[Note:
this essay was originally published ten years ago, when the movie “The Da Vinci Code” was
released.]
This
week we celebrate the Feast of Pentecost, commemorating the event that took
place 50 days after the Resurrection, when the Holy Spirit descended on the
apostles and infused them with the power and courage they needed to spread the
Good News in a hostile environment.
It
has been about two weeks since the new Tom Hanks movie, “The Da Vinci Code,”
was released, and this is a good time to discuss both the movie and the Holy
Spirit, as one is being hyped to the max right now while the other has all but
been forgotten. (If you’re not sure, the Holy Spirit is NOT the one receiving
tons of media hype these days.)
The
movie, based on Dan Brown’s best-selling novel, makes some rather outlandish
claims about the history of Christianity, including: Jesus and Mary Magdalene
were married and had a daughter; in the year 325 A.D. the emperor Constantine
declared Jesus to be divine, an idea that had not occurred to anyone prior to
the 4th century; Constantine rejected dozens of other gospels and rewrote the
four that are in the Bible; and the Catholic Church has for centuries suppressed
the truth about Jesus, using lies, deception, and murder.
In
my mind, the most disturbing aspect of “The Da Vinci Code” is not that Brown
wrote a story that is sacrilegious and blasphemous toward Christianity.
Archbishop Angelo Amato, a top Vatican official, noted that if “such lies and
errors had been directed at the Koran or the Holocaust, they would have justly
provoked a world uprising.”
But
as anyone following the news in recent years knows, it is perfectly acceptable
in our culture to trash traditional Christian beliefs—and especially Catholic
beliefs—with impunity. Brown states in the book, “everything our fathers taught
us about Christ is false,” and then spends the rest of his novel trying to
convince readers it is true. Ho hum, another Christian basher. It’s getting
rather routine.
And
in my mind, the most disturbing aspect of “The Da Vinci Code” is not that Brown
portrays fiction as if it is historical fact. Brown coyly tries to have it both
ways, asserting at times that his book is a novel, while at other times
claiming that he is presenting the truth. For example, when the book was first
published in 2003, Brown told National Public Radio
that his characters are fictional but “the ancient history, the secret
documents, the rituals, all of this is factual.” That same year he told CNN
that “the background is all true.”
There is a wealth of historical evidence that demonstrates beyond
a doubt that Brown’s version of history is simply ludicrous. Even secular
historians are in agreement that the early Christians, from the 1st century
onward, believed that Jesus was divine. Ho hum, another modern relativist who
thinks “truth” can be whatever someone feels it is. This too is rather routine
these days.
No,
in my mind, the most disturbing aspect of “The Da Vinci Code” is the fact that
so many faithful Christians have no clue about the history of the early Church,
and as a result are accepting Brown’s fantasy as plausible. Most Christians are
quite ignorant about the early centuries of Christian history, and dare I say,
virtually ALL Catholics—my own people—are completely in the dark about the
fascinating story of the growth and development of the early Church.
It’s
almost as if some people—people who identify themselves as Christians—really
WANT the “Da Vinci” story to be true. Author James Hitchcock points out,
“Millions of people read The Da Vinci Code not because they necessarily
believe its absurd story, but because it creates a myth that serves certain
emotional needs and allows them to be ‘religious’ without submitting to the
demands of faith.”
Hitchcock
explains that the story “is not merely another ‘liberal’ revision. It is
nothing less than the claim that Christianity has been a deliberate fraud
almost from its beginning, that the true story of Jesus was suppressed, and
that only now are we finally learning what it was all about.”
The
philosophical worldview of “The Da Vinci Code” is a mixture of New Age
spirituality, neo-gnosticism, and radical feminist goddess worship. It tells us
to look for God not above and beyond us, but rather inside of us. Instead of
God coming down to meet mortal humanity—most obviously at the Incarnation, when
the Second Person of the divine Trinity took on human flesh—the “Da Vinci” view
claims that people already have the “divine spark” within. To paraphrase Mel
Brooks, “We don’t need no stinkin’ Savior, we can save ourselves.”
Combined
with our culture’s intense distrust of all authority—especially Church
authority—and our culture’s rampant narcissism, “The Da Vinci Code” is the
perfect vehicle for this new wave of feelings-based spirituality.
What
does all this pop culture stuff have to do with Pentecost and the Holy Spirit?
Ah, I thought you’d never ask. Let’s review what Jesus told us about the Holy
Spirit. In John’s gospel Jesus said, “When the Advocate comes whom I will send
you from the Father, the Spirit of truth that proceeds from the Father, he will
testify to me.” A little later Jesus also said, “When he comes, the Spirit of
truth, he will guide you to all truth.”
From
the very beginning the Church has firmly believed that the Holy Spirit—who
Jesus called “the Spirit of truth”—has been guiding the faithful, keeping the
Church from embracing erroneous doctrines. It was the Holy Spirit who inspired
the authors of the New Testament documents to write the truth about God; it was
the Holy Spirit who guided the Church to choose which documents belonged in the
Bible; it was, and is, the Holy Spirit who makes sure the Church teaches the
truth about the life of Christ and God’s plan of salvation for the world.
As
mentioned last week in our discussion of the so-called “Gospel of Judas,” the
National Geographic Society (NGS) firmly believes that historical events are
ultimately the result of human politics, power, and public relations. The
sensationalistic TV special produced by the NGS claims that the people with the
most power and influence, the early Catholic leaders, forcibly suppressed
another version of the story of Jesus, a version that makes Judas the good guy.
“The
Da Vinci Code” has the same view, claiming that the organization with the most
power and influence, the Catholic Church, has suppressed the truth about Jesus
and Mary Magdalene, and the true Gospel of the “sacred feminine.”
In
both cases the religious beliefs that have emerged down through the centuries
are based solely on human efforts. The group with the most power—the Catholic
Church—ended up “winning” the PR battle. God was not a factor.
But
in the views of both the “Gospel of Judas” and “The Da Vinci Code,” God is a
silent, powerless wimp. Sinister men were able to squash God’s true message.
Well,
I don’t know about you, but the God I worship is not a powerless wimp. And He
is not silent. He didn’t go to all the trouble of creating mankind in the first
place and employing a wonderful plan of salvation after mankind rebelled, to
then just sit back idly as His plan was being suppressed. The God I worship is
not that impotent.
The
only “version” of history that makes any sense at all is that God employed His
wonderful plan of salvation, and then insured that the plan would be known to
all the world by sending the Holy Spirit, “the Spirit of truth,” to “guide [us]
to all truth.”
The
other “versions” of history may give people a warm fuzzy feeling, and make them
think that they possess secret, special knowledge—not to mention allowing them
to focus on themselves rather than the much more difficult requirement of
denying themselves. However, the Good News of Jesus Christ, preached beginning
on the Day of Pentecost in the year 33 A.D. and continuing unchanged to this
very day, is the true Truth. And it is the only “version” of the story, guided
and preserved by the Holy Spirit, that can get us into Heaven.