The Surprising Reason Luke Removed Atonement from His Gospel

Links Mentioned in this Episode: https://bartehrman.com/norway - Join Dr. Bart Ehrman on a Norway and Svalbard cruise, June 1-14, 2026 https://www.bartehrman.com/hbconference - our new conference New Insights into the Hebrew Bible – happening live on March 20-22. Get early-bird pricing through Feb 28th via this link. Episode Outline: 0:00 Did Luke remove atonement from his Gospel? 0:58 NIHB conference announcement and Genesis event details 2:10 Icebreaker: weird peer-review stories and Bart’s early article on John 6:33 What atonement means in Christian theology 8:18 Where Mark presents Jesus’ death as an atonement 9:59 How Luke edits Mark and removes those atonement references 13:59 Promo break: Norway/Svalbard trip and NIHB reminder 17:37 The debated Last Supper verses in Luke and why Bart thinks they were added later 22:07 Mark vs. Luke at the crucifixion: torn curtain, centurion, and theology 27:14 Why repentance and forgiveness matter more than sacrificial payment in Luke 31:44 Listener Q&A: Jesus’ literacy, Pilate’s language, Mark 15:2, and Gospel names Episode Description Rewriting the Meaning of Jesus’ Death—Luke’s Unique Take This episode opens with a compelling claim: The author of Luke’s Gospel borrowed heavily from Mark but was careful to remove every reference to atonement—that is, the core Christian idea that Jesus died “in our place” for the forgiveness of sins. If so much of Christian theology hinges on atonement, why would Luke set aside this concept? What did Luke think the death of Jesus actually accomplished? Megan Lewis is joined by Bart Ehrman, a 6-time New York Times bestselling author and one of the world’s leading Bible scholars, to unpack this subtle but absolutely critical distinction. Their conversation moves from the meaning of “atonement” in Christian tradition and compares how Mark—and then Luke—describe Jesus’ death, Last Supper, and crucifixion. Throughout, Bart Ehrman explains not just what changes Luke made, but the far-reaching reasons for why he made them. The episode also features insightful asides: from a story about the politics of academic publishing to practical examples like paying a parking ticket as a metaphor for atonement. There’s a bonus Q&A segment tackling the languages Jesus spoke and the language of the trial before Pilate, the ambiguity of Jesus’ words before Pilate in Mark’s Gospel, and even a playful discussion of why scholars still use Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, when these names weren’t the actual authors. Three Key Takeaways: 1. Luke’s Gospel Intentionally Removes Atonement Theology. Whereas Mark (and Paul, and most early Christian writers) see Jesus’ death as a sacrifice “for sins,” Luke excises every reference to Jesus dying for others. In Luke, Jesus’ death becomes the motivation for repentance. 2. Repentance, Not Sacrifice, Opens the Path to Forgiveness. In Luke–Acts, forgiveness is granted to those who genuinely repent and turn back to God—not because a price is paid. 3. This “Edit” Profoundly Affects Our Understanding of God and Salvation. The difference between a God who requires a sacrifice and a God who forgives those who repent is more than academic—it has shaped centuries of theological debate over divine justice, mercy, and the meaning of Jesus’ death. Also watch these episodes: The Surprising Reason Luke Removed Atonement from His Gospel    • The Surprising Reason Luke Removed Atoneme...   Did Scribes Change Luke's Theology?    • Did Scribes Change Luke's Theology?   Lost Verses? The Biggest Changes Made to the Gospel of Luke    • Lost Verses? The Biggest Changes Made to t...   #GospelOfLuke #Atonement #BiblicalScholarship #HistoricalJesus #NewTestament #BibleStudy #Forgiveness #SynopticGospels