 2025|Public Forum, Teaching Christianity|

So Did Secretaries Write the Apostles’ Letters for Them?

Here is my second post on the use of secretaries in the ancient world, in which I discuss the issue of whether illiterate people (like Simon Peter, or John the son of Zebedee) could have had someone else write their books for them – so that 1 Peter *could* in some sense actually be by Peter even if he couldn’t write, or the Revelation of John by John. In it I continue to consider ways ancient secretaries worked.  Did they compose writings for the "authors"?  (To make best sense of this it would help to read the previous post, where I talk about two of the main ways ancient writers used secretaries.  But hey, you don't *have* to read it.  It ain't required!) Again, the discussion is taken from my book Forgery and Counterforgery (Oxford University Press). ****************************** It is Richards‘ third and fourth categories that are particularly germane to the questions of early Christian forgery. What is the evidence that secretaries were widely used, or used at all, as co-authors of letters or as ersatz [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:07-04:00August 28th, 2025|Catholic Epistles, Paul and His Letters|

Couldn’t 1 and 2 Peter Have Been Written By Peter’s Secretaries?

Over the 13+ years of this blog, every time I have talked about whether Peter (or any of Jesus's other disciples) probably did or even could write one of the books attributed to him, since he (and they) were Aramaic speakers who were almost certainly uneducated and illiterate, but the books are written in highly literary Greek by trained Greek authors, I get a number of queries about whether it is possible that he (or they) may have used secretaries. For example, maybe Peter dictated and the secretary  cleaned it up and put it into literary Greek for him.  Or Peter gave an educated follower the gist of what he wanted to say, and the secretary composed it for him.  Or Peter wrote it down in Aramaic and the secretary translated it with a few flourishes.  Etc.  There are a range of (other) options you could think of, if you're familiar with how secretaries today might work. But did they work that way in the days of Peter and the apostles?  And how would we [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:07-04:00August 27th, 2025|Catholic Epistles, Paul and His Letters|

For Further Reading on James, 1 Peter, and 2 Peter

Now that I’ve devoted several posts to summarizing the themes, emphases, authors, and occasions of the three Catholic epistles, I can provide some suggestions for further reading: important works written by scholars for non-scholars.  I have given brief annotations for each book to give you a sense of what it’s about and so help you decide which, if any, might be worth your while.   I have divided the list into three sections: Books that provide important discussion of one or more of these Catholic epistles, and of the problem of persecution dealt with in 1 Peter. Commentaries that give lengthy introductions to all matters of importance about the book of Acts and then go passage by passage to provide more detailed interpretation (that’s where you can dig more deeply into “what does this particular word actually mean?”; “what is the real point of this passage”; how does this passage relate to what Luke says elsewhere in his two-volume work or to what we can find in other parts of the New Testament?”; [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:07-04:00August 26th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

2 Peter: Who Wrote It, When, and Why?

Now that I have provided a summary of the major themes and emphases of the letter of 2 Peter, I can move to the question of who actually wrote it.  It claims, of course, to be written by Simeon (i.e. Simon) Peter, Jesus disciple.  But it is widely thought in fact to be pseudonymous, more than any other book of the entire New Testament. I’d like to give a relatively fully explanation of why, and for that reason have decided to provide here a fairly heavily edited and accessible account of my discussion in Forgery and Counterforgery (Oxford University Press). ************* 2 Peter is among the least well attested works of the New Testament from Christian antiquity, although it is found already in the manuscript called P72, ca. 300 CE, along with 1 Peter and Jude, the two canonical letters with which it is most closely associated.   Still, during the first four centuries the book had an unsettled status among those interested in establishing the contours of the New Testament.  The church father Origen doubted [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:07-04:00August 24th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

2 Peter in a Nutshell

In this “nutshell” series that summarizes each book of the New Testament in canonical order, we now come to the second letter that claims to be from the pen of Jesus’s disciple Peter.  Here is my one-sentence, fifty-word description of the book. 2 Peter is a short letter written in the name of Peter to warn readers to avoid false Christian teachers who endorse immoral lifestyles, so as to avoid severe condemnation on the day of judgment that is coming soon, even though some “scoffers” have denied it is coming at all.   Now I can expand on the major emphases and themes of the book before turning, in the next post, to who actually wrote it, when, and why.   The three-chapter letter of 2 Peter does not appear to be directed to any particular Christian community, but to Christians everywhere, or at least those who agree with him on what it means to be a follower of Christ; in his words, he write to those who have obtained “the same kind [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:06-04:00August 23rd, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

September 2025 Gold Q&A

Scheduling note: The Q&A was originally scheduled at 2pm Eastern on 9/14. It has been rescheduled to 6pm Eastern on 9/14. Golds & Platinums, Our next Gold Q&A with Bart is coming up on Sunday, September 14 at 6 PM Eastern and it’s your chance to ask whatever’s been on your mind. Have a question you’ve been waiting to ask?Email it to Jen at: [email protected] Quick tips for getting your question answered: Keep it clear and concise—short, focused questions are prioritized. Can’t attend live? No problem. We’ll send out the full recording a day or two after. Looking forward to another thoughtful round of questions. Question deadline: End of day Thursday September 11th. Here’s the Zoom link to join the Q&A on 9/14: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83564698628?pwd=1X4eY1QtU9FTxBwmNQt4witIveVMZl.1 Meeting ID: 835 6469 8628 Passcode: 667511 Get your question in now and see what Bart has to say. See you there!

2025-09-10T13:13:06-04:00August 22nd, 2025|Public Forum|

Platinum Repost: The Death and Afterlife of Jesus: A Historical Reconstruction Part II – Guest Post by Platinum Member Mark Reichert

We recently shared part one of a post written by Platinum blog member, Mark Reichert. You can find the first part here. Here now is the second part of his two-part reflections in which he offers his own reconstruction of what might have happened after the crucifixion. So what do I think really happened? There is no way to know for sure but I can put together a story that seems plausible and makes sense to me. I believe Jesus and his following traveled to Jerusalem for Passover during the governorship of Pontius Pilate. How large a following I do not know though enough for it to be considered a “following.” Once there, he came to the attention of Roman and/or Jewish authorities in a negative way. Either he said, or someone accused him of saying, that he was “King of the Jews.” I highly doubt the account in Mark that states Jesus was bound by Jewish priests and elders and brought before Pilate. This would be like Palestinian authorities turning a [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:05-04:00August 21st, 2025|Public Forum|

Jesus, Essenes, Bible Translations, and 2 Thessalonians: Readers’ Questions and Answers

Here are some of the more interesting questions from readers over the past few weeks, and my responses:   READER’S QUESTION Have you considered the angle that Jesus may have been a revolutionary Essene? This would explain his outward orientation instead of inward. I mean he fits right in with being a disciple of John the Baptist and has a very Essene worldview. A good amount of his followers were also followers of John the Baptist. Most of the points he makes, eating with tax collectors and sinners, doing things on the Sabbath, not obsessing over ritual purity. All of these seems strangely specifically targeted towards the essenes, which means he is very familiar and actively critiquing them. I am wondering if he could basically be what Luther was to Catholicism. As in Luther was a catholic and started a revolution inside Catholicism. Like on the surface it doesn’t fit but if he’s a counterculture within Essenism, it fits pretty well   MY RESPONSE: Yes, I’ve thought a lot about it and written about it. [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:05-04:00August 20th, 2025|Reader’s Questions|

Why An Author Claiming to Be Peter Wanted to Sound Like Paul

In my previous posts I've been showing that 1 Peter does not embrace the views and priorities known to be held by Peter, but endorses views and adopts the language and concerns of Paul.  And I've asked why an author would write a book like that.  Here I give my solution, as found in my longer study, edited here, Forgery and Counterforgery (Oxford University Press). ****************************** The most widely proffered, but not fully convincing, explanation for why an author would claim to be Peter when writing like Paul is simply that he is trying to effect some kind of reconciliation between the two apostles, widely known to have quarreled publicly and widely thought to be at loggerheads about major theological and practical issues (as we will see at greater length in the next chapter). This is the view expressed crisply, for example, in the major study by Wolfgang Trilling, who stresses that the names used at the beginning and end of the letter are key.  Peter himself was known to be a leading authority figure in [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:06-04:00August 19th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

Is 1 Peter More Like 1 Paul?

In my previous post I started explaining that if you were to read 1 Peter, and didn't see his name as the first word, you would probably never suspect it was written by Jesus' disciple; on the contrary, it sounds a lot like something Paul wold have written.  (All this is taken, in edited form, from my book Forgery and Counterforgery [Oxford University Press]; this is an academic book, but I've tried to make it completely legible to non-scholars.) It has nonetheless become virtually de rigueur among scholars to discount the Paulinisms of 1 Peter, as evidenced in such major commentaries as those of Goppelt, Achtemeier, and Elliott, and especially in such a full-length study as that of German scholar Jens Herzer.  It should be pointed out that a book like Herzer's Petrus oder Paulus was perceived to be necessary precisely because 1 Peter does bear so many resemblances to a (deutero)Pauline letter, as we will see. Herzer’s lengthy analysis shows that the structure of the letter and the individual terms and phrases [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:06-04:00August 17th, 2025|Catholic Epistles, Public Forum|

Why Does the Author of 1 Peter Sound Like Paul Instead of Peter?

Why does the “Peter” of 1 Peter sound like Paul but not Peter? This is at the heart of the question of why a pseudonymous author who was claiming to be Peter would have written this particular letter.   It’s a perplexing matter in part because nothing much about 1 Peter sounds like what we would expect from Peter, as we know him otherwise from the New Testament. This will take a few posts to explain.  The following is largely taken, with edits (including the omission of the footnotes), from my longer study Forgery and Counterforgery (Oxford University Press). ****************************** Apart from the name “Peter” at the outset of the letter and possibly the reference to Rome (“Babylon”) at the end, there is nothing in the book of 1 Peter to tie it specifically to the Petrine tradition.  This makes the book decidedly different from lots of other non-authentic writings of the New Testament, the Deutero-Pauline epistles (Colossians, Ephesians, 2 Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Timothy, and Titus) whose authors clearly strive to sound like Paul, and [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:06-04:00August 16th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

Did The Apostle Peter Write 1 Peter?

When it comes to the question of whether Peter, the disciple of Jesus, was likely to have written 1 Peter, as I indicated in my previous post, a major issue to consider is the fact that in antiquity MOST people could not read, let alone write, let alone compose a sentence, let along a five-page essay, let alone in a foreign language.  But weren’t Jews the exception?  Didn’t Jewish men all know how to read and write?  It turns out, the answer is no. Again, this is taken from my fuller study, Forged (HarperOne). The fullest, most thoroughly researched, and widely influential study of literacy in Palestine during the period of the Roman empire is by Catherine Hezser.[1]  After examining all of the evidence Hezser concludes that in Roman Palestine the best guesstimate is that something like 3% of the population could read, and that the majority of these would have been in the cities and larger towns.   Most people outside of the urban areas would scarcely ever even see a written text.   [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:05-04:00August 14th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

1 Peter: Who Wrote It, When, and Why?

Now that I have laid out the major themes and emphases of 1 Peter in my previous post, I can move on to the questions of who wrote it, when, and why.  The final issue in some ways is easiest, at least when it comes to the overarching purpose of the letter.  As we have seen, the author is concerned about Christians’ reactions to their persecutions, and is intent that they give their opponents no grounds for opposition but lead upright lives, being a “witness” to those who challenge their faith, and imitating Christ in suffering unjustly.  Whoever wrote the letter, and when, it seems reasonably safe to assume this was the major reason for it.  We will see later, however, that there may be at least one less obvious reason as well. For the issues of who wrote it and when, I provide here is largely based on my more extended study, Forged… Why The Bible’s Authors Are Not Who We Think They Are (HarperOne). The book 1 Peter is allegedly written [...]

2025-09-10T13:13:05-04:00August 13th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

The Death and Afterlife of Jesus: A Historical Reconstruction Part I – by Mark Reichert (Platinum Member Winner)

As you know, the Platinum Members of the blog are invited to submit their own posts to be considered for publication on the blog. After we've published four of these posts, Platinum members are asked to vote for one to be published to the entire blog. Today, we have a post for you from Platinum blog member Mark Reichert. He offers the first part of a compelling two-part reflection on one of the most well-known—and debated—stories in history. It’s part historical reconstruction, part personal inquiry, and entirely worth the read. According to the Gospel of Mark, the Jewish preacher Jesus was crucified by Roman Governor Pontius Pilate in Jerusalem the day before the Sabbath (Friday) during the holiday period of Passover. After about 9 hours on the cross Jesus “gave up the ghost.” The Roman centurion in charge of the crucifixion said “truly this man was the son of God.” A supporter and onlooker, Joseph of Arimathaea, asked Pilate for the body of Jesus. After consulting with the centurion, Pilate relented and Jesus was removed [...]

2025-09-09T20:23:54-04:00August 12th, 2025|Historical Jesus, Public Forum|

1 Peter in a Nutshell

In this series providing overviews and discussions of each of the books of the New Testament “in a nutshell” we come, following the canonical sequence, to another gem, the book of 1 Peter.   In this post I will focus on its major themes and emphases, and then in subsequent posts deal with a number of critical questions about it, such as who wrote it and when, and why, if it claims to be by Peter, it sounds so much like Paul. First, a one-sentence fifty-word summary. First Peter, is a letter allegedly written by the apostle Peter to gentile Christians scattered throughout Asia Minor who are suffering persecution, urging them to remain true to their faith and to suffer only for upright behavior, in imitation of Christ and in anticipation of his imminent return in judgment.   Now I can provide a fuller account of this short but intriguing book.  Here is an edited account taken from my book The New Testament: A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings (Oxford University Press. ************************ The [...]

2025-09-10T13:12:52-04:00August 10th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|

Am I? AI? What do you think?

I have been thinking a lot lately about the relationship of AI to human consciousness.  I'm obviously not an an expert, but hey, at least I can think.  Can AI think?  That, of course, is a major question constantly being raised.  And one on which almost everyone seems to have an opinion.  (In contrast to, say, religion….)  Is AI really that different from I?  Am I a different mode of existence? The people I talk with usually argue that real thinking cannot happen without consciousness, and machines cannot be conscious the way humans are.  OK, fair enough.  I agree.  It doesn’t seem like it.  It seems like I myself am conscious, have free will, can make personal and intellectual decisions on grounds other than data themselves (often bad decisions), can emote, can sense the world, and so on.   I say it “seems” like because, well, what’s it even mean that I can do and experience these things in the mechanistic world that I personally believe in?  How am “I” at the most fundamental [...]

2025-09-10T13:12:52-04:00August 9th, 2025|Reflections and Ruminations|

Q3 2025 Platinum Webinar – September 9th

Platinum Members: You’re InvitedJoin Bart for our next Platinum-Only Webinar on Tuesday, September 9 at 7:00 PM ET. This quarter’s topic is a big one:Biblical Explanations for SufferingWhy does suffering exist, and how did early Christians attempt to explain it? Bart will explore the range of answers offered in the Bible and what they reveal about the people and times that produced them. As always, there will be plenty of time for your questions at the end. Zoom Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81833322504?pwd=2KKsI8XPhqfCzhhkNKxyna8tSwXNIa.1 Meeting ID: 818 3332 2504 Passcode: 854127 (Don’t worry—we’ll send out the recording afterward, so you won’t miss out if you can’t join live.)

2025-09-10T13:13:05-04:00August 8th, 2025|Public Forum|

Why Would Someone Forge the Letter of James?

In my previous three posts I’ve argued that the author of the book of James really does want his audience to think he is “James, the brother of Jesus,” but that in fact he was someone else.  In modern parlance, that means the book is a “forgery.”  Ancient Greek did not use the English word forgery, of course, but the terms they used for this kind of book were just as judgmental and, even, ugly. But why would someone forge this book, claiming to be James knowing he wasn’t? The first thing to notice is to reaffirm the one of the first things that we noticed (!):  the book appears to appears to attack a form of Pauline Christianity that stresses the importance of “faith alone” for salvation.  For this author, “faith without works is dead,” and if someone doesn’t live in ways that are beneficial to others and pleasing to God, they cannot be saved, however much faith they claim to have. This is especially seen in what is arguably the most famous passage [...]

2025-09-10T13:12:51-04:00August 7th, 2025|Catholic Epistles|
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