MISREPRESENTING JESUS Audiobook By Edward Andrews cover art

MISREPRESENTING JESUS

Debunking Bart D. Ehrman's "Misquoting Jesus"

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MISREPRESENTING JESUS

By: Edward Andrews
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Has the New Testament really been changed beyond recognition? Are the original words of Jesus and the apostles forever lost? Popular works such as Misquoting Jesus have convinced countless readers that the Bible we possess today is riddled with corruption, scribal manipulation, and irretrievable uncertainty. Misrepresenting Jesus: Debunking Bart D. Ehrman’s “Misquoting Jesus” offers a careful, evidence-based response to those claims.

This fully rewritten fourth edition is not a reactionary defense, but a disciplined examination of the manuscript evidence itself. It neither denies scribal errors nor exaggerates them into a crisis. Instead, it explains how the New Testament was written, copied, transmitted, and critically evaluated—and why the original wording can be known with extraordinary confidence.

To accomplish this, the book is intentionally divided into two parts. Section 1 is written specifically for churchgoers, pastors, Bible teachers, and seminary students who have no prior knowledge of New Testament textual studies. It introduces the world of ancient manuscripts, scribes, papyri, codices, textual variants, and critical editions in clear, accessible language. This section equips readers with the necessary foundation so that discussions of variants, corruption, and transmission are understood accurately rather than sensationally.

Section 2 builds on that foundation by addressing, chapter by chapter, the major claims made by Bart D. Ehrman. Each assertion is examined in light of the manuscript tradition and the actual practice of textual criticism. Where claims are overstated, they are corrected. Where partial truths exist, they are placed in proper proportion. The result is a clear demonstration that the New Testament text has not been lost, distorted, or rendered unknowable.

We do not need the original manuscripts to possess the original words. Through the abundance of early and diverse witnesses, the New Testament has been restored—not miraculously through perfect copying, but historically through careful comparison. The critical Greek texts in use today reflect the original wording to an extraordinary degree.

This book is written for readers who want answers grounded in evidence, clarity instead of confusion, and confidence rooted in history rather than assumption.

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