The DaVinci Code
Folks
continue to ask my opinion about the popular novel, The DaVinci Code. Below
I am reprinting a relevant section from one of my Sunday letters, and a review
by Margaret Mitchell. I hope you will find these helpful.
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I’ve just finished reading The DaVinci Code. It is a page turner
- although more so in the first half than in the second where one might have
expected the intensity to increase. Like much fiction centered on religious
themes, this book begins with a few recognizable biblical and ecclesiastical
names and stories and then proceeds to mix them (and the reader) in a stew of
half-truths, distortions, and fantasies. The story at hand claims that the
church has, over centuries, duped its members by twisting the truth to
accommodate the advancement of its own ideologies and politics - Dan Brown has
duped his audience by twisting the truth to accommodate the advancement of his
story line into a best selling novel. A danger in biblical movies and novels is
that the whole scriptural story is seldom told, and what is told is shaped for
the screen and for broad public consumption. The danger in The DaVinci Code is
that the scriptural/ecclesial story is told only in part, with the remainder
filled in by the author, at his whim and will. In The DaVinci Code virtually
nothing Christian, Catholic or ecclesial escapes Brown’s heavy hand: all are
painted as secretly dedicated to keeping Christendom and the world from knowing
the truth about Jesus.
You know that I am not slow to criticize the church and so my
critique of the Code is not knee-jerk response in apologetics. There are many
faults to find in church history (and how the church has recorded it) but the
old canard at the heart of this novel is as tired as it is false: see
Kazantzakis and Scorsese The DaVinci Code is a fast paced mystery that takes
advantage of the average reader’s lack of familiarity with church history and
theology. If you need to decide between spending time reading the The DaVinci
Code or coming to the Vatican II series mentioned above - choose the series! If
you have time for both: read the former with a critical eye and savor the
latter for the substance it will offer.
-Rev. Austin Fleming
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Cracking the Da Vinci Code
— Margaret M. Mitchell
Besieged by requests for my reaction to The Da Vinci Code, I
finally decided to sit down and read it over the weekend. It was a quick romp,
largely fun to read, if rather predictable and preachy. This is a good airplane
book, a novelistic thriller that presents a rummage sale of accurate historical
nuggets alongside falsehoods and misleading statements. The bottom line: the
book should come coded for "black light," like the pen used by the
character Sauniere to record his dying words, so that readers could scan pages
to see which "facts" are trustworthy and which patently not, and (if
a black light could do this!) highlight the gray areas where complex issues are
misrepresented and distorted.
Patently inaccurate:
-in his own lifetime Jesus "inspired millions to better lives"
(p.231);
-there were "more than eighty gospels" (p.231; the number 80 is
factual-sounding, but has no basis);
-"the earliest Christian records" were found among the Dead Sea
Scrolls (including gospels) and Nag Hammadi texts (pp.234, 245);
-the Nag Hammadi texts "speak of Christ's ministry in very human
terms" (p.234);
-the marriage of Mary Magdalene and Jesus is "a matter of historical
record" (p.244);
-Constantine invented the divinity of Jesus and excluded all gospels but the
four canonical ones; --Constantine made Christianity "the official
religion" of the Roman Empire (p.232);
-Constantine coined the term "heretic" (p.234);
-"Rome's official religion was sun worship" (p.232).
There are more.
Gray areas:
"The vestiges of pagan religion in Christian symbology are
undeniable" (p.232), but that does not mean "Nothing in Christianity
is original." The relationship between early Christianity and the world
around it, the ways in which it was culturally embedded in that world,
sometimes unreflectively, sometimes reflexively, sometimes in deliberate
accommodation, sometimes in deliberate cooptation, is far more complicated than
the simplistic myth of Constantine's Stalinesque program of cultural
totalitarianism. Further, Constantine's religious life -- whether, when, how
and by what definition he was Christian and/or "pagan" -- is a much
debated issue because the literary and non-literary sources (such as coins) are
not consistent. That Constantine the emperor had "political" motives
(p.234) is hardly news to anyone! The question is how religion and politics
(which cannot be separated in the ancient world) were interrelated in him. He
is as hard to figure out on this score as Henry VIII, Osama Bin Laden, Tammy
Fay Baker and George W. Bush. Brown has turned one of history's most
fascinating figures into a cartoon-ish villain.
"Paganism" is treated throughout The Da Vinci Code as though it were
a unified phenomenon, which it was not ("pagan" just being the
Christian term for "non-Christian"). The religions of the
Mediterranean world were multiple and diverse, and cannot all be boiled down to
"sun-worshippers" (232). Nor did all "pagans" frequently,
eagerly, and with mystical intent participate in the hieros gamos (ritual sex
acts). "The Church" is also used throughout the book as though it had
a clear, uniform and unitary referent. For early Christian history this is
precisely what we do not have, but a much more complex, varied and localized
phenomenon. Brown presumes "the Church" is "the Holy Roman
Catholic Church" which he thinks had tremendous power always and
everywhere, but ecclesiastical history is a lot messier.
Brown propagates the full-dress conspiracy theory for Vatican suppression of
women. Feminist scholars and others have been debating different models of the
"patriarchalization" of Christianity for decades. Elisabeth
Schuessler Fiorenza's landmark work, In Memory of Her (1983), argued that while
Jesus and Paul (on his better days) were actually pretty much pro-women, it was
the next generations (the authors of letters in Paul's name like 1 and 2
Timothy and others) who betrayed their feminist agenda and sold out to the
Aristotelian, patriarchal vision of Greco-Roman society. Others (unfortunately)
sought to blame the misogyny on the Jewish roots of Christianity. More recently
it has been argued that the picture is more mixed, even for Jesus and Paul.
That is, they may have been more liberal than many of their contemporaries
about women, but they were not all-out radicals, though they had ideas (such as
Gal 3:28) that were even more revolutionary than they realized (in both senses
of the term). Alas, no simple story here. And while obsessing over Mary
Magdalene, The Da Vinci Code ignores completely the rise and incredible
durability and power of the other Mary, the mother of Jesus, and devotion to
her which follows many patterns of "goddess" veneration (she even
gets the Athena's Parthenon dedicated to her in the sixth century).
This list is just a sample. A "black light" edition of The Da Vinci
Code would, however, be unnecessary if readers would simply take the book as
fiction. But there is an obstacle: the first page of the book reads, under the
bold print headline "Fact": "all descriptions of ...documents,
and secret rituals in this novel are accurate."
Margaret M. Mitchell is Associate Professor of New Testament at the
University of Chicago Divinity School and the Chair of the Department of New Testament
and Early Christian Literature. Her latest book is The Heavenly Trumpet: John
Chrysostom and the Art of Pauline Interpretation (Westminster/John Knox, 2002).