The Da Vinci Code: A Review
by Ken Green
published in Biblical Insights,
Vol. 5, No. 11, Nov. 2005
Vol. 5, No. 12, Dec. 2005
Vol. 6, No. 1, Jan. 2006
Vol. 6, No. 2, Feb. 2006
Vol. 6, No. 3, Mar. 2006
A popular novelist seeks to undermine the faith of those
who believe the Gospels are the Word of God.
The Da Vinci Code, a novel by Dan Brown, has been at the
top of the best seller lists for over two years. I finally read it
a few months ago and found it to be a 454 page thriller. It is
filled with suspense, breakneck action, and unexpected twists
It is quite a clean and decent work, as modern novels go, with
little objectionable language or episodes. It is also a book that is deeply
anti-Christian. It characterizes the New Testament Gospels as "fabrications," and the deity of Christ as a
fable.
"Well, after all, itg is a novel," many have said; "just a
work of fiction." Surely no one will take it as a serious historical study. The problem is that it purports to be a historical novel. In this genre we expect the characters, circumstances, and perhaps the places to be fictional. But we assume
the historical context to be factual. This is precisely what Brown alleges
in the foreword of his book. Herein lie the concerns of so many. Historian Paul L. Maier has likened The
Da Vinci Code to a World War II novel in which Germany wins the
war, and Churchill is tried in London and Roosevelt in Washington as war criminals.
Evidence abounds that non-believers have been confirmed in their unbelief, and many seekers and believers have
been confused and disillusioned by this novel. Mark Twain
just about had it right when he said that a lie will run around
the world while the truth is getting its shoes laced up!
The Da Vinci Code begins with the murder of a Museum
Curator at the Louvre in Paris. A Harvard professor who is an Indiana Jones
type character, and a French code breaker
who happens to be the curator's estranged granddaughter,
are mistakenly implicated in the murder and set out together
to unravel the mystery as they try to stay a step ahead of the
authorities.
The deeper theme is that the curator had evidence to disprove the deity of Christ. He was one of a select group of
pagans tht had harbored a great secret for many generations.
This information had been recorded in documents buried beneath the ruins of the Temple in Jerusalem. The documents
had been found and since 1099 had been in the custody of a
secret European society called "The Priory of Sion." They
were awaiting the correct time to make this secret public.
What was this great secret? It was that Jesus was married to Mary
Magdalene, they had a daughter named Sarah, and there are descendants of Jesus upon
the earth
today. Many clues to the "truth" had been planted by great
artists and thinkers. These may be found in paintings by Da
Vinci, operas by Wagner, the architecture of cathedrals and
even in Disney cartoons. The Church (Roman Catholic) is
aware of the "truth" and is making every effort to seize the
evidence and destroy it.
The "truth" is, we are assured, the heretics in the early
church, those who denied the deity of Christ, who were speaking the truth. The Church banned their teaching, for the "truth" would have
destroyed its power base. The Gospels
of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are unreliable. It was the
Gnostic gospels, books rejected by the early church, that are
historically accurate and tell the truth about Jesus.
The truth according to Dan Brown is that Jesus was just
an ordinary human being with strong leanings toward goddess worship. You can forget any notion that He was resurrected from the dead or that His death has any benefit for you
or me.
The Da Vinci Code is not only a runaway best seller in this
country but is being translated into 40 languages and is now
being made into a movie with Ron Howard directing. Brown
has been lauded as a brilliant historian. Literary Journal described his
work as "a compelling blend of history and page-turning suspense," a "masterpiece" that "should be mandatory reading." Publisher's Weekly called it "an exhaustively re-searched page-turner about
religious societies, ancient cover-ups and savage vengeance."
Does Dan Brown really believe this nutty conspiracy theory that he
proposes in his fictional work? He says he
does. When asked by Charles Gibson on Good Morning America (Nov. 3, 2003) if his work would have been different were he writing a
nonfiction book, he replied, "I don't think it
would have. I began the research for 'The Da Vinci Code' as
a skeptic. I entirely expected, as I researched the book, to
disprove this theory. And after numerous trips to Europe,
about two years of research, I really became a believer."
Which only goes to show that people, even highly intelli
gent people, will believe whatever they want to, whether there
is an iota of evidence for it or not!
It will be interesting to see how the critics deal with the
movie, won't it? Of course we don't have to wait. We know.
We may be sure it will not be with the same viciousness with
which they took after Mel Gibson's The Passion Of Christ.
The New Republic called that movie "a repulsive, masochistic
fantasy, a sacred snuff film" that is "without any doubt an anti-Semitic
movie." The New York Times accused Gibson of "courting bigotry in the name of sanctity." Andy Rooney of 60 Minutes said that Gibson was "a real nut case" whose true
motive was making money. I will predict that this film will be
praised to high heaven by critics and receive multiple awards.
In the following we shall review some of the major
claims of The Da Vini Code. I make little claim to originality
in these. I have drawn upon a number of good rebuttals that
have been published.
Was Jesus Married To Mary Magdalene?
The idea that
Jesus was married, much less to Mary Magdalene, is a story
made up from the lurid imaginations of the minds of men.
Any far-fetched theory regarding Jesus that a scholar,
writer, or producer can conjure up is sure to reap wide coverage in the print and broadcast media. These folks just love
any sensational attack on traditional Christianity.
In my lifetime Jesus has been described as a madman who
schemed His own crucifixion and orchestrated His alleged
resurrection (The Passover Plot by Hugh Schonfield, 1966); a
radical revolutionary (Jesus and the Zealots by S.G.F. Brandon, 1967); a mushroom cultist (The Sacred Mushroom and the
Cross by John M. Allegro, 1970); a master magician (The
Secret Gospel 1973; Jesus the Magician: Charlatan or Son of
God?, 1978, both by Morton Smith) and on and on.
One of the more popular motifs has been to paint Jesus
as a happy husband who either escaped or survived the crucifixion and lived in seclusion and marital bliss to a ripe old age. Several
books have presented this hypothesis, the most
influential being Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Baigent, Lincoln,
and Leigh in the 1980's. According to the scenario presented
in this work, Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had a child
and the bloodline of Jesus is traced in the Merovingian dynasty of medieval France.
This tale serves as the basis for the current bestseller,
The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. In recent weeks I have seen newspaper
columns and television specials devoted to
this theory.
The character in The Da Vinci Code that is presented as
being in the absolute know regarding these matters is Leigh
Teabing. It is he who explained: "The early church needed
to convince the world that the mortal prophet Jesus was a
divine being. Therefore, any gospels that described earthly
aspects of Jesus' life had to be omitted from the Bible. Unfortunately for the early editors, one particularly troubling earthly theme kept recurring in the gospels. Mary Magdalene ...
More specifically, her marriage to Jesus Christ ... It's a matter
of historical record" (p. 244).
Now so far as I can figure out, there would have been no
transgression of God's law if Jesus had married. Marriage
is fully within the boundaries of His will for mankind. But it
would certainly raise some perplexing questions about any
offspring from such a union. Do they share in the Deity of
Christ in any way?
The question is, was He married? Is there anything to this
allegation? the answer is a resounding 'no.' There is absolutely no evidence in either the Scriptures or the writings of
the early Christians that Jesus was married to anyone. Not
even in the Gnostic gospels and other apocryphal writings of
the second and third centuries is it ever suggested that Jesus was married!
In fact the notion that Jesus had a physical relationship with a woman would have been repulsive to
the Gnostics. Also, the Gnostics were not interested in what
actually happened. They took everything symbolically. This
is why they felt free to write their own Gospels.
"But there must be something!" one may insist. Surely
such a claim would not just be made up! We do so want to
believe the best about people, don't we? Well, okay. Here is
the argument that undergirds this whole thesis. According to
rabbinical tradition, Jewish men were expected to marry!
That is! There was a general expectation of marriage.
Therefore Jesus was married. And Mary Magdalene seems
to be the logical bride. Never mind that there were obvious
exceptions to this general expectation. Jeremiah was unmarried. John the Baptist was apparently unmarried. Celibacy
was practiced by the Essenes, a sect of the Jews that are
connected with the Quram community around the Dead Sea
and connected with the Dead Sea Scrolls. Paul was unmarried.
The expert character, Leigh Teabing, further states: "Jesus was the
original feminist. He intended for the future
of His Church to be in the hands of Mary Magdalene ... She was of the House of
Benjamin ... of royal descent" (p. 248).
Of course, there is no evidence for any of this. Nothing
reveals to us the tribal affiliation of Mary Magdalene and there is no
suggestion that she was commissioned by the
Lord to be a leader in the church.
There are two apocryphal gospels that are brought in to
witness. The Gospel of Philip refers to Mary as Jesus' "companion" which Brown's character Teabing says translates as "spouse or wife in Aramaic." The problem here is that this
work was not written in Aramaic, but in Greek. It is a third
century work. Historian Paul Maier says, "Scholars dismiss
the work as having no genuine historical recollections that
are not drawn form the canonical Gospels."
The Gospel of Mary Magdalene is the other work that
allegedly supports this theory. It also is a late work and is
given no credibility by scholars. But even if these works were credible,
neither of them furnishes any evidence that
Jesus was married. But the fictional character Teabing says, "I shan't bore you with the countless references to Jesus and
Magdalene's union" (p. 247). There are two late, unreliable references, neither of which even says that they were married.
There is no evidence at all that Jesus and Mary Magdalene
were wed. But there is some good evidence to the contrary.
Paul, though unmarried, argued that he had the right to marry
and support a wife (I Corinthians 9:5). He names as precedents for
this, "the other apostles, and the brothers of the Lord and
Cephas" (Peter). If Jesus had been married, it would certainly
seem that He would have been named as the primary example.
Eighty Gospels
Unbelievers seek to cast doubt on the New Testament by
affirming the legitimacy of the apocryphal gospels of the
Gnostics.
According to "Leigh Teabing," a fictional scholar in Dan
Brown's "historical novel," The DaVinci Code, "More than
eighty gospels were considered for the New Testament, and
yet only a relative few were chosen for inclusion" (p. 231).
One reading this book with the assumption that the background and environment of the story are historically accurate
would naturally assume that a conspiracy was formed to keep
certain writings from the public eye. This is precisely what
Brown claims in this volume.
The fact is that the number "eighty" is a wild exaggeration
by any count. These books which are called the "New Testament apocrypha" (which means of doubtful origin) were second and third century writings by the Gnostics. This was a
label given to several sects that differed on various details
but agreed that matter is essentially evil and spirit good. Conclusions they reached relative to the Gospel of Christ included the denial that God could not have been God and Christ,
the Spirit (if He was God) could not have been man.
Ben Witherington III, author of The Gospel Code: Novel
Claims About Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and Da Vinci, writes:
"The novel expresses in popular form what some scholars
have been arguing or implying for years. Twenty years ago,
Elaine Pagels wrote The Gnostic Gospels, a book that introduced the larger public to the other 'Christian' writings that
arose in the early centuries of the church. Regarding the
books of the New Testament, Pagels asked, "Who made that
selection, and for what reasons? Why were these other writings excluded and banned as 'heresy'?"
One must understand that scholars are under a great deal
of pressure to publish and make a name for themselves and
the institutions they represent. This is true whether one is a
scientist, historian, theologian, or whatever. The majority of
scholars are people of integrity, hopefully, who do not go out
on a limb to publish fanciful theories that really have little or
no basis in truth. Human nature being what it is though, we
may be sure that getting attention is more important than
truth for some.
Pagels claimed (as does The Da Vinci Code) that there was no such thing
as orthodoxy or heresy prior to the period
of the great councils (325 A.D. and after). The novel puts it this
way: "Anyone who chose the forbidden gospels over Constantine's version was deemed a heretic. The word heretic derives from that moment in history." Now, is that an accurate
assessment?
To argue that there was no orthodoxy is to say there was
no recognized belief system in the church of the first century.
Any Bible student will immediately think of a number of New
Testament references. Jude said he wrote to exhort brethren "to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints" (Jude 3). John told his readers to "not
believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of
God; because many false prophets are gone out into the
world" (I John 4:1). John's epistles are a defense against the
early stages of Gnostic teaching. Paul in his pastoral letters
to Timothy and Titus refers often to "sound doctrine." He declared to the Ephesians, "There is one body and one spirit,
just as you were called in one hope of your calling; one Lord,
one faith, one baptism; one God and Father" (Ephesians 4:4-6).
Also, the Gnostics rejected the Old Testament Scriptures
which affirm that God created matter and that He saw His
creation as good. The New Testament, however, affirms the
inspiration of the Jewish Scriptures (II Timothy 3:16; II Peter 1:21)
and constantly quotes from them. New Testament scholar
Pheme Perkins notes how rarely the Gnostics literature refers
to the Old Testament: "Gnostic exegetes were only interested
in elaborating their mystic and theological speculations concerning the origins of the universe, not in appropriating a received canonical tradition...(by contrast) the Christian Bible
originates in a hermeneutical framing of Jewish Scriptures,
so that they retain their canonical authority and yet serve as
witnesses to the Christ-centered experience of salvation."
The fact is, there is no evidence that the Gnostic writings
were ever accepted by early Christians as legitimate scriptures. The earliest of these writings is supposed to be the Gospel of Thomas and all the data indicate that it was written after the New
Testament books were widely circulated and recognized as authoritative. Other Gnostic writings such as the Gospel of
Truth, the Gospel of Philip, the Gospel of the
Hebrews, the Gospel of Mary, and etc. were published much
later.
Christians of trhe second century like Irenaeus and Tertullian
(commonly called ante-Nicean fathers) were opponents
of Gnosticism and opposed such in their works: Against
Heretics and The Prescription Against Heretics. Such were
obviously published long before the Council of Nicea (325 A.D.). In about
180, Irenaeus, who was a bishop of the church in Lyons, wrote in the above
mentioned work of the
New Testament Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, and
called them the Four-fold Gospel.
Furthermore, the Muratorian Canon of the late second
century gave a near complete list of New Testament Scriptures that were generally accepted. The Gnostic documents
are not among them. They were never considered for inclusion into the New Testament. They were recognized from the
beginning as forgeries and works of heresy having no connection with the apostles of Jesus Christ. The Muratorian Canon
mentions that several books "can not be received into the
catholic (universal) church, for it is not fitting that gall be
mixed with honey."
The Sacred Feminine
No movement or system of thought has enobled and exalted women as has the Bible.
The theme of "the Sacred Feminine" is interwoven throughout Dan Brown's best-selling novel, The Da Vinci Code. This
motif is joined with that of the quest of the Holy Grail. All who have read
the exploits of King Arthur and his Knights of
the Round Table are familiar with that legend. But according
to Brown's novel, those guys got it all wrong. The Holy Grail
was not the chalice that Jesus used at the last supper. Not
at all. It was the womb of Mary Magdalene in which the offspring, the royal blood of Jesus Christ was borne.
The Internet has numerous sites devoted to the Sacred
Feminine. Radical feminists and new-agers are enamored
with this fantasy. Without belaboring the story line of the
novel (anyone interested can get the book from the library or
borrow the copy that I bought at a yard sale), this theory has
it that goddess worship was very much a part of Judaism and
primitive Christianity. The goddess took the forms of Isis in
Egypt, Ishtar in Babylon, Asherah in Canaan, Aphrodite in
Greece, and Venus in Rome. In the early church it was manifested in Mary Magdalene.
Leigh Teabing, the fictional scholar of the novel, asserts:
"The early Jewish tradition involved ritualistic sex. In the
Temple, no less. Early Jews belived that the Holy of Holies
in Solomon's Temple housed not only God but also His powerful female equal, Shekinah" (pg. 309).
The most sophomoric Bible student would surely shake
his head in amazement at the ignorance manifested in this
statement! The term "Shekinah" in the Hebrew Old Testament describes the glory of God, not a divine consort. Furthermore, monotheism, the belief in and worship of the one God, was the most
fundamental tenet of Jewish theology. The sexual practices of pagan idolatry
were constantly forbidden and renounced by the law and the prophets.
The Da Vinci Code claims that the church "demonized sex"
while the pagan religions exalted it as a sacrament. The
estrangement between the caracter, Sofie Neveu, a French
police officer and code breaker, and her grandfather, a curator of the Louvre in Paris, was occasioned by a lurid ritual of
pagan sex that Sofie chanced to witness, which involved her
beloved grandfather and guardian. This was later explained
to her and to readers of the novel as a good thing for it was
simply the hieros gamos orgy, the ritualistic sex between
priests and priestesses to promote fertility.
While there may be some truth in the charge that sex was"demonized" by the church following the first century, the Bible regards it
as a wonderful gift from God. But God has
clearly defined the boundaries of sexual relations: "Marriage
should be honored by all, and the marriage bed kept pure, for
God will judge the adulterer and all the sexually immoral"
(Hebrews 13:4, NIV). Pagan orgies will only multiply the problems
that our world is already suffering from the Sexual Revolution
including AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
It is really ironic that an important part of the novel's plot
is the claim that the Roman Catholic Church did all it could to
suppress the Sacred Feminine. In fact, they have done the
very opposite. No, they have not deified Mary Magdalene,
but for all practical purposes they have done so in the theology of Mary the Mother of Jesus, also called Mary the Mother
of God and Mary, Co-Redeemer. The Catholic Church practices a form of idolatry as they display the statues of Mary and
others and teach people to kneel before them.
The cult of the Sacred Feminine claims, however, that Mary the Mother of
our Lord was exalted to take attention
away from Mary Magdalene. We are told that many of the
classic paintings of Madonna and Child are actually Mary
Magdalene holding the child of Jesus. The evidence? There
is none.
The fact is that in the deepest sense, the Bible is the advocate of the sacred feminine. While God is always spoken
of in the masculine gender, both the man and the woman were created in His
image (Genesis 1:27). Without the woman,
man was incomplete. Furthermore, God is described through
forms both masculine and feminine, though the male images
are predominant: "As one whom his mother comforts, so I
will comfort you" (Isaiah 66:13).
In those lands where many gods, male and female, are
worshipped, women are brutally dealt with. Such was the situation in the traditions of India, Japan, Africa, and pre-Christian Europe. In India, women were traditionally burned alive
by their husbands in a ritual known as sati. These customs
were outlawed in 1829, but had to be banned again in 1956 and again in 1984.
We still hear of them occurring.
The truth is, no system of thought or religion has exalted
and ennobled women as have the Bible and Christianity.
Virtual Reality
Here are a few, final lies and inaccuracies that accompany
this popular novel.
As I have prepared this review over the past few weeks,
The DaVinci Code has continued at the number one spot on theNew York Times' bestseller list. There are a number of errors
and myths in the book that we shall not attempt to explore in
any detail. But as we bring to a close this article, we shall
briefly note some further misrepresentations.
One of several books that have been published debunking
the alleged facts of this historical novel is Darrell Bock's
Breaking the Da Vinci Code: Answers to the Questions Everyone's Asking. Professor Bock refers to the book as "virtual
reality." By this he means that Dan Brown, the author, while
claiming to represent historical fact within the context of a
fictional novel, has actually created a separate universe using
a concoction of wacky conspiracy theories, weird twists on
old legends, historical half-truths and some pure lies.
That such has caught the rapt attention of the public is a
startling reflection of our age. Most people have no understanding of history. They are ready to swallow anything but
truth. They are well represented by Sophie in the novel whose name means wisdom, but whose mind is a blank slate
when it comes to church history. The novel's eccentric British scholar, Leigh Teabing, responds to her shocked incredulity at some of the things she is being told with an alleged
quote from Napoleon, "The winners in history are usually the
ones who write the history we read."
People who have done no study or investigation into church history will quickly chirp, "I don't believe the Bible.
There have been so many changes and interpretations and
translations over the years." Yet they will grab a popular
book filled with historical errors, devour it, and recommend
it to their friends. Go figure.
Here are some brief comments on a few of the matters we
have not discussed:
The Priory of Sion: Brown states in the preface that this
organization does exist and that its history as represented in
the novel is factual. The claim is that it is a secret European
society founded in Jerusalem in 1099 with the purpose of preserving information that was discovered in documents hidden
beneath the ruins of the Temple in Jerusalem. The information? That Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene and had a
daughter whose bloodline continued in a dynasty of French
kings. The fact is that The Priory of Sion does indeed exist,
but it is a product of a hoax that began in France in 1956.
The Knights Templar: This was a group of knights founded in 1118 during the Crusades to protect pilgrims in their
travels to the Holy Land. Brown's version has it that they
were guardians of the great secret regarding Jesus' marriage
and bloodline. There is no historical evidence to support this
theory.
Leonardo da Vinci: The book claims that Leonardo's
key paintings, including The Last Supper, The Mona Lisa, andThe Virgin of the Rocks, hold clues to the "truth" according
to Dan Brown. He claims that the figure to the right of Jesus
in The Last Supper is not the apostle, John, but Magdalene.
What is the evidence for this? There is none.
Historian Paul L. Maier says, "Admittedly, the apostle John
at Jesus' right hand, does have a feminine look to him in Da
Vinci's masterpiece, but that was the master's habit in painting younger men, as witness his portrayals also of John the
Baptist and others. Moreover, the great artist could not possibly have had Mary Magdalene in mind or there would have
been fourteen figures in his fresco, rather than Jesus and the
twelve. If the figure at Jesus' right hand is the Magdalene,
where is the missing John?"
Noah: "Noah was himself an albino" (page 166). Brown pulled this out
of thin air. There is nothing in historical data to substantiate
such.
The Jewish Tetragrammaton: The novel claims that the
Hebrew sacred name YHWH is "in fact derived from Jehovah,
an androgynous physical union between the masculine Jah
and the pre-Hebraic name for Eve, Harvah" (309). There is no
truth at all in this. YHWH is a form of the Hebrew verb "to be"
Since it was not pronounced by the ancient Jews, the pronounciation has been lost. It is variously represented in English
by "Jehovah" or "Yahweh."
Dead Sea Scrolls: The assertion is made, "Fortunately
for historians...some of the gospels that Constantine attempted to eradicate managed to survive. The Dead Sea Scrolls
were found in the 1950's hidden in a cave near Qumran in the
Judean desert" (page 234). It would seem that Brown could have
checked his dates at least. "Here we have three serious errors in less than three lines. Constantine, of course, was
not in the business of eradicating any gospels. The Dead Sea
Scrolls were discovered in 1947, not the 1950's. And they did
not contain any gospels or any references to Jesus" (Maier).
These scrolls contained Old Testament Scriptures and other
documents of that era before Christ.
Witch Hunts: The novel says, "During 300 years of witch
hunts, the Church burned at the stake an astonishing fivemillion women" (page 125). It is still terrible, but the number, according to historians was between 30,000 and 50,000. If the larger number is accurate, this is stillbut one hundreth of five
million. Something of an exaggeration, italicized for emphasis.
While there is much more I'm tempted to say on this, I have written enough to show the utter falsity of the claims of The Da Vinci Code. We may be sure that Brown has an agenda even beyond making money in the writing of this novel.