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Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery [Paperback]

Brandon Gilvin (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 2004
Few mystery novels have stirred as much interest and sparked as much discussion as Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code (Doubleday, 2003). Christians and non-Christians alike are drawn in by secret societies and intrigued by the notion of Mary Magdalene as Jesus' wife and the scandal of a massive cover-up by the church. But The Da Vinci Code is fiction, right?

Drawing on the Bible, non-canonical texts, and a wealth of historical thought and contemporary scholarship, Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery helps readers to separate fact from fiction. It provides a context for understanding what we really know about the history of Christianity and the church. Rather than just discrediting and debunking the theories posed in the The Da Vinci Code, Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery uses Dan Brown's postulates to explore the importance of many of the issues raised, including the loss of a sense of the sacred feminine in mainline Christianity, the importance of non-canonical gospels in early Christian communities, and the issues at play in the debates at Nicea and other early ecumenical councils.

Questions at the end of each chapter make Solving the Da Vinci Code Myster suitable for a group study or discussion.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

This book is part of the Popular Insights Series. In the Popular Insights Series, novels are more than entertainment. They are an entry into theological discussions, bible and church history, scripture, and new understandings of ourselves and how we live in community. Written for individual reflection or group discussion, Popular Insights titles draw on today's most popular novels to explore biblical truths, popular beliefs, and personal faith.

About the Author

Brandon Gilvin an ordained minister in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) has served as mininster in residence at Central Christian Church in Lexington, Kentucky.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 112 pages
  • Publisher: Chalice Press (July 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0827234570
  • ISBN-13: 978-0827234574
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,722,231 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Brandon Gilvin is the author of Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery, co-author of Wisdom from The Five People You Meet in Heaven, and is co-editor of Split Ticket:Independent Faith in a Time of Partisan Politics. He also works with Christian Piatt as co-editor of the WTF? (Where's the Faith?) series, all available on Chalice Press.

Brandon studied Religious Studies and Creative Writing at Hiram College in Hiram, OH, and received his Master of Divinity from Vanderbilt University in 2002. In both his undergraduate and graduate work, he sought to find intersection points between human creativity, a life of faith, and working for justice. In doing so, Brandon found passions for innovative, imaginative ministry and working to ask (and occasionally answer) difficult questions about globalization, human rights, and engagement with grassroots issues. While a student at Vanderbilt, Brandon interned at the Quaker Peace Centre in Cape Town, South Africa as a Peace Educator, an experience that further helped him develop his sense of vocation. Following graduation, Brandon served as a Pastoral Resident at Central Christian Church in Lexington, Kentucky. While there, he was deeply involved in the life of the church - teaching, leading worship, providing pastoral care and developing programs. In 2004, he returned to Africa through Global Ministries, serving the All Africa Conference of Churches in Nairobi, Kenya, as the Programme Executive for Communication, leading communication efforts for the network of more than 190 churches, denominations and ecumenical councils. He then served a year as the North American Regional Secretary of the World Student Christian Foundation in Toronto, Ontario, where he worked with students interested in faith-based social activism.

From Toronto, Brandon headed to Olathe, KS, where he served Saint Andrew Christian Church as Associate Pastor. While at Saint Andrew, Brandon focused on Social Justice, Adult Education, and Young Adult Ministries. He taught classes on Biblical Studies, Sex/uality and the Bible, Political Theology. He currently works as the Associate Director of Week of Compassion, the Relief, Refugee and Development Ministry of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).

Brandon writes with creativity, innovation, and highly values scholarly integrity in his approach to Sacred Texts. A bit on the irreverant side, Brandon has a soft spot for pictures of Jesus riding Dinosaurs.

Brandon and his wife Lisa reside in Kansas City.






 

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Solving the DaVinci Code Mystery, July 20, 2004
By 
Eric C Smith (Asheville, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery (Paperback)
This is a much-needed fair and clear examination of some of the claims made in Dan Brown's The DaVinci Code. As a minister, I can attest to the furor that book created among people who weren't sure how much of what Brown claimed is fact, and what is fiction or embellishment. I was impressed with the ease with which Gilvin was able to clearly and honestly articulate the debates surrounding each of Brown's claims, and to be a fair arbiter of truth. While written from the perspective of faith, Solving the DaVinci Code Mystery isn't a mere apology; neither is it overly skeptical of the claims of faith. It strikes a nice balance, always returning to the best of contemporary scholarship, and never fails to elucidate the most difficult of questions. I would recommend this book for personal use, or for use in academic or church settings.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A guide for the perplexed..., August 14, 2004
This review is from: Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery (Paperback)
There is a difficulty inherent in modern society -- the lines between fact and fiction are often blurred, and we as moderns (and post-moderns) are subjected to ever increasing amounts of information often without an increased capacity for scrutiny and analysis. Also, time-honoured texts are recast in various media, and the revision becomes more real than the original -- ask many people and they will recount the stories of Moses, the Passover and the Ten Commandments from a Cecil B. DeMille film more accurately than from the Bible itself. It is upon such phenomena that authors like Dan Brown of the 'Da Vinci Code' capitalise -- that people in the know are often permissive of the willing-suspension-of-disbelieve, while another group will right readily believe. So let it be written, so let it be believed...

Dan Brown's 'Da Vinci Code' has taken the reading world by storm in many ways -- it has spawned lectures, continuing education forums in colleges, seminaries and churches, and has even warranted television 'documentary' specials. Of course, the rumours and 'facts' Brown uses are not really new -- the book 'Holy Blood, Holy Grail' several years ago speculated on the descendents of Jesus or his family being forerunners of the French royal line. Brown weaves these kinds of juicy rumours into a mystery novel which then makes the mystery a layered one -- where is the real mystery? What is truth? -- more than just a question for Pilate (and you can look that one up...).

Brandon Gilvin rose to the challenge of presenting what we do and do not know about various issues that arise in Brown's text. In some ways, Gilvin presents corrective; in other ways, he presents alternative theories, interpretations, or overlooked facts that are relevant to the Da Vinci discussions. He concentrates on six particularly crucial topics. The first is canonical formation -- who wrote the Bible? Was it Constantine alone? Who was involved? The second involves the dogmatic construction around (and beyond) Nicea -- just who decided that Jesus was divine (or who would think he wasn't) and why? The third and fourth questions are (pardon the pun) intimately related -- were Jesus and Mary Magdalene married, and did their offspring form the basis of a European royal or protected line? The fifth question is one of conspiracy theories that would put any grassy knoll to shame -- has the church (in particular, the Roman Catholic church) been conspiring to withhold secrets about Jesus for thousands of years? Finally, how can Christianity and the Da Vinci Code coexist?

These are crucial questions, for some of them, Gilvin gives a very broad overview. For example, the subject of canonical development is the subject of countless volumes, hundreds of thousands of pages of text produced in scholarship each generation on the subject -- here it is neatly contained in twenty or so pages. This brevity is deliberate. Gilvin envisions his book to be useful not only to the solitary reader, but also as the basis for discussion groups in churches, schools or reading groups, and to this end provides questions and suggestions for further reading.

This is a good companion for those reading the Da Vinci Code. Not quite the key to the mystery, but a definite plus in deciphering toward the truth.
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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars To Go A Step Beyond, September 26, 2004
By 
Richard R. Carlton (Ada, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Solving the Da Vinci Code Mystery (Paperback)
If you loved DaVinci Code or if you hated it, you must admit it did get a reaction from you....which in itself is one definition of a successful novel. Many readers have found themselves more interested in the information detailed in Dan Brown's books, and if so, this book is a good choice to begin to learn about the amazing history of the Christian Church.

Especially Gnosticism and the early Christian Church, and especially the creation of the New Testament Bible. For a different review....here is my review of books that build on these interests, especially the "lost" books of the New Testament Bible and the concepts of Gnosticism.

Nearly all knowledgeable Biblical scholars realize there have been a wide range of writings attributed to Jesus and his Apostles..... and that some of these were selected for compilation into the book that became known as the Bible.....and that some books have been removed from some versions of the Bible and others have been re-discovered in modern times.

The attention focused on Gnosticism by Dan Brown's DaVinci Code may be debatable, but the fact is that increased attention on academics tends to be predominately positive, so I welcome those with first-time or renewed interest. At least first-timers to Gnosticism are not pursuing the oh-so-popular legends of the Holy Grail, Bloodline of Christ, and Mary Magdalene.

This is great......I seldom quote other reviewers, but there is one reviewer of Pagels' books who confided that he had been a Jesuit candidate and had been required to study a wide range of texts but was never was told about the Nag Hamadi texts. He said:

"Now I know why. The Gospel of Thomas lays waste to the notion that Jesus was `the only begotten Son of God' and obviates the need for a formalized church when he says, `When your leaders tell you that God is in heaven, say rather, God is within you, and without you.' No wonder they suppressed this stuff! The Roman Catholic Church hasn't maintained itself as the oldest institution in the world by allowing individuals to have a clear channel to see the divinity within all of us: they need to put God in a bottle, label the bottle, put that bottle on an altar, build a church around that altar, put a sign over the door, and create rubricks and rituals to keep out the dis-believing riff-raff. Real `Us' versus `them' stuff, the polar opposite from `God is within You.' `My God is bigger than your God' the church(s)seem to say. And you can only get there through "my" door/denomination. But Jesus according to Thomas had it right: just keep it simple, and discover the indwelling Divinity `within you and without you.'"

Here are quickie reviews of what is being bought these days on the Gnostic Gospels and the lost books of the Bible in general:

The Lost Books of the Bible (0517277956) includes 26 apocryphal books from the first 400 years that were not included in the New Testament.

Marvin Meyers' The Secret Teachings of Jesus : Four Gnostic Gospels (0394744330 ) is a new translation without commentary of The Secret Book of James, The Gospel of Thomas, The Book of Thomas, and The Secret Book of John.

James M. Robinson's The Nag Hammadi Library in English : Revised Edition (0060669357) has been around 25 years now and is in 2nd edition. It has introductions to each of the 13 Nag Hammadi Codices and the Papyrus Berioinensis 8502.

The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English (0140278079) by Geza Vermes has selected works....a complete work is more difficult to achieve than the publisher's marketing concept indicates. His commentary generates strong reactions.

Elaine Pagels has 2 books (The Gnostic Gospels 0679724532 and Beyond Belief : The Secret Gospel of Thomas 0375501568) that have received considerable attention lately. For many, her work is controversial in that it is written for popular consumption and there is a strong modern interpretation. She does attempt to reinterpret ancient gender relationships in the light of modern feminist thinking. While this is a useful (and entertaining) aspect of college women's studies programs, it is not as unethical as some critics claim. As hard as they may try, all historians interpret the past in the context of the present. Obviously there is value in our attempts to re-interpret the past in the light of our own time.

If you want the full scholarly work it is W. Schneemelcher's 2 volume New Testament Apocrypha.

Also, to understand the Cathars......try Barbara Tuckman's Distant Mirror for an incredible historical commentary on how the Christian Church has handled other points of view
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
canonical gospels
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mary Magdalene, Opus Dei, Holy Blood, New Testament, Holy Grail, Son of God, New York, Nag Hammadi, Dan Brown, The Gospel of Mary, The Gospel of Philip, The Gospel of Thomas, Hebrew Scriptures, Son of Man, Fourth Gospel, Hebrew Bible, The Gospel of Peter, Nicene Creed, San Francisco, The Dead Sea Scrolls, Christ Jesus, Henry Lincoln, Joseph of Arimithea, Karen King, Richard Leigh
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