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| where is john?
Dan Brown claims in The Da Vinci Code that Mary Magdalene,
not the Apostle John, is pictured to Jesus’ right in
Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper. However, no credible
art historian shares that view. And, if true, where is John
in the picture? |
Da Vinci Code
Errors: A Quick List
By D. James Kennedy, Ph.D., and Jerry Newcombe.
The Da Vinci Code is a novel, but it claims to be
based on facts. It is okay for a novelist to create a
fictional story—and even a fictional setting if he wishes.
What he can’t do with impunity is to claim that that
fictional background is based on fact. However, that is
precisely what Dan Brown has done. His “fact” is just as
much fiction as his fiction.
The Da Vinci Code is chock full of errors. Some are
unimportant; others, if true, would spell the end of
Christianity. Here are some of the many errors in The Da
Vinci Code. This is by no means an exhaustive list.
Error: The book tells readers that “The New Testament
is false testimony.”
Rebuttal: The New Testament was sealed with the
apostles’ blood. They put their money where their mouths
were. The Greek word for “witness”—as in the idea of
witnessing to the truth about Jesus— is “martyro,” from
whence we get the word martyr. Why? Because so many
witnesses to Jesus, e.g., the apostles, were killed for
testifying about what they themselves saw. Brown glibly
ignores this history and, instead, exalts the questionable
writings of second, third, and fourth century Gnostic
Christians, who were sexual libertines for the most part.
(Other Gnostics were strict legalists.)
Error: The doctrine that Jesus was divine
was created by a pagan emperor in the fourth century,
Constantine, for the purposes of manipulation: “It was all
about power.”
Rebuttal: After the Resurrection, Christians
worshiped Jesus because He was divine. They called Him “Kurios,”
the Greek word for “Lord.” In the Septuagint—the Greek
translation of the Old Testament that Jesus and the apostles
had (translated roughly 150 B.C.)—the word used for Yahweh
is Kurios. For a Jew to say that a human was Kurios was
absolutely forbidden.
Error: No one believed, prior to the Council
of Nicea in 325 A.D. that Jesus was divine.
Rebuttal: Again, in the Gospels, written in the first
century, we see that Jesus was divine. This is why He was
delivered up to be crucified. The Jews accused Him of
blasphemy, which is why they arrested Jesus and had a
“trial” among themselves:
Dan Brown’s view that the early Christians believed Jesus
was only a mortal rests on historical quicksand. From the
very beginning, Christians worshiped Jesus as the Son of
God. Cracking Da Vinci’s Code authors Jim Garlow and
Peter Jones have compiled a list of several Church
Fathers—all of whom wrote before the Council of Nicea in 325
A.D.—affirming this most basic Christian doctrine that Jesus
was divine. Those Fathers include: Ignatius (writing in 105
A.D.), Clement (150), Justin Martyr (160), Irenaeus (180),
Tertullian (200), Origen (225), Novatian (235), Cyprian
(250), Methodius (290), Lactantius (304), and Arnobius
(305). Furthermore, one of the earliest Christian creeds was
“Jesus is the Lord” (Kurios) (1 Corinthians 12:3).
Error: Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene, and the
Gnostic gospels teach that.
Rebuttal: There is the flimsiest of evidence for
that. There is one passage in the pseudo Gospel of Philip,
written about 250 A.D., long after Philip the apostle had
died, that claims Jesus often kissed Mary Magdalene on her
________ (where he kissed her is obscure in the manuscript).
The word could have been mouth, cheek, forehead, or
whatever. Even liberal scholar Karen King of Harvard
University observes that this is referring to a holy kiss
that is asexual in nature. Just like it says in the Bible,
greet one another with “a holy kiss” (Romans 16:16). Let’s
also remember that this was written more than 200 years
after Christ. So even Dan Brown’s sources from antiquity
don’t make his case for him.
Error: In The Last Supper, Leonardo da Vinci allegedly painted Mary Magdalene seated next
to Jesus.
Rebuttal: One of Dan Brown’s proofs is that John
looks so feminine, but John is often portrayed in such a way
in art because he was young. Go to any cathedral and look at
the stained glass images of John. Just as you can identify
Peter because he is holding keys, and you can tell Andrew
because he is holding a Cross like an X (the kind on which
He was crucified), so you can tell John by his feminine
looks. But suppose it were the case that Leonardo
intentionally painted Mary Magdalene next to Jesus instead
of John, because Jesus and Mary were allegedly married, and
Leonardo was in on the secret, then where is the “beloved
disciple” John? He is not in the picture. Where is he? Under
the table?
Error: The Gnostic gospels uniformly teach the
“sacred feminine”—the pagan idea that sex with a woman is
the route to a relationship with God.
Rebuttal: Unlike the four Gospels, the Gnostic
gospels can be actually degrading to women. The Gospel of
Thomas declares that a woman cannot be saved unless God
first changes her into a man (the very last verse of Thomas,
114).
Error: The Priory of Sion, which looms large in the
novel, was created in 1099 by the Knights Templar.
Rebuttal: The Priory of Sion was created out of whole
cloth in 1956 by a French anti-Semite con man, Pierre
Plantard. In 1975, documents were found in the Biblioteque
Nationale in Paris that allegedly proved the Priory is as
old as 1099, and that Leonardo da Vinci and Isaac Newton and
other luminaries secretly presided over it. These documents
were proved to be fakes.
Was There Any Fact-Checking?
There are so many errors among the alleged “accurate
depictions” of The Da Vinci Code that historian and
first-rate scholar Paul Maier just has to shake his head. He
notes, “Detailing all the errors, misinterpretations,
deceptions, distortions, and outright falsehoods in The
Da Vinci Code makes one wonder whether Brown’s
manuscript ever underwent editorial scrutiny or
fact-checking.”
Amazingly, we live in the Information Age, yet we live in an
age of massive disinformation. The Bible says Satan is the
“the prince of the power of the air” (Ephesians 2:2). The
Bible also says that in the end times, “men will not endure
sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to
themselves teachers, having itching ears” (2 Timothy 4:3).
Is that not happening in our own day?
I trust that out of all of this, God, who is able to turn
all things to our good, will use it to give opportunities
for us to share the true Gospel of the true Savior, who gave
His life and shed His blood that we might be forgiven and
redeemed and saved by His grace through faith.
Adapted
from The Da Vinci Myth Versus The Gospel Truth by D.
James Kennedy, Ph.D., and Jerry Newcombe. Discover how
history and the Bible dispute Dan Brown when you
request this book. |
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