Dispensing
With 'The Da Vinci Code'
by
Bill Barnwell
by Bill Barnwell
Some people
will believe anything. A number of people believe in intelligent
aliens, that rich dying Nigerians want to give them millions of
dollars, that there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, that
Bill Clinton didn’t have sexual relations with that woman, etc.
The problems with these claims and others like them is that they
are either directly contradicted by known evidence or are arguments
from silence (no evidence). This sort of silliness was taken to
a whole new level with the early 80’s novel Holy
Blood, Holy Grail and by the 2003 best-seller (and now motion
picture) The
Da Vinci Code.
In these works,
Jesus is presented as just a great man whose divinity was invented
during the time of Constantine and the Council of Nicea in the early
forth century. He also shacked up with Mary Magdalene and fathered
a child and whose bloodline descends into French royalty. Furthermore,
the Church covered these facts up, and in "selecting"
which books to include in the Biblical canon, ignored the best and
reliable "gospels" about the real Jesus. Therefore, for
2,000 years, ignorant dumb sheep have been duped into believing
they knew Jesus when in fact they really believe a lie.
There has been
much written on this subject in a number of books, but apparently
many still haven’t got the message that the truth claims of The
Da Vinci Code have about as much credibility as those supposedly
dying or exiled Nigerian millionaires flooding your email inboxes.
Quickly here are the facts:
(1) There is
no evidence the extra-Biblical works cited by Da Vinci conspiracy
theorists are more reliable than the actual Biblical books themselves.
The Da Vinci Code makes the claim that there were actually
80 other gospels about the life of Jesus. In fact, there were 17,
and the four earliest and most reliable are found in the New Testament.
The other so-called "gospels" were part of a collection
of works known as the "Gnostic Gospels" from a group called
Gnostics that were written from the mid second century into the
third century.
Usually we
consider things that were written the earliest and closet to the
events that are being reported to be the most reliable and accurate.
Paul’s letters were written from around AD 49 to AD 63. The gospels
were written starting in the mid to late 60’s (Mark) up till at
the very latest the early 90’s (John). The writers of the canonical
gospels had access to either the apostles themselves or those heavily
connected to the apostles (in the case of Luke’s relationship to
Paul). If anyone "has an agenda" it is the writers of
the Gnostic gospels who deny the goodness of creation, disdain women
(yes, even though The Da Vinci Code presents the Gnostic
gospels as some liberating documents of equality they were in fact,
extremely anti-female), and present a goofy picture of a known vs.
spiritual world where all matter is corrupt and people are only
saved by a "secret knowledge."
(2) There is
no evidence anywhere that Jesus ever was married to anyone,
including Mary Magdalene, and no evidence anywhere that He fathered
children. This is completely an argument from silence. The only
source for this is one sentence in a late heretical Gnostic gospel
from the mid-second century that said Jesus loved Mary Magdalene
and makes some indirect reference to kissing her.
First of all,
as already stated these works are not credible themselves and were
never considered to be credible. Second, the reference to where
or what was kissed is never stated in the text since the text itself
is incomplete with gaps, and even so, the more likely reference
was to a friendly kiss, or kiss of greeting, referred to several
times in the canonical works of Scripture.
Many ask, "Well,
what’s the big deal if Jesus had a wife or children"? The big
deal in my mind is that there is no evidence anywhere to support
such a notion and we are dealing with extremely sloppy and irresponsible
history.
(3) Neither
Constantine nor the Council of Nicea had anything to do with inventing
Jesus’ divinity. The Council met because of something called the
Arian heresy, a belief that Jesus was not divine but was God’s first
created being. The doctrine of Christ’s divinity is found itself
in the first century NT documents in at least a dozen places explicitly
and others implicitly. In the early second century and beyond, Church
fathers began using language to try and convey the meaning of Christ’s
divinity and the Godhead and so forth. The council was called only
because of a doctrinal dispute that was dividing the Church and
to articulate on paper what the Biblical texts were already saying.
The authors assert that the victors wrote the history and from that
point forward Christ was divine. This is extremely misleading and
does not reflect the truth of the prior history of Christological
understanding. Finally, Brown’s novel asserts that the vote at the
Council was close when in fact it was not. The pro-Arian side only
had several votes to the other sides’ several hundred.
There are all
sorts of other historical errors in both Brown’s book and the other
Holy Blood, Holy Grail. Brown’s novel makes the assertion
on its first page that the historical backdrop of the fictional
story is "fact." As a professor friend of mine
pointed out, who himself claims to be an agnostic, "an honest
magician is one who doesn't pretend to have supernatural powers
and doesn't play to people's credulity, but just says, in effect
‘you can't figure it out, can you?’ Then there are the charlatans.
By asserting that the background circumstances of his story are
factually true, Brown puts himself in the second category."
Plenty act
as if I am just a Christian crank for continuing the pile-up on
Brown’s book and the new movie. But anything that further dumbs
down the populace, adds to historical misunderstanding and ignorance
certainly isn’t a good thing. Popular novels like this just make
people less intelligent and blind people to true historical inquiry.
It’s a lot more fun and easier to read some suspenseful murder mystery
novel (and yes, I read the whole book) that makes fanciful historical
claims rather than doing an inductive study on Scripture themselves,
examining extra-canonical works, and studying the history of the
early church period, the Gnostics, and the Church councils and the
various controversies and sides that were taken. It’s much more
fun just to nibble on pop history from sloppy novels or pseudo-scholars
(in the case of Holy Blood, Holy Grail) rather than put in
the time and effort to study real history.
What’s the
big deal though; it’s just a fictional novel, right? Well,
first, plenty of people are being swayed and influenced by the book.
Polls have shown that. Second, as said, anything that further introduces
misunderstanding in the public’s mind on important academic matters
needs to be refuted. Does the popular culture really need to be
dumbed down any further?
Also, many
Christians roll their eyes every time they read one of these sorts
of articles because they think it’s much ado about nothing. After
all, it’s just fiction. Well, I for one would be mightily ticked
off if somebody wrote a fictional story about my mother in a way
that harmed her integrity or defiled her, even if it was presented
in a way that was blatantly farcical. I’m sure the "Oh it’s
all just fun and fiction" crowd would feel the same way. If
anyone wrote a novel disgracing their mother as the central character,
any such person would be outraged and want to set the record straight.
Well, it’s all the more important when the issue is not mom, but
one who many of us consider the Savior of the world. Or is it defending
Jesus’ integrity not quite as important to these Christians?
Either
way, Christian or non-Christian, there is plenty not to like about
the Da Vinci phenomenon. Those interested in a more intelligent
public dialogue should continue having this debate and those who
gobble up the claims of Dan Brown should listen to what is being
said.
May
18, 2006
Bill
Barnwell [send him mail]
is a pastor in Flushing, Michigan. He has completed a Master of
Ministries degree and a Master of Arts in Theological Studies degree
at Bethel College in Mishawaka, Indiana.
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