The Da Vinci Code and Opus Dei
This mini commentary is not finished, there is still
more to come.
What authority do I have to write this
commentary for someone who has neither read the book
nor seen the movie? We all have a hierarchy of people
we trust in our lives. If a police officer warns me
about an area where my car could be vandalized, am I
going to drive there and park my car there for a week?
If he recommends that I don't speed through a yellow
light, will I have to try it, "for the experience?"
Within the hierarchy of people I trust,
I've listened to people with degrees in Church history
and Catholic theology. My opinions are based on these
people.
We recommend you neither buy
the book or see the movie. It attacks the Divinity of
Jesus, Our Lord and the Roman Catholic Church he founded
by fabricating history. No practicing Catholic should
support either Dan Brown, Ron Howard, the director, or
Tom Hanks. Instead we should pray for their conversion
to the true Catholic Faith that is always loyal to the
Church's Magisterium and Holy Father. Nevertheless, if
you do choose to read the book or see the movie, we recommend
you ALSO read an appropriate critique of the book and/or
the movie. We would recommend this
book or this
DVD.
That said:
His novel is fiction but has the effect
of planting seeds of doubt about Christian Catholicism
into all faith-fulled Christians. The book does not have
one shred of truth and distorts Catholic Christian history
and theology. He is telling the reader and movie goer:
- it is OK not to believe your Catholic Faith
- it is OK to doubt your Catholic Faith
That is wrong! Your faith is a
gift from God and historicity of the Christian Catholic
Faith is something that can't be changed. They want you
to believe that the Church has been keeping information
from you and has not told you the whole truth about its
own history. That historians down through the ages for
over 2000 years some how got it wrong.
This is a form of an earlier Church heresy called
Gnosticism. Gnosticism stated that only a chosen few knew
the REALLY truth about the Catholic Church. A truth
the other poor people didn't know. Gnosticism has its
roots in pride. Unlike the secrets of Gnosticism, the
mysteries of the Church, require a humility to understand
what we can, but have faith when we can't totally grasp
some teaching.
It also slanders Opus Dei. What is
Opus Dei?
The goal of this lay Catholic organization
is to encourage the ordinary parishioner / the lay Catholic
to grow in holiness in the world for Our Lord Jesus.
The Church has given official approval to the existence
of Opus Dei by erecting it as a personal prelature. {Personal
prelatures are ecclesiastical jurisdictions provided
for by the Second Vatican Council and the Code of Canon
Law that are created to meet specific pastoral needs
with greater flexibility. Opus Dei combines in a single
worldwide institution priests and laity, women and men,
sharing the same vocation of spreading the ideal of holiness
in the world and the sanctification of work.} What
follows has been taken from the official
Opus Dei web site:
“Opus Dei’s main activity consists in
offering its members, and other people, the spiritual
means they need to live as good Christians in the midst
of the world,” explained its founder.
Spiritual formation
The faithful of the Prelature
attend weekly classes called “circles”,
dealing with doctrinal and ascetical topics, and
a monthly day of recollection, a time for personal
prayer and reflection on topics to do with Christian
life. In addition, they attend an annual retreat
lasting three to five days. Similar activities are
also offered to the cooperators, to young people,
and to anyone else who wishes to attend.
This formation is given in the centers of the Prelature
and in other appropriate places. For example, a circle
may be given at the home of one of the people who attend,
and a day of recollection may be held in a church whose
parish priest permits it to be used for that purpose.
Personal apostolate
Personal testimony is always
the most important apostolate in Opus Dei. It is
an apostolate of witness, of specific and effective
help given to others, at work and in the other circumstances
of daily life: a personal apostolate carried out
through word and example. As a result, members’ apostolic
work is not limited to specific fields such as education,
or care for the sick or disabled. As the Catechism
of the Catholic Church reminds us, all Christians,
whatever their secular occupation may be, ought to
help to find Christian solutions to the problems
of society and give constant witness to their faith.
Corporate apostolate
The faithful of the Prelature,
with the assistance of the cooperators of Opus Dei
and many others, sometimes undertake charitable or
educational initiatives that entrust their spiritual
and doctrinal orientation to the Prelature. These
initiatives are called "corporate" apostolates
to distinguish them from the personal apostolate of
members, which is Opus Dei's primary apostolate.
Among these corporate apostolic
works are secondary schools, universities, women’s
centers, medical clinics in underdeveloped areas,
schools for farm workers, institutes for professional
education, student residences and cultural centers.
The Prelature does not involve itself in any profit-making,
commercial or political ventures.
Corporate apostolic works are owned and managed by
those who initiated them and not by the Prelature of
Opus Dei, which assumes responsibility only for their
spiritual and doctrinal orientation. Each undertaking
is financed in the same way as any other similar institution:
e.g., by residential fees, grants, donations, etc.
Corporate works regularly run at a loss, given the
type of work they undertake and the fact that they
are not intended to be profit-making. For this reason,
in addition to donations from the faithful of Opus
Dei and from the cooperators and others, they may receive
official subsidies from government
A critique of Opus Dei, pro and con
In my area, I have friends and family
members who have both very positive
and very negative experiences with Opus Dei. Critics
have charged it with controlling the lives of some of
its members, and with manipulative recruiting practices.
Some have experienced an environment
where:
- rash judgments are made
- mind control is involved.
- people are pulled away from their
families and
- people are used for their money.
On the other side I've had some
friends that have nothing but admiration for the goals
and way of life Opus Dei has to offer those who choose
to get involved.
One of our colleagues, Terry,
has stated:
I have nothing but admiration for
Opus Dei (or more properly entitled the Holy Cross
Prelature) However, their methods of living are too
much for me to embrace in my life, but I admire those
that do so.
When I reflect on the family and friends
who have had bad experiences with those that have had
a MUCH more positive experiences, the only difference
I see is a greater commitment to practicing the faith
by those with a positive experience.
No one, not even Opus Dei members,
are denying that the organization, like any other
lay or religious organization, has its set of problems.
The Church has established statutes
for the governance of Opus Dei, putting an end to the
somewhat secretive treatment of its internal rules. The
question is: Are they dealing with it. I believe they
are.
One book recommended by the head of
Opus Dei in America as well as a good friend of mine:
Opus
Dei : An Objective Look Behind the Myths and Reality
of the Most Controversial Force in the Catholic Church by John L. Allen
One of my favorite authors and brother
apologists in the faith, Scott Hahn is coming
out with a book in September called:
Ordinary Work, Extraordinary Grace
: My Spiritual Journey in Opus Dei
I'm sure it will be a GREAT read!
No matter what the ups and downs of
Opus Dei are, there's obviously something positive here
that the Church wants to foster.
But where does someone who has had
a bad experience with Opus Dei go to grow in holiness?
I would recommend one of two options:
- as a lay Catholic, live a sacramental
life by striving to get to daily Mass and trying to
say the rosary daily if possible
- if you feel that you are called
to a vowed religious order, check out the various orders
named after the Saints:
- Benedictine, (my favorite),
- Dominican,
- Jesuit,
- Franciscans, etc.
Some of these religious orders
also have third orders for the lay Catholics like
the Benedictines and Franciscans. This allows the
lay Catholic to be associated with a Catholic religious
order while still living in the world. It usually
involves some minimum requirements like making a
regular visit to the order, saying some prayers,
etc,. The KEY: Make sure they are loyal to the Church's
Magisterium, the official Teachings of the Church
and the Holy Father. Many are but many ARE NOT.
While on the issue of people who have
had a bad experience with
Opus Dei, I'd like to express one major concern.
Throughout Church history there have
been times where religious people in authority have scandalized
the Faith by either their actions or inactions. The problems
in Opus Dei, like any other religious organization are
not anything new. There is a tendency though for people
who have had a bad experience, with what is otherwise
a virtuous organization, to have their experience re-affirmed
in a movie like the Da Vinci Code. For those Catholics
who have had a bad experience with Opus Dei there is
a concern that they'll go see the movie and not only
re-affirm their personal scandalous experiences with
Opus Dei, but affirm the other heretical, anti-Catholic,
anti-Church material Dan Brown has put forward.
If we make generalities on people or
organizations based on bad experiences, we don't allow
God to work in the hearts and minds for that change that
is needed. We ultimately end up stereotyping an organization
or person solely based on previous sins. I should know
this because I've done that to certain friends : )
My question is:
Why has Dan Brown chosen a lay Catholic organization
to slander?
Why not the Benedictines, Dominicans,
Franciscans or some other Catholic religious order?
Surely "some" of
them have their set of "problems and sins",
which over time they are able to rectify.
I think part of the reason is because
of the world-wide effect a compelling lay Catholic organization
in the workplace dedicated to holiness and the Holy Father
would have on the world if the goals of Opus Dei were
to succeed. Just my opinion.
Is it a sin to go see this movie? Based
on what you now know, Probably Yes.
It depends on the foreknowledge and
intent of the person before buying the book or going
to the movie. As Catholic Christians we are obliged to
stay away from occasions of sin including ones that would
make us doubt the faith we publicly proclaim to believe.
The Church has warned the faithful about this movie just
as it would warn us about buying a copy of Penthouse
or Playboy. Why? We are opening ourselves up to an occasion
of sin via temptation. If a person knows about what the
book and/or movie is about, yet goes to see it, YES,
in my opinion, it is a sin.
Coming soon: subtle errors in the movie
itself.
But you may say:
Lighten up Mike, it's only fiction!
Bingo! That's my point. Because
it is fiction, it has the tendency to plant seeds of
doubt and statements like "I wonder if..." in
the readers mind. It is because it is fiction AND completely
distorts Catholic Christian history that ALL Christians,
weather Catholic or not, should not go.
How does the Christian publicly say NO to Dan Brown
and his anti-Catholic material? Purposely plan to go
to the movies the week the da Vinci Code movie opens
but instead of protesting the movie, which will just
bring attention to it, go to another movie that weekend
several times.
I plan to see "United 93" and
another caricature movie by Dreamworks.
I can only see four groups of people that would approve
of Dan Brown's book or movie:
- uncatechized Catholics
- uncatechized Christians
- people that claim to
be Christian but are really anti-Catholic
- atheist and agnostics
The response to this book and movie
will be an assessment of how well the Catholic Church
in America has catechized the faithful. I'm concerned
that many people who claim to be strong Catholics will
find nothing wrong with either the book or movie. As
Catholics in America we have to study our faith more.
I certainly didn't understand the faith
after I finished CCD the way I do now! That
gape of knowledge over time can be fatal to our salvation.
Mike
Humphrey |