ROME — OK, so maybe author Dan Brown takes a few liberties.
Jesus wasn't divine, after all; he married Mary Magdalene, a woman of possible ill repute, and they had kids. What's the fuss?
ROME — OK, so maybe author Dan Brown takes a few liberties.
Jesus wasn't divine, after all; he married Mary Magdalene, a woman of possible ill repute, and they had kids. What's the fuss?
This now-famous premise shaping Brown's bestseller "The Da Vinci Code" has infuriated leaders of the Roman Catholic Church and led to demands from a senior Vatican official that the book be shunned.
"My appeal is as follows," Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone said this week during a Vatican Radio broadcast. "Don't read and don't buy 'The Da Vinci Code.' "
Bertone said the breathless thriller of madcap chases through the Louvre, code-crunching and sinister intrigue in Rome is a pack of lies that maligns the world's greatest historical figure -- Jesus Christ -- and attempts to undermine Catholicism.
Although the book, and especially its suggestions about Jesus and Mary Magdalene, have always been controversial for church officials, Bertone, the archbishop of Genoa, is the highest-level prelate to come out against Brown's blockbuster.
Bertone, a former secretary of the powerful Vatican department that enforces church doctrine, sponsored a symposium Wednesday night in Genoa to, as he put it, expose the myths and malice of the book.
Speaking at the conference, Bertone acknowledged that the book was a brilliantly marketed page-turner but said it "falsifies the figure of Christ and the events central to the Christian experience, namely the passion of Christ, his death and resurrection."
The timing of Bertone's comments, coming nearly two years after the book started flying out of stores everywhere, had a few people scratching their heads. The book has been translated into 44 languages and sold an estimated 20 million copies.
The condemnation might have been prompted by the fact that the book's plots and assertions are about to become even more widely disseminated in a movie starring Tom Hanks. Or it could be the growing popularity of "Da Vinci Code"-based tours to Rome and Paris in which tourists, with book in hand, try to follow its clues.
Some priests have said they are alarmed that people really believe some of the book's wilder conspiracy theories.
The novel's vogue has contributed to the belief among many church leaders that their faith is under attack. Religious intolerance that has grown since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the United States and the U.S. invasion of Iraq has especially persecuted Christians, the Rome-based Jesuit magazine, Civilta Cattolica, said this month. The publication often reflects Vatican thinking.