Joshua Patrick wrote:The Da Vinci Code, it's at the heart of the Catholic Church, it is so offensive it is unbelievable.
The book hits at heart of the Christian faith, specially the Church itself.
Making out that Opus Dei, is some assasination organisation at the His Holiness' disposal. Even when Opus Dei approached the Author not to write lies about them, he did it anyways.
This article, pretty much destroys all the theories he makes.
http://www.catholic.com/library/crackin ... i_code.asp
If you will look on the title page of the book, it says, "A Novel." That means it is FICTION. If it offends your religion, don't read it. Anybody dim enough to take the fictional conspiracies and intrigue in this book seriously has problems much bigger than a lack of faith in the Roman Catholic Church.
I am a Jew. My client, the 88-year-old visually-impaired woman for whom I care, is a Christian of a rather conservative bent. I read to her for several hours every day. We have just finished reading Francine Rivers'
A Lineage of Grace, a set of five novellas based on the lives of Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, Bathsheba, and Mary, the mother of Jesus. They are reverent and deeply Christian books, very well written, and the deity and salvific power of Christ is assumed on every page. Today, we began Lloyd C. Douglas's
The Robe, another emphatically Christian novel. We both enjoyed the Rivers book immensely, though I do not share the author's religion, and I am enjoying
The Robe as well -- old-fashioned, VERY literate and gracefully written, so much so that it's almost a sensual pleasure to read it aloud. I fully expect to be reading about the wonder and the power of Jesus as I read on.
Somehow I don't find all this upsetting. I can enjoy good writing, and can appreciate a divine Jesus as a character of fiction, though others might of course take that character, and the ideas that surround him in the book, more seriously than I. Perhaps you might take the same approach to the fictional Opus Dei in
The Da Vinci Code. Unlike the books I am reading, I doubt that anyone other than conspiracy freaks and other assorted nuts and flakes take that book seriously at all. It's more than a little amazing that you do.