About a month ago, after my son had read the book we had a programme
debunking the author, who was quite uncomfortable with the questions
put forward by the researcher. The painting depicting Mary Magdalen
was in fact John. Any way please see below........

http://mailer.fsu.edu/~bmurphy/Page9.html
Unravelling the Da Vinci Code:

This is the text of a presentation I gave at Exedra Bookstore, 13th
April 2004 as a prelude to a discussion:



FACT: The Da Vinci Code has been hugely successful, earning its
author, Dan Brown, a lot of money.

FACT: Before he became an author, Dan Brown was a professor.

FACT: I rather fancy earning a lot of money myself.

So, as I read  The Da Vinci Code, I ask myself – what is the secret of
this book's success? It does not live up to standard expectations
about great literature. The prose-style is simple and the
characterisation is thin, relying on easily stereotypes: Fache, the
well-intentioned detective who never lets up in his pursuit of the
wrong suspects; Teabing, who fits every American's idea of a British
aristocrat; and Father Aringarosa, the scheming head of Opus Dei. It
has often been said that the ambition of Opus Dei was to take over the
role of the Jesuits, and it seems that they have at least succeeded in
becoming the most obvious target for anti-clerical sentiment.
But it would be unfair to say that Brown is pandering to prejudices.
His characters are easy to remember, just as the simple prose is easy
to read, and, like any good detective writer, he is aware of the
likely prejudices and expectations of his readers and manipulates
these to produce surprises. The plot is carefully crafted, so that at
every stage, just when we think we've got it all figured out, a new
revelation puts everything we thought we knew into a new perspective.
This has been the method of modern detective stories at least since
the time of Wilkie Collins, and Brown has certainly mastered this
genre. However, I don't think that this is sufficient to explain the
extraordinary success of The Da Vinci Code. Brown feeds us with
revelations not just about the murder of a librarian, but about the
quest for the Holy Grail and the origins of Christianity. I say
'revelations', but the history will not come as a revelation to
anyone, indeed, on p. 253, Brown helpfully lists his sources,
including a previous international bestseller, Holy Blood, Holy Grail.
Unlike The Da Vinci Code, this book was published as a work of history
rather than a work of fiction, although its reputation amongst
scholars does not quite match its popular success. Because he is not
even pretending to write history, Brown is able to make use of the
more sensational claims of this book, without having to worry about
whether these claims can be substantiated. If this inspires readers to
take a serious interest in the history behind the book, that's all to
the good, as long as people don't mistake what is, after all, a work
of fiction for a piece of serious history.
Brown does claim, on p.1 that

All descriptions of artwork, architecture, documents and secret
rituals in this novel are accurate.

It is possible, however, to be highly misleading without being
inaccurate. Consider, for example, the opening statement:

FACT:
The Priory of Sion – a European secret society founded in 1099 – is a
real organization. In 1975 Paris's Bibliothèque Nationale discovered
parchments known as Les Dossiers Secrets, identifying numerous members
of the Priory of Sion including Sir Isaac Newton, Botticelli, Victor
Hugo and Leonardo da Vinci.

In fact, there were three organisations called the Priory of Sion. The
first version of the club, founded in 1956, was described by one of
the founding members as four friends coming together to have fun. One
of the four friends, Pierre Plantard was a man with an active
imagination and extreme right-wing tendencies. In 1962, he founded
another society with the same name, but his goal seems to have been to
set up a secret society that would rival the freemasons, but would
spread extreme right-wing ideas. Of course, any society that takes the
freemasons as a model must have some history behind it, and Plantard
duly invented one, and planted forged documents in the Bibliothèque
Nationale. Forced to admit the fraud, he was resigned from the Priory
of Sion in 1983. In 1989, he founded a third version of the Priory. In
1993, documents were uncovered in his apartment that claimed he was
the true King of France. He died in Paris in 2000. For an excellent
web-site on the topic, go to  http://priory-of-sion.com/ I won't bore
you with the details. I suspect that Dan Brown is playing a joke on
his readers here; on p.217, he states that a BBC documentary
corroborated the stunning results of Teabing's research on the Grail.
In fact, a BBC documentary was produced (I think it was in the 1990's)
on Holy Blood, Holy Grail. So far from corroborating it, the
documentary exposed the book as a piece of nonsense. The moral is that
you Americans should watch the BBC more often, then you wouldn't be so
easily taken in. I do think it's unfair of Brown to include this in a
section labelled 'FACT', but I guess he's a joker, waiting to see how
many people are gullible enough to fall for the bait. (More info on
the Priory of Sion).

Mary Magdalene as the Lover of Jesus: The Da Vinci Code and History:

The Priory of Sion provides a useful way of linking many pieces of
history – documents and art-works, in a grand thread. Once we realise
that the Priory of Sion is a hoax, the thread unravels – but what
about the details? The claim that I've been asked about most often is
that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were lovers. Is this historically
credible? I hope you will indulge me if I give you all a little lesson
in New Testament studies (if you enjoy it, I'm teaching a course on
this topic this Summer). For me, the patient process of searching for
the historical truth is ultimately more exciting than a fictional wild
goose chase.

I quote from pp. 245-246:

'These are photocopies of the Nag Hammadi and Dead Sea scrolls which I
mentioned earlier,' Teabing said. 'The earliest Christian records.
Troublingly, they do not match up with the gospels in the Bible.'
Flipping toward the middle of the book, Teabing pointed to a passage.
'The Gospel of Philip is always a good place to start.'
Sophie read the passage:
And the companion of the [Saviour is] Mary Magdalene.[ Christ] loved
her more than [all] the disciples and used to kiss her often on her[
mouth]. The rest of [the disciples were offended by it and expressed
disapproval.] They said to him 'Why do you love her more than all of
us?'

(Passages in [] indicate a gap in the MS, where the translator has
guessed what the missing material might be. These passages are not
bracketed in The Da Vinci Code.)

The Nag Hammadi documents and the Dead Sea Scrolls are real enough.
They are the two most important manuscript finds for understanding the
early history of Judaism and Christianity. The Dead Sea Scrolls are
the work of a Jewish sect, not of Christians, and so can hardly be
called 'The earliest Christian records.' The Nag Hammadi documents are
indeed early Christian records, but they cannot, as a group, be
described as the earliest. The Gospel of Philip, quoted here, may date
from the second half of the 3rd Century (Note on dates). The familiar
canonical Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John all date from the 1st
Century. We should be cautious about accepting this statement about
Mary Magdalene as the historical truth. In fact, I will go further and
say that I think we should reject this passage as fictitious. Allow me
to explain why.
I should make it clear at once that I do not reject this passage in
favour of blind adherence to the picture of Jesus that we have from
the canonical Gospels. If we are serious about wanting to understand
the historical figure of Jesus, we must be prepared to judge all the
evidence, whether it comes from a canonical or non-canonical source,
by the standards of critical historical enquiry. Let me give an
example that concerns only the canonical Gospels. Bear in mind that
most scholars think Luke used Mark as a source. (Biblical quotations
from Revised Standard Version).

Mk 14: 46-48

And they laid hands on him and seized him. But one of those who stood
by drew his sword and struck the slave of the high priest and cut off
his ear. And Jesus said to them, "Have you come out as against a
robber, with swords and clubs to capture me?"

In the confusion of Jesus's arrest, someone's ear gets cut off. The
way it's described here, it could be accidental; the man who draws the
sword might be part of the arresting party.

Lk 22: 49-51

And when those who were about him saw what would follow, they said
'Lord, shall we strike with the sword?' And one of them struck the
servant of the high priest and cut off his ear. But Jesus said, "No
more of this!" And he touched his ear and healed him.

This is the version Mel Gibson prefers; Jesus demonstrates that he
forgives those who attack him. Luke emphasises forgiveness more than
any other evangelist (he is the one who records the words "Father,
forgive them, they know not what they do.") Why does nobody else
mention the healing of the ear? The most likely explanation is that
Luke made it up, elaborating the story that he found in Mark. It isn't
so much that the healing itself is incredible: I don't think its right
to doubt that Jesus was a great healer. Its simply odd that nobody
else records the fact, not even John, who claims to know the servant's
name (Malchus), and it fits so well with Luke's theology of
forgiveness. Stories get exaggerated as they are told again, and that
seems to be what's happened here. It looks as though the facts have
been spiced up with a bit of fiction.

Now some passages from the non-canonical Gospels. First, the Gospel of
Thomas - incidentally, this really is one of the oldest Christian
documents we have: possibly from the 1st Century, possibly older than
John's Gospel (although Ehrman dates it to early 2nd Century):

Simon Peter said to them, 'Let Mary leave us, for women are not worthy of life.'
Jesus replied 'I myself will lead her in order to make her male, so
that she too may become a living spirit resembling you males. For
every woman who will make herself male will enter the kingdom of
heaven.'(Footnote 2)

Message: to enter the Kingdom, you must transcend your gender
(elsewhere, we are told that men must become women: I'll return to
this). This then sets the stage for The Gospel of Mary, a dialogue
that dates to the 2nd Century, and one that's quoted by Teabing. The
disciples ask Mary to reveal the teachings of Jesus, because she knew
him so well. She tells them about a vision that she has had, but
Andrew and Peter refuse to believe that Jesus would reveal teachings
to a woman: they are jealous of her prophetic gifts. Peter also
expresses jealousy of Mary in the Pistis Sophia, one of the most
important gnostic texts that was known before the Nag Hammadi
discoveries: it probably dates from the same time as the Gospel of
Philip. Again, Jesus defends her.
The common theme then is that Peter expresses doubts about Mary,
because she is a woman, but Jesus vindicates her. In Thomas, the
question is whether she can be included in the group at all. In The
Gospel of Mary, it is whether her vision is to be believed: she is
more intimate with Jesus than Peter, so he is jealous. Nowhere in The
Gospel of Mary does Mary claim to be his wife or companion however,
which would have been the best way to shut Peter and Andrew up! In the
Gospel of Philip, the level of intimacy between Jesus and Mary has
reached its peak: he kisses her somewhere ('the mouth' is a
translator's guess: kisses on the mouth have ritual significance in
this Gospel). She is his 'companion', which does seem to mean 'wife'
or 'girlfriend', but then Peter's question hardly makes sense: "Why do
you kiss your wife but you never kiss me? Do you love your wife more
than you love me?" I suggest that this is because the author of The
Gospel of Philip invented this detail.(Footnote 3)

As these texts are being written, the gnostics who write them are
being rejected by the orthodox Church that is emerging – Mary and
Peter are probably being used to represent two positions in
ecclesiastical politics. As with the ear of the high priest's servant,
the story grows in the telling. Incidentally, the same thing was
happening with the other Mary, Jesus' mother. In the mid 2nd Century,
around the same time that the Gospel of Philip was written, the
Proto-Gospel of James described the birth and childhood of the Virgin
Mary, and includes a rather icky story about her perpetual virginity.
This exercised a decisive influence on Catholic piety, but I don't
know of any scholar who takes it seriously as history, and if I came
across such a scholar, I would find it hard to take their scholarship
seriously.

Teabing adds (p. 245) that if Jesus had been unmarried, the Gospels
would contained some explanation, given that marriage was the norm:
'the social decorum at that time virtually forbid a Jewish man to be
unmarried.' He overlooks the Dead Sea Scrolls, whose importance he has
just told us about. The scrolls were probably produced by the Essenes,
a Jewish sect that seem to favour celibacy for religious reasons (note
4).

to be continued......................

-- 
Cheers,

Gabe Menezes.
London, England

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