MAYFIELD, Ky. -- The Almighty is convicting -- her word --
our freshly-saved Southern Baptist neighbor against evil.
"Going to see that movie is a sin," she warned our
13-year-old son. She meant The Da Vinci Code.
Berry IV and his folks gambled with their souls and went
anyway. "The family that sins together…"
Of course, our neighbor isn’t alone in dissing The Da
Vinci Code, book and movie. The religious right group Focus on the Family
says the Da Vinci Code "is a seductive fiction being presented as
fact."
But wait. Author Dan Brown and hell-bound Hollywood,
however unwittingly, have opened "a door of opportunity" with the Da Vinci
Code, Focus folks say. The novel and film can be soul-savers, FOFers add.
FOF has spun an Internet website to help the faithful
"know the truth and share it with others." The website quotes Dr. Edwin
Lutzer, who wrote The Da Vinci Deception: "The movie will confuse
lots of people, but Jesus will become the centerpiece of many conversations.
For those who are prepared to explain that Christianity rests on solid
foundations, the opportunity will be tremendous."
The movie’s star, Tom Hanks, doesn’t understand the fuss.
Apparently, my Southern Baptist in-laws and their kids don’t either. They
watched the film with us. The boys loved the novel that inspired the movie
and lent its name to the film.
Hanks says we shouldn’t take The Da Vinci Code too
seriously. "…The story we tell is loaded with all sorts of hooey and fun
kind of scavenger-hunt-type nonsense," he claimed in the Evening Standard, a
newspaper in London, where part of the movie was filmed. "If you are going
to take any sort of movie at face value, particularly a huge-budget motion
picture like this, you’d be making a very big mistake."
The FOF probably thinks Hanks is just another sneaky,
liberal Hollywood heathen like The Da Vinci Code’s director, Ron Howard.
Opie, we hardly know ye.
I haven’t heard anybody connected with the movie claim it
is factual. Brown says his book is make-believe.
Even so, the FOF frets that "many readers (and presumably
film-goers) are expressing confusion about Christianity due to the blurred
historical references and facts" in The Da Vinci Code. Beware, they say,
"The Word of God warns us of false teachers who ‘secretly introduce
destructive heresies, even denying the sovereign Lord who brought them.’"
If you haven’t seen the movie or read the book, the plot
goes like this: Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene; sinister Catholic
conspirators have hidden the secret for eons, and the Holy Couple has divine
descendants living in France.
That’s entertainment, but not necessarily entertaining.
Writing in Newsweek, movie critic David Ansen called the movie
"overstuffed and underwhelming," adding that The Da Vinci Code is "not
likely to topple Christianity as we know it."
Nonetheless, Focus on the Family and its leader, Dr. James
Dobson, will doubtless continue their tilting at The Da Vinci Code windmill
with "truth" as FOF defines it: You can’t be a liberal and a Christian.
(Dobson has been cozy with the Republican right for years.)
Anyway, what possibly bothers Brother Dobson most about
the movie and the book is that most of Christendom seems unvexed by them.
The film is making millions; the novel is an international bestseller.
Dobson, of course, is famous for ferreting out "hidden
agendas." In 1994, the FOF magazine clobbered the Girl Scouts for making "a
religious oath optional for membership," according to Americans United for
Separation of Church and State. Dobson "added that the Girl Scouts are
‘pushing a philosophy -- a philosophy that includes humanism and radical
feminism,’" AU says.
Last year, Dobson disparaged a We Are Family
Foundation-sponsored music video that used SpongeBob SquarePants and other
popular cartoon characters to promote tolerance among kids. Dobson is on
record against the t-word.
In 1996, he claimed "tolerance" is a "double meaning" term
that "can be misconstrued by those ‘who reject the concept of right and
wrong,’" according to AU. "Tolerance," Dobson concluded, "is ‘kind of a
desensitization to evil of all varieties,’" AU reports.
Dobson suspected the We Are Family video "hijacked"
SpongeBob and the other "childhood symbols…to promote an agenda that
involves teaching homosexual propaganda to children." Sponge Bob has held
hands with Patrick, his starfish sidekick.
Eventually, The Da Vinci Code will exit movie screens for
video stores. The novel will fall from the best seller list and end up in
the bargain bin at bookstores.
But you can bet Focus on the Family and others of the
Jesus-loves-me-but-He-can’t-stand-you persuasion will find a new demon du
jour. I hear there’s another Harry Potter movie on the way.
-- Berry Craig is a
professor of history at West Kentucky Community and Technical College in
Paducah. He and his wife, Melinda, are members of the Witherspoon
Society.