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Mary Magdalene

March 10, 2006

By John Thavis, Rome Bureau Chief, Catholic News Service

The Da Vinci Code came in for some resounding criticism at a recent round-table discussion at the Marianum Pontifical Theological Faculty in Rome.

It wasn’t a pick-it-apart session by church historians. Instead, four women spoke about Mary Magdalene, and her distorted depiction in Dan Brown’s book.

The moderator of the discussion, Marinella Perroni, a New Testament theologian, said DVC joins a list of books and other media treatments that exploit the figure of Mary Magdalene. She said caution is always needed when dealing with Scriptural figures, but for some reason people feel free to take great liberties with Mary Magdalene.

Maria Luisa Rigato, a retired professor of exegesis at the Pontifical Gregorian University, said she found Brown’s book entertaining fiction -- but it was clear to real scholars that Mary Magdalene was neither the wife nor the lover of Jesus.

The Catholic participants drew a sharp distinction between what we know about Mary Magdalene from the approved Gospels and what has been circulated for centuries in the so-called Gnostic gospels, which were long ago rejected by the church.

But a Waldensian pastor, Rev. Letizia Tomassone, said she thought the non-canonical gospels, although they are clearly later manuscripts, can be valid secondary sources of information. In some of these later gospels, she said, Mary Magdalene appears as the “mediator of the resurrected Christ,” which aligns with what the Gospel of St. John says about her being the first witness of the resurrection.

Mary Magdalene, Rev. Tomassone said, comes across as “one who knows how to heal the heart of a wounded community.”

The experts generally agreed, however, that there is no Scriptural evidence that Jesus and Mary were lovers, which is a key element in the DVC plot. Even the incomplete references in the Gnostic gospels about Jesus special relationship with Mary Magdalene depict a “spiritual intimacy,” not a sexual relationship, Rev. Tomassone said.

The panelists differed about whether it should matter to Christians whether Christ was married or not. Some said they would have no problem with that -- but the Gospels make no mention of it.

That prompted an objection from a young priest in the audience, who said he would not have made a promise of priestly celibacy unless he believed he was imitating Christ.

The moderator, Rigato, downplayed the impact of DVC, saying it was “third rate literature” compared to earlier treatments of similar subjects, like “The Last Temptation of Christ” by Nikos Kazantzakis.

“Dan Brown with his 40 million copies is nothing compared to the billions of copies of the Bible. It’s something you consume and forget, and will not affect the faith in the least,” she said.

But Miriam Diez i Bosch, a Catholic journalist who lectures on communications, said it was disturbing that a book like DVC was succeeding so well. Similar books may follow, she said.

The good thing is that DVC has given Catholics a chance to explain themselves, she said. The bad part is that Catholics clearly need to be better instructed in their faith, she added.

She said the church in particular needs better catechesis and more widely published scholarship on the figure of Mary Magdalene -- something more profound than presenting her as “the icon of the fallen woman.”

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