SEKHMET 2005

 

[Posted below are two articles critical of the pop cult favorite “The Da Vinci Code.” While Gnostic Communications obviously disagrees with the literalist, conservative foundation of both articles, we do find points of agreement with our position that “The Da Vinci Code”  is based on wild speculation with the typically “New Age” theosophy-for-profit motivation. Gnostic Communications comments on both articles will appear in this size text & color. This is a work-in-progress.]


Follow-up on the Da Vinci Code fabrications

Fred Hutchison
August 16, 2004

[Despite the ultra-conservative outlook of the author, this article is very much on target in its unmasking of “New Age” pretensions & pseudo-history.]

 

THE DA VINCI CODE is a “New Age” rehash of theories concerning the relationship of Jesus and Mary Magdalene, the existence of a secret Order that guards the so-called “Holy Grail as well as” the ancient bloodline of the holy couple. The book is a highly successful speculative package wrapped in unscientific theory and sheer fantasy. Naturally it goes over with the gullible & highly suggestible “New Age” faddists.

A few months ago, I wrote an essay in which I demonstrated how the knowledge of a few facts of history make many of the claims of the popular novel, The Da Vinci Code, an impossibility. When something is presented as truth which is historically impossible, you can be pretty sure that you have been reading fabrications, or more bluntly stated, lies.

An article in the June issue of Christianity Today presents more facts of history which add further proofs of the impossibility the claims of the Da Vinci Code. The article focuses upon the incredible claim that Gnostic texts represent early Christianity and that the New Testament as we know it, was substituted for the older Gnostic texts by Emperor Constantine and the Council of Nicea in the fourth century.

The alleged motive of this grand conspiracy was to suppress women's liberation and sexual liberation of Gnostic Christianity, and put-to-put forward patriarchy, the oppression of women, and sexual Puritanism. As I pointed out earlier, Gnostics were misogynists (they hated women), they were extreme ascetics who hated sex, and had an elite male leadership. Therefore, the claims about Gnosticism in The Da Vinci Code are the exact opposite of the historical truth.

 

[This is certainly true of the original middle-eastern form of Gnosticism. There were, however, various sects that included a widely divergent spectrum from mysticism to sexual exploration. The “Gnostic Pagans” living primarily in Alexandria were open to intellectual & religious experimentation. As the concept of Gnosis spread to Rome, various other theosophical deviations occurred.]

In my earlier essay, I pointed out issues of historical timing which invalidates the claims of The Da Vinci Code. "Why the 'Lost Gospels' Lost Out," by Ben Witherington III, in Christianity Today, gives many more detail about church history. Witherington's central point is that Christian Orthodoxy came early and the Gnostic texts appeared late in the game. The Council of Nicea (326 AD) validated an old orthodoxy and rejected novel new Gnostic ideas. Once again, the truth is the exact opposite of certain claims of The Da Vinci Code. Let me summarize a few of the most interesting facts presented by Witherington.

The Early Church — First Century (30 – 100 AD)

All of the New Testament books were written in the first century. All of the Gnostic books were written in the second and third century. This fact alone demolishes the claims made in the Da Vinci Code about the Gnostics, and the canon of scripture.

Many of the New Testament books cite the Old Testament as authentic scriptural books. The Gnostics rejected the Old Testament because it presents God as the creator of a world which is good. The Gnostics believed that the material world is evil and the work of an evil Demiurge.

The first generation of Christians were mostly composed of Jews who regarded Christianity as a fulfilled Judaism in which the Messiah had come in the form of Jesus Christ — or Yeshua Messiah (Messiah). This could only be possible for a group which continued to read the Old Testament and found that it was filled with prophesies of the Christ which they knew and trusted for salvation. Witherington says, "When the church accepted the Hebrew scriptures, it implicitly rejected Gnosticism before it had a chance to get started."

I might also mention that the Apostle John warned in his First Epistle against a heresy which denied that Jesus had come in the form of flesh and blood. This heresy was later adopted by the Gnostics. The Gnostics claimed that the physical body is evil. Therefore, the holy Christ could not have condescended to living in a physical body, but was an angel or phantom. But without a physical crucifixion and physical resurrection, there is no salvation. That is why Gnosticism is deadly to one's faith.

The Church Fathers (100 – 325 AD)

In 110 AD, Papias gave anecdotal information about the four gospels — all of which tell of Jesus Christ who came as a man. The earliest surviving fragment of the New Testament was a portion of the Gospel of John copied in 110 AD. The Gnostics had not yet appeared in the historical record.

During the period 125 – 150 AD we get reports of the Gnostics Valentinius and Basilides. In 150 the Gospel of Thomas was composed, which was the very first Gnostic book. However, in 140 AD, Marcion assembled and published a selection of books into a sort of truncated New Testament, and called upon the faithful to establish a New Testament cannon. All of the books which would be assembled in the New Testament were in wide circulation by 125 AD — 25 years before the Gospel of Thomas was penned. During the years before the first Gnostic works appeared, the four Gospels were often published together in collected works and St. Paul's Epistles were often published together. No Gnostic books were ever added to any of the collections of New Testament texts. In 200 AD, the Muratorian Canon was published, with a nearly complete list of the current New Testament. This was 50 years before the Gnostic Nag Hamadi manuscripts were published. The Muratorian Canon was 125 years before Nicea! So much for the astounding lies of the Da Vinci Code!

Classical Christian theology arose as a defense against heresy. The early councils of the church, beginning with Nicea, published these classic refutations of heresy, such as the Gnostic heresy. Nicea produced the famous Nicene Creed. However, it is a mistake to assume that the birth of orthodoxy occurred at Nicea There cannot be a heresy until there is first an orthodoxy to defend. Indeed, some of the later epistles in the bible include a defense against heresy. These heresies contradicted a collection of established doctrines which constituted a proto-orthodoxy which was well established in the churches before the Apostles died. Building upon this foundation, orthodoxy developed during the second and third centuries. Witherington cites several of the early Fathers of the Church as he summarizes the development of Orthodoxy and the defense against heresy during the era prior to Nicea.

Nicea (325) and Beyond

The council of Nicea rejected Gnosticism, just as the Fathers and the Bishops of the church had been doing since the Gnostic books first started appearing in 150 AD. Nicea defined and formalized the doctrine of the Trinity building upon scriptural authority, the writings of the Fathers and the maturing orthodoxy of the churches. Eusebius published another nearly complete list of New Testament books.

Bishop Athanasius (whose name is honored in the Athanasian Creed) published a list which includes all the present New Testament books. Pope Damascus called a second church council (382), which issued a complete list of the New Testament canon — just as we know them today.

In 350 AD, the Codex Vaticanus and the Codex Sinaticus, the first nearly complete Bibles, were published. Surviving manuscript copies from the 350 AD publication, discovered in Alexandria, are the oldest texts available to the modern New Testament scholars and bible translators. The King James translators (1611) selected from the many fine copies made by Charlemagne's scribes around 800 AD. The scribes of 800 AD had to make their copies from the few surviving manuscripts copies of the publication of 350 AD. Like Charlemagne's scribes, modern scholars have only a few copies of these same manuscripts. I speculate that these were fourth or fifth generation copies. Paul wrote and sent an epistle. The church which received the epistle made copies — 1st generation copies. Somewhere between 100 and 140, 2nd generation copies were made and published in collections of Paul's Epistles. Many 3rd generation copies of the collections were made between 140 and 325 AD. Only a few of these collections survived the persecution of Emperor Diocletian (303-306). Constantine made 50 vellum 4th generation copies in 332. These were available to the codex publishers of 350 who made 5th generation copies. But these publishers may have also had access to 3rd generation copies which survived Diocletion — which would give their copies a 4th generation pedigree. If we consider that Gnosticism did not exist until after the 2nd generation copies, there were only two generation of copies made during the time when Gnostic books were in circulation. Conclusion: Our New Testament is a translation of Greek texts which are astonishingly old and very close to the original autograph. The texts have been wonderfully insulated from Gnostic contamination. (Note: This paragraph rests partly on sources outside of Witherington's article, and upon some speculations of mine about the generations of copies.)

 

Breaking The Da Vinci Code
So the divine Jesus and infallible Word emerged out of a fourth-century power-play? Get real.
By Collin Hansen | posted 11/07/2003


Related Bible Studies:

Engaging the Da Vinci Code
The Da Vinci Code and Other Heresies
Debunking The Da Vinci Code


Related Audio Sermons:

There's Something About Mary
What About That Other Bible?

Perhaps you've heard of Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code. This fictional thriller has captured the coveted number one sales ranking at Amazon.com, camped out for 32 weeks on the New York Times Best-Seller List, and inspired a one-hour ABC News special. Along the way, it has sparked debates about the legitimacy of Western and Christian history.

While the ABC News feature focused on Brown's fascination with an alleged marriage between Jesus and Mary Magdalene, The Da Vinci Code contains many more (equally dubious) claims about Christianity's historic origins and theological development. The central claim Brown's novel makes about Christianity is that "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, argues Brown, 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 Scripture—both of them novelties that had never before existed among Christians.

Watershed at Nicea
Brown is right about one thing (and not much more). In the course of Christian history, few events loom larger than the Council of Nicea in 325. When the newly converted Roman Emperor Constantine called bishops from around the world to present-day Turkey, the church had reached a theological crossroads.

Led by an Alexandrian theologian named Arius, one school of thought argued that Jesus had undoubtedly been a remarkable leader, but he was not God in flesh. Arius proved an expert logician and master of extracting biblical proof texts that seemingly illustrated differences between Jesus and God, such as John 14:28: "the Father is greater than I." In essence, Arius argued that Jesus of Nazareth could not possibly share God the Father's unique divinity.

In The Da Vinci Code, Brown apparently adopts Arius as his representative for all pre-Nicene Christianity. Referring to the Council of Nicea, Brown claims that "until that moment in history, Jesus was viewed by His followers as a mortal prophet … a great and powerful man, but a man nonetheless."

In reality, early Christians overwhelmingly worshipped Jesus Christ as their risen Savior and Lord. Before the church adopted comprehensive doctrinal creeds, early Christian leaders developed a set of instructional summaries of belief, termed the "Rule" or "Canon" of Faith, which affirmed this truth. To take one example, the canon of prominent second-century bishop Irenaeus took its cue from 1 Corinthians 8:6: "Yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live; and there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ."

The term used here—Lord, Kyrios—deserves a bit more attention. Kyrios was used by the Greeks to denote divinity (though sometimes also, it is true, as a simple honorific). In the Greek translation of the Old Testament (the Septuagint, pre-dating Christ), this term became the preferred substitution for "Jahweh," the holy name of God. The Romans also used it to denote the divinity of their emperor, and the first-century Jewish writer Josephus tells us that the Jews refused to use it of the emperor for precisely this reason: only God himself was kyrios.

The Christians took over this usage of kyrios and applied it to Jesus, from the earliest days of the church. They did so not only in Scripture itself (which Brown argues was doctored after Nicea), but in the earliest extra-canonical Christian book, the Didache, which scholars agree was written no later than the late 100s. In this book, the earliest Aramaic-speaking Christians refer to Jesus as Lord.

In addition, pre-Nicene Christians acknowledged Jesus's divinity by petitioning God the Father in Christ's name. Church leaders, including Justin Martyr, a second-century luminary and the first great church apologist, baptized in the name of the triune God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—thereby acknowledging the equality of the one Lord's three distinct persons.

The Council of Nicea did not entirely end the controversy over Arius's teachings, nor did the gathering impose a foreign doctrine of Christ's divinity on the church. The participating bishops merely affirmed the historic and standard Christian beliefs, erecting a united front against future efforts to dilute Christ's gift of salvation.

"Fax from Heaven"?
With the Bible playing a central role in Christianity, the question of Scripture's historic validity bears tremendous implications. Brown claims that Constantine commissioned and bankrolled a staff to manipulate existing texts and thereby divinize the human Christ.

Yet for a number of reasons, Brown's speculations fall flat. Brown correctly points out that "the Bible did not arrive by fax from heaven." Indeed, the Bible's composition and consolidation may appear a bit too human for the comfort of some Christians. But Brown overlooks the fact that the human process of canonization had progressed for centuries before Nicea, resulting in a nearly complete canon of Scripture before Nicea or even Constantine's legalization of Christianity in 313.

Ironically, the process of collecting and consolidating Scripture was launched when a rival sect produced its own quasi-biblical canon. Around 140 a Gnostic leader named Marcion began spreading a theory that the New and Old Testaments didn't share the same God. Marcion argued that the Old Testament's God represented law and wrath while the New Testament's God, represented by Christ, exemplified love. As a result Marcion rejected the Old Testament and the most overtly Jewish New Testament writings, including Matthew, Mark, Acts, and Hebrews. He manipulated other books to downplay their Jewish tendencies. Though in 144 the church in Rome declared his views heretical, Marcion's teaching sparked a new cult. Challenged by Marcion's threat, church leaders began to consider earnestly their own views on a definitive list of Scriptural books including both the Old and New Testaments.

Another rival theology nudged the church toward consolidating the New Testament. During the mid- to late-second century, a man from Asia Minor named Montanus boasted of receiving a revelation from God about an impending apocalypse. The four Gospels and Paul's epistles achieved wide circulation and largely unquestioned authority within the early church but hadn't yet been collected in a single authoritative book. Montanus saw in this fact an opportunity to spread his message, by claiming authoritative status for his new revelation. Church leaders met the challenge around 190 and circulated a definitive list of apostolic writings that is today called the Muratorian Canon, after its modern discoverer. The Muratorian Canon bears striking resemblance to today's New Testament but includes two books, Revelation of Peter and Wisdom of Solomon, which were later excluded from the canon.

By the time of Nicea, church leaders debated the legitimacy of only a few books that we accept today, chief among them Hebrews and Revelation, because their authorship remained in doubt. In fact, authorship was the most important consideration for those who worked to solidify the canon. Early church leaders considered letters and eyewitness accounts authoritative and binding only if they were written by an apostle or close disciple of an apostle. This way they could be assured of the documents' reliability. As pastors and preachers, they also observed which books did in fact build up the church—a good sign, they felt, that such books were inspired Scripture. The results speak for themselves: the books of today's Bible have allowed Christianity to spread, flourish, and endure worldwide.

Though unoriginal in its allegations, The Da Vinci Code proves that some misguided theories never entirely fade away. They just reappear periodically in a different disguise. Brown's claims resemble those of Arius and his numerous heirs throughout history, who have contradicted the united testimony of the apostles and the early church they built. Those witnesses have always attested that Jesus Christ was and remains God himself. It didn't take an ancient council to make this true. And the pseudohistorical claims of a modern novel can't make it false.

For more on what the early church fathers can teach us about Jesus and the Bible, see our sequel to this article. To schedule an interview with Collin Hansen, please contact him contact him at cheditor@christianhistory.net.

Copyright © 2003 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
Click here for reprint information on Christian History.


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