I revisited this topic because something I just came across fits right in to what I said about Dr. Ehrman and differing points of view. From Dr. Ehrman's Introduction in the book Misquoting Jesus,
It was during my first semester at Wheaton, then, that I met Dr. Gerald Hawthorne, my Greek teacher and a person who became quite influential in my life as a scholar, teacher, and eventually, friend. Hawthorne, like most of my professors at Wheaton, was a committed evangelical Christian. But he was not afraid of asking questions of his faith. At the time, I took this as a sign of weakness (in fact, I thought I had nearly all the answers to the questions he asked); eventually I saw it as a real commitment to truth and as being willing to open oneself up to the possibility that one's views need to be revised in light of further knowledge and life experience.
This name comes up again in the book Faith & Doubt, by John Ortberg (2008, Zondervan). (This book is similar to The Myth of Certainty by Daniel Taylor, addressing how Christians can deal with challenges to faith on a personal level). In Chapter 8, Pastor Ortberg recalls his own experiences at Wheaton while studying under Dr. Hawthorne. Ortberg spends several paragraphs recounting what Dr. Hawthorne did that gained adoration and respect from his students, and affirmed that he influenced many lives. On page 122, Ortberg has this to say about the contrasting reactions Ehrman and he (Ortberg) had in facing the challenges:
Eventually Bart began to ask questions as well. But the notion that the Bible had a human side seemed to him proof that it could not be divine. The only alternative to simpleminded fundamentalism to him seemed to be to reject God altogether. The same teacher and the same questions that deepened my faith dismantled his.
...
Bart and I went to the same school, admired the same teacher, were disturbed and excited by the same questions, and were exposed to the same learning. Yet those experiences led to the growth of faith in one and the growth of doubt in the other. I don't know why.