Is the Da Vinci Code true?
Though first published in 2003, Dan Brown's book The Da Vinci Code remains a
bestseller. In addition, even before the movie was released, Newsweek crowned
the film adaptation from Columbia Pictures 2006's "hottest movie." To help you
understand the fine line between fact and fiction in this fascinating story, we
summoned the help of an expert, Dr. Craig L. Blomberg, Distinguished Professor
of New Testament at Denver Seminary.
Dr. Blomberg completed his Ph.D. in New Testament at Aberdeen University in
Scotland. In addition to writing numerous articles, he has authored or edited
fifteen books, including: The Historical Reliability of the Gospels,
Interpreting the Parables, Jesus and the Gospels: An Introduction and Survey,
and Making Sense of the New Testament .
A New Testament Scholar Reviews The Da Vinci Code: A Novel by Dan Brown.
The most important word in this entire book is the noun in the subtitle; this is
a "novel" - a work of fiction. That is important to remember, especially after
the statements on page 1, which move the work slightly into the arena of
historical fiction, but only slightly. With respect to art, Mary Magdalene most
certainly does not appear in Da Vinci's painting, 'The Last Supper.'
With respect to the secret rituals of the Priory of Sion, they are all imaginary
because that society was invented in 1956 by an ultra-right-wing Frenchman who
pretended to be heir to the French throne. It is true that the author has worked
hard to describe accurately the contemporary European locations, including city
layouts, buildings, and artwork, in which the plot is set. The statement that
"all descriptions of. . .documents. . .in this novel are accurate" is, however,
highly inaccurate!
It didn't take me very long in reading this book to understand why it was the #1
bestseller on the New York Times list of fiction for a large portion of 2003. It
is well-written, fast-paced, with surprising turns of plot and intrigue
regularly shocking readers, especially when they start to think they have things
figured out. It contains all the elements of a good murder mystery, enough vivid
portrayals that one can imagine the events depicted on location, especially if
one is familiar with France and Britain, and bite-sized chapters that regularly
end with a "cliffhanger" begging one to read more. I could hardly put the book
down myself, wanting to know what would happen next.
I am not presumptuous enough to claim to be an expert critic of contemporary
American fiction. And more than the barest description of the plot would destroy
the fun for prospective readers. The following will have to suffice. The main
character, Professor Robert Langdon, a supposed expert in "symbology" from
Harvard, while in Paris as a guest lecturer, has plans to meet with the curator
of the Louvre, Jacques Saunière. Before the meeting can happen, Saunière is
murdered under bizarre circumstances, and Langdon is seemingly about to be
charged with his killing. Strange codes scrawled at the murder scene bring on
stage one Sophie Neveu, an expert cryptographer, who turns out to have secret
messages for Langdon, leading the two to flee on a trip that begins as an
attempt to save Langdon's life and eventually enmeshes them in the famous
medieval "quest for the holy grail"-except that the grail is not the chalice
that Jesus used at the Last Supper but. . . Well, I really can't tell you any
more than this without spoiling too much.
Much of what could mislead the careless reader involves the history and
contemporary manifestations in Brown's narrative of the two societies, the
Priory of Sion and Opus Dei, which prove to be antagonists to each other in his
story. Apart from their very general religious objectives and the names of a few
famous leaders in the former, almost everything crucial to the plot-line about
these two groups is made up. But what concerns me most, as a New Testament
scholar, are the number of people who think that the occasional comments about
Jesus, his associates and the literature and events of the first three Christian
centuries are at all accurate.
Put simply, they are not, and even very liberal biblical scholars (as in, for
example, the famous Jesus Seminar) agree. Specifically, there is not a shred of
historical evidence that Jesus ever married Mary Magdalene (or anyone else) or
ever fathered children. Such information would certainly have been included in
the Bible (1 Corinthians 9) where Paul appeals to the fact that Peter and
various other apostles had wives when they received material help from the
churches. In supporting his right to receive such help, Paul would have wanted
to appeal to an even more convincing example-Jesus-if it were available. Also,
with the very early veneration of Mary in Roman Catholicism - largely out of a
desire to have a quasi-divine female figure along with God the Father - had
Jesus ever been married, such a woman could scarcely have disappeared without a
historical trace. She would have been celebrated and venerated instead,
especially in the very strands of Catholicism that The Da Vinci Code pit against
the revelation of "the truth" of Jesus' marriage. Brown instead stands this
logic on its head when he has Langdon allege that it was so unusual for a Jewish
man not to be married that, if he were celibate, that is what the Gospels would
have had to call attention to (p. 245). But in a sense that is precisely what
they do when Jesus counterculturally approves of a single, celibate lifestyle in
Matthew 19:10-12. And numerous other features in the Gospels call attention to
certain ascetic tendencies in Jesus' life, making his celibacy less surprising.
Moreover, it is not true that "according to Jewish custom, celibacy was
condemned"-some Jewish sects in fact promoted celibacy as a spiritual ideal.
Another blatantly fictitious portion of The Da Vinci Code is the claim that
"more than eighty gospels were considered for the New Testament." Add up
everything that was ever called a gospel in the first half-millennium of
Christianity (most of which are small compilations of esoteric sayings ascribed
to Jesus and not narratives of any portion of his life) and you come up with
about two dozen documents. About half of these are known only from quotations in
early church fathers or small scraps or fragments that have been discovered, and
there is little that is unorthodox in them. The only rejected "Gospel" that any
sizable number of scholars of any theological stripe gives serious credence to
is the Coptic Gospel of Thomas, a collection of 114 sayings attributed to Jesus,
of which some are orthodox, some not, and some simply intriguing.
But Brown's characters do not appeal to the Gospel of Thomas at all! Equally
false is Langdon's claim that "The Bible, as we know it today, was collated by
the pagan Roman emperor Constantine the Great" (p. 231). While historians do
debate how serious Constantine's conversion to Christianity was, he certainly
didn't remain a pagan. And he had nothing to do with the canonization of the New
Testament. That was a process the roots of which can be documented as early as
the mid-second century, culminating in A.D. 367 when the 27 books of the New
Testament were agreed on by all branches of Christianity. It is true that there
was dispute from the second to the fourth centuries over seven of the NT books,
for various reasons, but there is no evidence that there was ever any proposal
not to include the Gospels of
Matthew, Mark, Luke or John or to include any other Gospel. Brown further
confuses the truth by alluding to the Dead Sea Scrolls as if they included
Gospels (p. 234), when in fact they contain no Christian documents
whatsoever-only Jewish (and a few Greek).
In marshalling support for Mary Magdalene as Jesus' wife, Langdon avers that
"the Gospel of Philip is always a good place to start" (p. 246). Hardly, since
even very liberal scholars agree that this is a late, third-century collection.
Thus there is little if anything in it that is likely to be historical. What is
more, this "Gospel" exists only in Coptic, not Aramaic, so that it is irrelevant
when Langdon goes on to claim that the word "companion" (which Mary is deemed to
be of Jesus) means "spouse" in Aramaic. It is also worth pointing out that no
Aramaic or Hebrew words for "companion" normally mean spouse! The very short
collection of sayings known as the Gospel of Mary (the next plank in Langdon's
platform for marrying the Magdalene to Jesus) claims only that Jesus loved her
more than various apostles and it comes from an even later date, casting doubt
on its historicity.
At several points in various ways Brown's novel makes the claim that Jesus was
not considered divine until the fourth century. This, too, is patently false -
the claims emerge already in the first-century canonical gospels, as again every
biblical scholar of every stripe recognizes. Of course, a lively debate
continues as to whether those claims were deserved, but that's quite different
from what The Da Vinci Code is talking about.
The most sweeping of all the fictitious claims in this book is the idea that the
Priory of Sion has preserved "thousands of ancient documents as scientific
evidence that the New Testament is false testimony" (p. 341). Such documents
simply don't exist. This is part of Brown's fiction. The legendary post-New
Testament material that does exist has been scrutinized intensely by biblical
scholars and is available in English translation for all to read. Nothing in
them undermines the New Testament. There is no hidden cache being suppressed
from the general public.
For readers who want actual scholarship pointing to the reliability of the New
Testament, I invite them to consult my books on The Historical Reliability of
the Gospels (Downers Grove: IVP, 1987) and The Historical Reliability of John's
Gospel: Issues and Commentary (Downers Grove: IVP, 1991). For an excellent study
of what can truly be known about Jesus outside the New Testament, see the book
with that title by Robert E. Van Voorst (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000).
Meanwhile, enjoy The Da Vinci Code. It's a fantastic novel. I'm so glad I read
it. Just keep reminding yourself throughout, "It's only a novel. It's only a
novel."
Craig L. Blomberg, Ph.D.
Distinguished Professor of New Testament
Denver Seminary
A full version of Dr. Blomberg's review can be found at
www.denverseminary.edu/dj/articles2004/0200/0202.php