Paper-13
Name: Ramiz M. Solanki
M. A. Sem:- 04
Roll No. 27
Batch: 2017-19
Enrolment No.2069108420180051
Paper No: 13 (The New Literature)
Assignment Topic: Historical Propaganda in ‘The Da Vinci Code’
Email Id: ramiz.solanki39@gmail.com
Submitted to: Department of English MKBU
Historical Propaganda
Dan Brown’s
blockbuster novel, The
Da Vinci Code, represents an undeniable publishing
phenomenon. Sadly, it also represents a direct attack upon the central truths
of the Christian faith — and a misrepresentation of historical fact. Indeed,
the novel is really a work of historical fiction, but many readers are deceived
by Brown’s all-too-clever recasting of history.
Brown uses the novel’s
plot and dialogue as the means of “uncovering” what he presents as long-lost
truths about the transformation of Christianity. The Da Vinci Code becomes a literary vehicle for denying the deity
of Christ, the reliability of the New Testament, and the essence of the Gospel.
In so doing, Brown is not subtle.
The book claims that Jesus Christ was
married to Mary Magdalene, and that a child was born of this marriage. One
character explains that Jesus — “the original feminist” — had intended for Mary
Magdalene to lead the church after His death, but “Peter had a problem with
that.” So after the crucifixion, Mary and her child fled to Gaul, where they
established the Merovingian line of European royalty.
Heard this all before?
The main contours of this plot have been found in many books published in
occultic literature. Holy
Blood, Holy Grail, for example, by Michael Baigent, Henry
Lincoln, and Richard Leigh (1983), made the same claims, but in what purported
to be a non-fiction exposé, not a suspense novel.
None of these theories is credible. When
one examines the sources, there can be no serious question about the marital
status of Jesus. The canonical Gospels, (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John)
preclude any option of understanding Jesus as married. He operates as an
unmarried teacher with a band of devoted disciples. He is not the head of a
household, but builds a household of faith — the church. At the crucifixion, he
assigns John responsibility for caring for Mary, his mother. There is no
mention of any wife, and certainly no mention of children.
So how can Brown promote such an
unfounded theory? Very easily — he simply asserts that the marital status of
Jesus was hidden by Christian leaders by means of a vast conspiracy. This
conspiracy, we are told, explains the absence of any mention of Jesus’ marriage
in the New Testament and the church’s denial of any such suggestion throughout
its history.
Devotees of suspense
novels read for the sheer pleasure of the intellectual engagement — not so much
with the philosophical ideas, but with the conspiratorial theories. In that category, The Da Vinci Code delivers spectacularly, resting as it does on a
conspiracy theory involving virtually everyone even remotely connected with
Christianity throughout the last two thousand years. One of the central
arguments found in The
Da Vinci Code is that certain leading figures
have always known the truth — including the Knights Templar, the Masons, the
Roman Catholic Church, and even Interpol. The “Priory of Sion,” asserted to be
a secret cabal of the illuminated ones, is central to Brown’s plot and is
claimed to have included as Grand Masters no less than Sandro Boticelli, Isaac
Newton, and, of course, Leonardo Da Vinci.
According to Brown’s
thesis, Da Vinci hid hints of Jesus’ marriage in works of art such as his
famous masterpiece, The
Last Supper. Brown argues that one of the figures
in the fresco standing next to Jesus isn’t a man at all, but Mary Magdalene.
Jack Wasserman, however, a prominent art historian at Temple University,
however, rejects that argument. Once we understand the artistic style of the
era, Wasserman countered, it becomes clear that the figure does not even begin
to look like a woman.
The fact is, art
historians have poked holes in most of Dan Brown’s interpretations found
in The
Da Vinci Code. Of course, if you are promoting a
conspiracy theory, you simply fold all this into the conspiracy. When an ABC News
reporter asked Dan Brown why so many art historians dismiss his theories “as
absolutely bizarre and crazy,” Brown explained: “I think it’s because we see
what we’ve been told we see.”
Even more problematic
than his dubious art criticism is that Brown has to lay the groundwork for his
conspiracy by having his main characters deny the inspiration and authority of
the biblical text, replacing Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John with a set of
Gnostic gospels discovered at Nag Hammadi just after World War II.
He calls these Gnostic texts the
“unaltered gospels,” and he dismisses the New Testament texts as mere
propaganda. The New Testament, Brown argues, is simply the result of a male-dominated
church leadership inventing Christianity in order to control the Roman empire
and subsequent world history, and then to oppress women and
repress goddess-worship.
In Brown’s mind, the
heretics are the heroes, and the apostles are un-indicted co-conspirators. The
greatest villain of all is perhaps the Emperor Constantine, who, Brown claims,
never even became a Christian, but knew a useful fiction when he saw it.
According to The
Da Vinci Code, Constantine called the Council of
Nicea in 325 to invent the idea of Christ’s divinity (and celibacy) and then
turn out the heretics, thus burying the real story of Jesus and Mary Magdalene
forever. “It’s all about power,” one character explains. That is why
Constantine “upgraded Jesus’ status.”
And the Council of
Nicea? There, The
Da Vinci Code reveals, the Emperor led the
bishops to declare Jesus as the Son of God by a vote — “a relatively close vote
at that,” the text elaborates.
For anyone with a real interest in the
identity of Jesus and the history of the church, such heresies are easily
dismissed. The Nag Hammadi texts are easily identifiable as Gnostic literature,
spurious writings of which early Christians were most certainly aware, and
which they rightly rejected as sub-biblical and erroneous. Thus, calling them
“unaltered” gospels is like reading the official Soviet histories as objective
fact — complete with leading figures airbrushed out of the photos. Moreover,
the early church did not establish the canon (the official set of New Testament
writings) at Nicea, for a general consensus was already evident at that
gathering. The New Testament writings were recognized and set apart because of
their authorship by one of the apostles and by their clearly orthodox content —
in harmony with the other New Testament writings as recognized by the churches
spread throughout the Greco-Roman world.
The
Da Vinci Code weaves fact and fiction with such
recklessness that the average reader will assume all its claims to be factual.
There was in fact an ecumenical council at Nicea, but Brown’s account of it is
preposterous. The real Council of Nicea adopted a creed in order to reject the
heretical teachings of one Arius, who taught that Jesus was not of the same
substance as the Father. The council did not “invent” the divinity of Jesus.
This was already the declaration of the church, claimed by Jesus Himself as
well as by the apostles. The council boldly claimed this as the faith of the
church, naming Arianism as a heresy and Arians as heretics. A close vote? Only
two out of more than three hundred bishops failed to sign the creed. Not
exactly a cliff-hanger.
Much more could be
considered, but the main issue is this: How plausible is such a conspiracy? The
threshold of credibility for this conspiracy requires us to believe that the
entire structure of Christian theology is a sinister plot to fool the masses.
Further, we must believe that the leaders of this conspiracy knew that Jesus
was not the Son of God, but were willing to die for this cause by the millions.
As C.
S. Lewis once argued, people might be
willing to be martyred for a lie if they are innocently deceived, but very few
will die for what they know to be a lie. What is more, it requires one to
believe that the truth, known by millions, has been kept secret from the world
until now. Specifically, until the release of The Da Vinci Code. Those who want to believe the heresies of The Da Vinci Code will hold to them tenaciously — whatever the
evidence. Clearly, the book attacks the Scriptures, the Christian faith, and
the Gospel itself, but the truth is unshaken. G. K. Chesterton
reminded us that orthodoxy is not only true; it is infinitely more interesting
than heresy. It is alive and compelling and life-changing. Heresies come and go
by fashion. The truth is unchanged and unchangeable. Caveat emptor, “let the buyer beware.”
Bibliography
Magazine, Tabletalk. Historical
Propaganda. 05 April 2019
<https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/historical-propaganda/>.
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