No he has not 'been strenuously rebutted.'
Yes he has. Ehrman's view is hardly mainstream. A broad range of scholarship disputes or dismisses his claims.
There are, of course, disagreements between scholars, but is unwarranted to trash a scholar, I'm just stating the case.
I'm not trashing anyone. You need to calm down.
Your response does not dispute the distinct Platonic influence on scripture, doctrine and dogma by the church fathers and later leadership in the Roman Church.
Oh dear, this does rather show a degree of historical assumption:
1: I have never advanced a Platonic influence on Scripture, so stop putting words into my mouth.
2: There is no Platonic influence on Scripture. Matthew is sound Jewish scholarship. Mark is Aramaic and not really a scholar in any sense. Luke is an educated Greek and uses the Greek literary trope of the journey on which to built his testimony, but he's not a Platonist. John is steeped in Jewish mysticism. Paul again likewise.
3: The very fact of the Arian disputes, the accusations against Clement and Origen, Irenaeus wrote what is effectively a Catechism and was not a scholar at all ... Augustine who was a Platonist but moved on ... Right through to St Maximus who recast the Platonic 'stasis-kinesis-genesis' to read 'genesis-kinesis-stasis' to bring it into line with Christian Scripture, the evidence is clear and undeniable that the Fathers were Plutonists whose views were reshaped according to Scripture, they did not shape Scripture to suit Plato.
4: Most tellingly, there was no such institution as 'the Roman church' in the times we're discussing. And the majority of Fathers were Greek, the Latins only a few. The dogmas and doctrines were formulated in the first seven ecumenical councils, which were largely Greek in tenor.
You in reality confirmed the influence of Platonism in the thinking of church fathers, which went along way to forming the foundation of traditional Christianity.
Here lies the heart of what I see as your error. The Fathers used the philosophical language of the day to defend and explain the foundations of traditional Christianity, but those foundations are Scriptural, not Platonic. If your thesis was correct, then Arianism might well have been the doctrine, or if not that then the Trinity would have conformed to emanationism, because Platonism is basically emanationism.
The Didache does not specifically mention the Trinity nor the Resurrection.
Yes it does: "And concerning baptism, baptize this way: Having first said all these things, baptize into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in living water. But if you have not living water, baptize into other water; and if you can not in cold, in warm. But if you have not either, pour out water thrice upon the head into the name of Father and Son and Holy Spirit." (Chapter 7). The resurrection is spoken of in chapter 16.
My views and citations are not without merit, and have the support of well recognized scholars like John Dominic Crossan.
They are not without merit, but the citations are the opinions of theologians, and not conclusive, and many of the assertions have been soundly rebutted.
You continue to use groundless claims of 'personal attacks' which, having been at IO for many years, is invariably the path taken by those who're floundering, in an attempt to shift the argument onto a personal level and avoid the issues and play, and discuss matters without personal involvement. You have continually referred to scholars who do not follow your line as 'revisionist' and various other pejorative terms, and I've never pulled you up for it, I've simply ignored out, where you seem to be looking for the opportunity to claim offence.
As I have said before and often, I wish BobX was here. He had a better grasp of the history, the documents and the the disputes than you and I, and he could really put me on the spot and make me sweat, and we discussed matters at length, but neither side ever fell into personal attack or claims of abuse. He taught me a lot, and more than once damped the flame of my ardour and taught me to read wider and with an open mind.
I really think he enjoyed scholarship for scholarship's sake. I fear you simply do just as you are so happy to declare of others, you tow your party line, offer a revisionist history and an apologia for your own philosophical position which is not mainstream not does it enjoy much support outside American liberal Christian circles.
I might add the Jesus Seminar and those who promoted it is, today, largely discredited for its unscholarly methodology, so I don't hold much store by them.