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Decoding The Da Vinci Code
I guess Christians should be flattered. Who knew the Council of Nicea and Mary Magdalene could be this hot? Thanks in large measure to Dan Brown's fictional thriller The DaVinci Code, early church history just can't stay out of the news.
If only a more worthy work could have prompted such attention. Brown first grabbed the headlines and prime-time TV in 2003 with his theory that Jesus married Mary Magdalene. But The DaVinci Code contains many more (equally dubious) claims about Christianity's historic origins and theological development. It's left to the reader whether these theories belong to Brown's imagination or the skeleton of "facts" that supports the book.
Brown claims "almost everything our fathers taught us about Christ is false." Why? Because of a single meeting of bishops in 325, at the city of Nicea in modern-day Turkey. There, Brown argues, church leaders who wanted to consolidate their power base (he calls this, anachronistically, "the Vatican," or "the Roman Catholic church") created a divine Christ and an infallible Scriptureboth novelties that had never before existed among Christians.
Christian History & Biography and its sister publications have covered the subject widely. We've compiled related articles and resources below.
Christian History & Biography Issue 85: Debating Jesus' Divinity
The Council of Nicaea and its bitter aftermath.
Breaking The Da Vinci Code
So the divine Jesus and infallible Word emerged out of a fourth-century power-play? Get real.
Editor's Bookshelf: Da Vinci Dissenters
Four books try to break, crack, or decode the deception.
Speaking in Code
A roundup of the many anti-Da Vinci Code books from Christian publishers.
The Da Vinci Rejects
What other Christian publishers could have done to respond to Dan Brown's bestseller.
Why the 'Lost Gospels' Lost Out
Recent gadfly theories about church council conspiracies that manipulated the New Testament into existence are badreally badhistory.
The Da Vinci Code, Corrected
Why the "lost gospels" were really lost
Thanks, Da Vinci Code
The book sends us back to Christianity's "founding fathers"and the Bible we share with them.
The Good News of Da Vinci
How a ludicrous book can become an opportunity to engage the culture.
A Hammer Struck at Heresy
What exactly happened at the famous Council of Nicea, when the Roman emperor convened some 250 quarreling Christian bishops?
Christian History
Readers respond to The Da Vinci Code
Film Forum: Talking About Revolutions
What religious critics are saying about The Matrix Revolutions, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, Elf, Brother Bear, The Human Stain, In the Cut, Shattered Glass, Mystic River, Radio, Veronica Guerin, and the upcoming Return of the King, and Da Vinci Code films.
Film Forum: Critics Rocked by Jack Black, Gored by Tarantino
Religious press critics attend The School of Rock, Kill BillVol. 1, Out of Time, The Station Agent, and Wonderland. More reviews arrive for Luther, Secondhand Lions, and Matchstick Men. Plus: More Passion debate, farewells for Elia Kazan, a report from the Chicago Film Festival, and director Ron Howard takes on the heresy-laced Da Vinci Code.
Reel News: DaVinci Countered by Catholic Outreach
Catholic groups form The DaVinci Outreach website to counter the message of the upcoming film.
Leader's Insight: Breaking Da Vinci
A pastor's response to The Da Vinci Code phenomenon and the doubts it raises.
The Da Vinci Code's Ancient Heresies
The best-selling novel recycles beliefs long ago condemned by Christians.
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WEBLOGS
On the following articles, you'll have to scroll down to find the Da Vinci items:
Weblog: Will Iraq Turn to Shari'ah?
Plus: More on Kelley, The Passion, Da Vinci Code, Billy Graham plans revival in Missouri, and articles from online source around the world.
Weblog: Time Goes Gnostic
Plus: Christmas, Carl Henry, more Gnostics, and other articles from online sources around the world.
Weblog: Newsweek Goes to Sunday School
And learns about all the women in the Bible, who have been there for millennia.
Weblog: Marriage Amendment Introduced in Senate
Plus: Graham Staines murderers appeal, Christians like gambling, but not psychics, and Homer Simpson ministry.
Weblog: Bethlehem Prepares for Dour Christmas
Plus: Tons more on Christmas, the lies of Da Vinci, State Department's religious freedom report, Christian video games, and hundreds of stories from online sources around the world.
Weblog: Catholics Boot Episcopal Ceremony Over Presiding Bishop's Pro-Homosexuality Comments
Plus: Hiding gay bishops under poetry readings, Christianity vs. Islam, and other stories from online sources around the world.
To get complete coverage on the latest issues impacting your faith, sign up for our new Christianity Today Hot Topics newsletter by clicking here.
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Books
Breaking the Da Vinci Code
Answers to the Questions Everybody's Asking
Many who have read the New York Times best-seller The Da Vinci Code have questions that arise from seven codesexpressed or impliedin Dan Brown's book. In Breaking the Da Vinci Code, Darrell Bock, Ph.D. responds to the novelist's claims using central ancient texts and answers several popular questions.
Buy Now!
Cracking Da Vinci's Code
You've Read The Fiction Now Read the Facts
Are your friendsor youwondering if Dan Brown's best-selling thriller is really fiction? After all, it reads like irrefutable fact! Garlow and Jones confront the suspense novel's heresy and false teaching with true and accurate Christian theology. They trace Brown's misguided hypothesis back to its roots, revealing pagan influences in today's cultureand the church!
Buy Now!
The Da Vinci Deception
Credible Answers to the Questions Millions are Asking about Jesus, The Bible, and the Da Vinci Code
Was Jesus really married to Mary Magdalene? Did they actually have children who intermarried with the French royal family? Has the church been hiding the truth for centuries? In his bestselling work of fiction, The Da Vinci Code, Dan Brown blurs the lines between history and fiction, giving the impression they are one and the same and that Christianity is based on a lie. In The Da Vinci Deception, renowned theologian and pastor of the world famous Moody Church in Chicago, Dr. Erwin Lutzer examines the "facts" behind the bestselling novel, clarifies the issues involved in the deception, and equips readers with the truth.
Buy Now!
The Gospel Code
Novel Claims About Jesus, Mary Magdalene and Da Vinci
Dan Brown's international best-seller The Da Vinci Code has raised many questions in the minds of readers. The Da Vinci Code, in blurring the lines between face and fiction, popularizes the speculations and contentions of numerous more serious books that are also attracting wide attention. How would we respond to claims that we now have documents that reveal secrets about Jesus, secrets long suppressed by the church and other religious institutions? Do these new documents successfully debunk traditional views about Jesus and early Christianity? Ben Witherington III confronts these claims with the sure-footedness of a New Testament scholar, yet in the plain language that any interested reader can follow. He takes us back to the early centuries after Jesus' death and tells us what we can really know about Jesus, Mary Magdalene, the canonical Gospels and their Gnostic rivals.
Buy Now!
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