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cracking the da vinci code

Discussion in 'Religion & Spirituality Forum' started by LarryD, Mar 3, 2004.

  1. Rob

    Rob Caught One

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    Chuck Colsons Take

    I think I saw a movie made out of this book on DvD a while back. I haven't read it though. The movie was mildly entertaining.


    The Da Vinci Conspiracy
    Distinguishing Fact from Fiction

    BreakPoint with Charles Colson

    January 20, 2004

    Several months ago, a friend came to me outraged over Dan Brown’s thriller, The Da Vinci Code. He read the book, and while he found the story fascinating, it was filled, he said, with historical distortions and was nothing but an anti-Christian—specifically anti-Catholic—screed. Don’t worry, I told him, it will blow over like all fads. Besides, no thinking person will take it seriously.

    Well, I was wrong. Since then I’ve talked to a lot of people who have read the book. And for non-believers, it confirms their unbelief. It turns off honest seekers, and it has confused and disillusioned even many Christians.

    That’s because while Brown has a knack for creating suspense, breakneck pacing, and surprising twists, he also has a knack for playing fast and loose with the truth.

    The Da Vinci Code begins with the murder of a museum curator. A Harvard professor and a French code breaker are called in to decipher a cryptic message that he wrote just before he died. They discover that he was protecting a powerful and dangerous secret.

    So far, just your average thriller, right? We soon find out that the curator had evidence that could disprove the deity of Christ. Although the Church had tried for centuries to suppress the evidence, great thinkers and artists have planted clues everywhere: in paintings by Da Vinci, the architecture of cathedrals—even Disney cartoons.

    That sounds like a loony conspiracy theory, except that Brown props up his flimsy edifice with impressive-sounding, supposedly historical “facts.” One of his characters even states, “The historical evidence supporting this [story] is substantial.”

    But it’s not. Brown uses a combination of lies and half-truths, founded on a skewed perspective of Church history. In Brown’s view, the heretics in the early Church were the real truth-tellers, and the Church banned their doctrines because they threatened the Church’s power base.

    Just in case readers go back to their Bibles to check facts, Brown has his characters claim that the Gospels aren’t historically accurate. Instead, it’s the Gnostic gospels—books discarded by the early Church as unreliable—that tell the truth about Jesus.

    As Dan Brown knows, an adventure story like The Da Vinci Code is an ideal way to get past people’s guard. Between trying to guess who the real villains are and trying to decode the various clues scattered throughout the book, who’s going to notice that Brown’s religious theories are as phony as a three-dollar bill?

    Christians need to notice, that’s who. And we need to do our research so that we can respond to the fabrications in The Da Vinci Code. (See the links at the end of this commentary to get started.)

    Even though Dan Brown knows the techniques of writing a best-selling thriller, he uses them to reach the most banal conclusions. He apparently thinks it’s exciting to show Jesus as an ordinary human being with strong leanings toward goddess worship. But the biblical story of Jesus—God the Son coming to earth as a man to die and rise again for our salvation—is infinitely more exciting. If you know Christians who are reading the book, tell them, “Throw it away.” And if you have non-Christian friends who have read it, debunk The Da Vinci Code. Then tell them a much better story: one that has the added advantage of being true.

    http://www.pfm.org/Content/ContentG...es/20041/January1/The_Da_Vinci_Conspiracy.htm
     
    Last edited: Mar 3, 2004
  2. wossa

    wossa Not a ********* any more

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    yeah me too.

    #312 on the list. :rolleyes:

    it'll be in paper back before I ever get it.
     
  3. mathmajors

    mathmajors Roll Wave

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    I'm always interested in historical references when it comes to the life of Christ. I just don't think it's that far-fetched that Jesus had a wife and kids, etc.

    The book is a real page-turner, though.
     
  4. Superfluous_Nut

    Superfluous_Nut pastor of muppets

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    the book is listed under fiction, is it not? did this guy get upset that star wars didn't really take place in history as it proclaims?
     
  5. mathmajors

    mathmajors Roll Wave

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    I didn't like that guy's attitude, either.
     
  6. BigVito

    BigVito Splitting Headache

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    Mr. Colson, or as I like to refer to him "Prisoner 23226", was a bit preoccupied in the '70's so he probably missed Star Wars.

    Why are books like the Da Vinci Code and movies like the Last Temptation of Christ so feared by certain segments of the Christian community? "If you know Christians who are reading the book, tell them, “Throw it away.”" Are ideas that dangerous?
     
  7. kshead

    kshead What's the spread?

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    :lol2:
     
  8. mathmajors

    mathmajors Roll Wave

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    A lot of those folks don't realize that all they really know is what is written in the Bible. They'll take that for truth because they've been conditioned to.
     
  9. hasbeen99

    hasbeen99 Fighting the stereotype

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    Okay, I've decided Imma read the book. Thanks for the post, Rob. :)
     
  10. hasbeen99

    hasbeen99 Fighting the stereotype

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    If He did, I think He would have included it in His ministry. Why hide it?
     

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