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Regular Price: $15.00

Paperback/208 pages

Biblical Studies/
New Testament
ISBN 0-8308-3267-X

Books

The Gospel Code
Novel Claims About Jesus, Mary Magdalene and Da Vinci

by Ben Witherington, III
author of The Brother of Jesus

Dan Brown's international bestseller The Da Vinci Code has raised many questions in the minds of readers.

Was Jesus really married to Mary Magdalene? Did he father a child with her? Did Constantine suppress the earliest Gospels and invent the doctrine of Christ's divinity? Do the Gnostic Gospels represent the true Christian faith which the early church sought to supplant?

The Da Vinci Code, in blurring the lines between fact and fiction, popularizes the speculations and contentions of numerous more serious books that are also attracting wide attention. How should we respond to claims that we now have documents that reveal secrets about Jesus, secrets long suppressed by the church and other religious institutions? Do these new documents successfully debunk traditional views about Jesus and early Christianity?

Witherington confronts these claims with the sure-footedness of a New Testament scholar, yet in the plain language that any interested reader can follow. He takes us back to the early centuries after Jesus' death and tells us what we can really know about Jesus, Mary Magdalene, the canonical Gospels and their Gnostic rivals.

Ben Witherington, III is professor of New Testament at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky, and the author of numerous books on the New Testament.

Endorsements

"In these few pages, an eminent New Testament scholar not only explodes the follies of The DaVinci Code but also dissects the claims of certain scholars to find in the Gnostic Gospels a historically authentic Jesus and an alternative Christianity. Timely and compelling!"

William Lane Craig
coauthor of Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up?

"Ben Witherington won't stop at refuting the historical errors of The Da Vinci Code. He will not rest until he refutes the novel's spiritual error as well. Witherington names the narcissism at the heart of the Gnostic revival and offers the New Testament's God-centered good news in its place."

David Neff
Editor, Christianity Today