Dan Brown ist der katholische Salman Rushdie.
Mit (Lach)Tränen in den Augen lese ich diese Auszüge aus einem Artikel der New York Daily News.
"Since “The Da Vinci Code” became an international phenomenon in 2003, Brown has hidden himself away from the world. It was partly Catholic church’s reaction to “The Da Vinci Code” that drove him underground. The novel put forth that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene and begot a line of lesser royalty in the south of France. That thinking wasn’t original, but it was still incendiary and didn’t sit well with many Catholics up to and including the Vatican.
Certainly Pope Benedict XVI is no fan. His first book as pontiff was “Jesus of Nazareth” and was seen as a corrective to Brown’s heretical depiction of the savior."
Glauben die eigentlich selbst diesen Mist, den sie da verzapfen?
[via getreligion.org]
"Since “The Da Vinci Code” became an international phenomenon in 2003, Brown has hidden himself away from the world. It was partly Catholic church’s reaction to “The Da Vinci Code” that drove him underground. The novel put forth that Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene and begot a line of lesser royalty in the south of France. That thinking wasn’t original, but it was still incendiary and didn’t sit well with many Catholics up to and including the Vatican.
Certainly Pope Benedict XVI is no fan. His first book as pontiff was “Jesus of Nazareth” and was seen as a corrective to Brown’s heretical depiction of the savior."
Glauben die eigentlich selbst diesen Mist, den sie da verzapfen?
[via getreligion.org]
ElsaLaska - 19. Sep, 20:50
Der Vergleich mit Salman Rushdie ist echt zum Schießen.
LG
Bea
Unglaublicher bullshit ... :-)
ja, das glauben sie
ehrlichkeitshalber muss man aber auch sagen dass einige touristen aus amiland mit enzyklopädischem detailwissen über die europäische geschichte aufwarten können.