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The Da Vinci Fallacy
Interview With Columnist and Author Amy Welborn
FORT WAYNE, Indiana, APRIL 7, (HYPERLINK "http://
www.zenit.org"Zenit.org).-

First, there was "The Da Vinci Code." Now there's "De-coding Da Vinci."

The latter, by writer Amy Welborn, aims to debunk the errors that permeate the
best-selling novel by Dan Brown.

Welborn is a columnist and reviewer for the Catholic weekly Our Sunday Visitor
and the author of several books, including the "Prove It!" series of
apologetics books for youth, also published by Our Sunday Visitor.

Q: Isn't "The Da Vinci Code" just a work of fiction? Why do you think it was
important to write a book like yours?

Welborn: "The Da Vinci Code" certainly is a work of fiction -- in more ways than
one, actually. But within the framework of this novel, author Dan Brown
presents many assertions about history, religion and art. He presents them as
truth, not as part of his fictional world.

For example, one of Brown's central points is that the earliest Christians did
not believe that Jesus was divine, and that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were
married.

He puts these assertions in the mouths of scholar characters, and frames them
with phrases like "Historians say" and "Scholars understand." In addition,
Brown presents the titles of real, albeit unreliable, sources within his book,
as well as in a bibliography offered on his Web site.

Further, author Dan Brown has repeatedly said in interviews that part of what he
is doing in this book is presenting a heretofore "lost history" to readers, and
that he is glad to be doing so.

So, certainly, "The Da Vinci Code" is a novel, but the author makes assertions
about history within the novel, presents them as fact and widely accepted, and
it is this element of the novel that has disturbed some readers and requires a
response.

Q: What are the most important assertions about Christian origins that author
Dan Brown makes in this novel? What seems to be disturbing people the most?

Welborn: Brown makes several assertions, none of which would be taken seriously
by real, as opposed to fictional scholars.

The basis of the book is that Jesus, a mortal teacher of wisdom, was intent on
reintroducing the notion of the "sacred feminine" back into human consciousness
and experience. He drew followers, and was married to Mary Magdalene, whom he
designated as the leader of his movement.

This was opposed by another party -- the "Peter party" -- which worked to
suppress the truth, which was ultimately achieved through the actions of
Emperor Constantine who "divinized" Jesus at the Council of Nicaea in 325.

It is this suggestion that the Christian Church has been engaged in a
destructive cover-up of the truth that has disturbed readers, as well as the
idea -- propped up by Brown's assertions that "historians believe" -- that
Jesus was not experienced as divine by his earliest followers.

Q: How do you address these assertions?

Welborn: The first thing I do is to point out the contradictions inherent in
these statements. They simply don't make any sense on innumerable levels.

For example, Brown says that the "Peter party," meaning orthodox Christianity,
was opposed to Mary Magdalene and demonized her.

Well, in the centuries this was supposedly happening -- the first three
centuries of Christianity -- we have many examples of Church Fathers holding
Mary Magdalene up for particular praise. Mary Magdalene is honored as a saint
in Catholicism and Orthodoxy. How is that "demonizing"?

Further, and more fundamentally, Brown claims that Constantine basically
invented the notion of Christ's divinity in order to prop up his power and
unify the empire.

If this were the case, then who was, in fact, the "Peter party" of Orthodoxy
which Brown claims was battling the Mary Magdalene devotees for power all of
those centuries? It just doesn't hold up.

Basic to all of this is the question of sources, which I take a great deal of
time addressing in my book. Readers need to understand that the sources upon
which Brown depends are mostly Gnostic writings dating from the late first
century at the earliest, and most probably later.

He completely ignores the New Testament writings, which even skeptical scholars
date from the first century, as well as the consistent witness of the Greek and
Latin Fathers, as well as liturgical evidence from these first three centuries.

Given this, there's no reason to take anything Brown says about Christian
origins seriously.

Q: What is the role of Opus Dei in "The Da Vinci Code"? What's your response to
this?

Welborn: In "The Da Vinci Code," Opus Dei plays the part, I believe, that the
Jesuits used to play in older anti-Catholic fiction and polemic: a worldwide
secret society with unique ties to the Pope that is up to no good.

Brown uses a caricature of Opus Dei in this novel, although he does cover his
bases and make them dupes, rather than villains, eventually.

But needless to say, "The Da Vinci Code" is full of misstatements and
mischaracterizations of Opus Dei, as well as the rather interesting figure of
an Opus Dei "monk," which, in itself discounts anything else Brown has to say
about the group because, of course, Opus Dei is a primarily lay organization
and does not have monks.

Q: Are the assertions that Brown makes about Leonardo's art defensible?

Welborn: Not at all, and it's rather shocking how blatant his mistakes are, on
almost every aspect of the artist's life and work that he attempts to discuss.
I have many details in my book, but I think the place to start is with the
artist's name.

Brown presents himself as some sort of devotee and expert in art history. But he
also consistently refers to the artist in question as "da Vinci," as if this
were his name. It's not. It's the indicator of his home town.

The man's name was "Leonardo," and that is the name by which he is called in any
art book you might pick up. Anyone who claims to be an art expert and refers to
the artist as "da Vinci" is as credible as a person claiming to be a Church
historian who refers to Jesus as "of Nazareth."

Q: Is "The Da Vinci Code" anti-Catholic?

Welborn: It is, in this sense: Dan Brown holds Catholicism guilty for supposed
crimes that, if he were consistent, for which he should hold all Christianity
guilty.

After all, it is not only Catholicism that believes that Jesus is divine,
recites the Nicene Creed, and accepts the canon of the New Testament. It is not
only the Catholic Church that played a role -- and not nearly as great as Brown
claims -- in execution of witches during the late medieval and early modern
period.

As a U.S. citizen, I can tell you with confidence that Catholic bishops were not
in charge during the 17th-century Salem, Massachusetts, witch trials.

So yes, in that sense, "The Da Vinci Code" is anti-Catholic.

Q: Why do you think the assertions about Christian origins that Brown makes have
been so eagerly received, even by self-professed Christians?

Welborn: Because, unfortunately, they have not been well educated in the
historical origins of Christianity. My book is essentially an attempt to do
some gentle correction of that situation.

I encourage readers, in the end, to not depend on the silliness of this novel to
broaden their understanding of Christian origins.

If they are interested in who Jesus really was and what he really preached and
was about, there is an easily accessible way to do that, which isn't secret or
hidden. It's the New Testament. It's the sacramental life of the Church. If you
want to meet Jesus, I say, start there. You might be surprised at what you
find. *****
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