http://bit.ly/EKOPK

- - -
But Brown doesn't have the soul of a true-believing Enemy of the Faith. Deep
down, he has a fondness for the ordinary, well-meaning sort of Catholic, his
libels against their ancestors notwithstanding. He's even sympathetic to the
religious yearnings of his Catholic villains - including, yes, the murderous
albino monks. 

This explains why both "The Da Vinci Code" and "Angels and Demons" end with
a big anti-Catholic reveal (Jesus had kids with Mary Magdalene! That
terrorist plot against the Vatican was actually launched by an
archconservative priest!) followed by a big cover-up. A small elect (Tom
Hanks and company, in the movies) gets to know what really happened, but the
mass of believers remain in the dark, lest their spiritual questing be
derailed by disillusionment and scandal. Having dismissed Catholicism's
truth claims and demonized its most sincere defenders, Brown pats believers
on the head and bids them go on fingering their rosary beads. 

...

The polls that show more Americans abandoning organized religion don't
suggest a dramatic uptick in atheism: They reveal the growth of
do-it-yourself spirituality, with traditional religion's dogmas and moral
requirements shorn away. The same trend is at work within organized faiths
as well, where both liberal and conservative believers often encounter a God
who's too busy validating their particular version of the American Dream to
raise a peep about, say, how much money they're making or how many times
they've been married. 

These are Dan Brown's kind of readers. Piggybacking on the fascination with
lost gospels and alternative Christianities, he serves up a Jesus who's a
thoroughly modern sort of messiah - sexy, worldly and Goddess-worshiping,
with a wife and kids, a house in the Galilean suburbs, and no delusions
about his own divinity. 

But the success of this message - which also shows up in the work of Brown's
many thriller-writing imitators - can't be separated from its dishonesty.
The "secret" history of Christendom that unspools in "The Da Vinci Code" is
false from start to finish. 

The lost gospels are real enough, but they neither confirm the portrait of
Christ that Brown is peddling - they're far, far weirder than that - nor
provide a persuasive alternative to the New Testament account. The Jesus of
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John - jealous, demanding, apocalyptic - may not be
congenial to contemporary sensibilities, but he's the only historically
plausible Jesus there is. 

For millions of readers, Brown's novels have helped smooth over the tension
between ancient Christianity and modern American faith. But the tension
endures. You can have Jesus or Dan Brown. But you can't have both. 

- - -

An excellent article, with which I find myself in agreement mainly. As a
recovering Catholic, my main problem with modern Christianity is its
fractured, fratricidal character. A deeper reading of Scripture than is
currently possessed by any denomination to which I have belonged or belong
reveals a Creator whose creative purpose is so much more wondrous than a
mere reading of any of their catechisms and doctrinal position papers gives
clue. 

I think many Christians are lured by the desire for a deeper spirituality in
modern mysticism, but herein lies the danger: The god of this world, Satan,
has a smorgasbord of false spirituality to offer, complete even with
whatever kind of healing power "makes you believe", ostensibly to set us
free from "organized religion", but in fact to put us under his harsh
dominion, while he still has "time" to play God and boss his demons around. 

I will even go so far as to suggest some Christians, irrespective of
denominational affiliation, are prone to accept his spiritual authority
sooner than the Lord's, because in our fleshly nature there is this harsh
logic of kill-or-be-killed that we identify with a kind of universal truth
(in fact its mainly a fleshly truth, thus ephemeral). So, "religiosity" as a
phenomenon is also an expression of a desire by well-meaning folk to embrace
the nicer side of faith, but unchecked by real spiritual growth it
eventually becomes an expression of the same fleshly logic for which Christ
suffered on the cross. Christians need I guess to find the least common
denominator of the faith before they can grow into its fullness, but how to
do that without losing the sense of wonder one experiences at the moment of
conversion? Maybe that is the key--capturing and keeping that child-like
wonder--I don't know, I just heard that somewhere. ;)

I'm not talking about some doctrine-leveling ecumenism, which reduces Jesus
to some "least common denominational" checklist of do's and don'ts, but a
total view of the Gospel that uproots all the man-made traditions and myths
that confound the plain meaning of Christ's message of reconciliation and
peace with God. This is why I think Catholicism is such an easy target in
the modern era by the Dan Browns of the world: it's loaded with that kind of
arbitrary and cultural-historical crud Jesus himself railed against when
trading barbs with the Sadducees and Pharisees. But other denominations,
yea, all of them, have their substitute made-up traditions as well.

(I currently attend and am even a freshly-minted deacon at a Baptist church
here near Tampa, where I really enjoy the fellowship and worship, but for
the life of me cannot find evidence that Jesus and the apostles drank
Welsh's Grape Juice at the last supper anywhere in the Scriptures... ;) )

Only in the spirit is true religion found---not that "big tent" kumbaya crap
that fosters cognitive dissonance and fake co-habitation of thought between
mortal enemies, so much the focus of modern secularism. (Because while we
are still in the flesh, these enemies do exists, and we cannot mix with them
in spirit or truth without risk of spiritually damaging consequences.)

The thing I struggle with, naturally, is that part of my soulish nature that
wants constantly to take this physical world and all its goings-on so damned
seriously. Evidence of it even in this esteemed list's archives abounds, as
recently as this morning. :) It matters spiritually what is happening but in
the big scheme of things the physical here-and-now is an illusion that, once
it passes away, will in retrospect I think be full of "Oh, now I get it"
proofs of what is good and true, even to those who refused to seek or
embrace it while "alive in the flesh", though it will be a bit late for them
to jump on the bandwagon.

And when that moment of universal revelation happens, it won't even be as
obtuse as Ed's comic strip joke at Stephen Russell's expense. ;)

- Bob.


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