Scandalous New Anti-Catholic Movie
Will Soon Lead Millions of People Astray
Unless We ACT NOW!
If you thought The Da Vinci
Code was bad,
wait until you hear about this hateful smear!
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Angels and Demons.
Details below . . .
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Dear friend of Catholic Answers,
I’m sure you remember the virulently anti-Catholic—and
basically anti-Christian—movie The Da Vinci Code, which infested
the world’s movie theaters last year and raked in $758 MILLION at the box office.
Although The Da Vinci
Code was fiction, it was sold to audiences under the false premise
that it was “really true.”
Consider these examples of the heresies and blasphemies with
which The Da Vinci Code was rife:
·
Jesus is not God. He was
only a man.
·
Jesus was married to Mary
Magdalene.
·
Mary Magdalene is to be worshiped
as a goddess.
·
Jesus got Mary Magdalene pregnant,
and the two had a daughter.
·
That daughter gave rise to a
prominent family line that is still present in Europe
today.
·
The Bible was put together
by a pagan Roman emperor.
·
Jesus was viewed as a man and not
as God until the fourth century, when he was deified by the Emperor
Constantine.
·
The Gospels have been edited
to support the claims of later Christians.
·
In the original Gospels, Mary
Magdalene rather than Peter was directed to establish the Church.
·
There is a secret society known as
the Priory of Sion that still worships Mary Magdalene
as a goddess, and this group is trying to keep the truth alive.
·
The Catholic Church is aware of
all this and has been fighting for centuries to keep it suppressed and
often has committed murder to do so.
·
The Catholic Church is willing to
and often has assassinated the descendents of Christ to keep his
bloodline from growing too large.
Words cannot
describe the absurdity of these assertions. You
wouldn’t expect any discerning individual to take them seriously. But that’s
the problem: apparently there aren’t too many “discerning individuals” around these
days.
The Da Vinci Code was taken seriously by millions of gullible people—egged on by
the media, which ran news stories and documentaries exploring the
premises of The Da Vinci Code.
One such “documentary”—produced
by ABC and titled “Jesus, Mary, and Da
Vinci”—was hosted by a Catholic reporter, Elizabeth Vargas, who basically
said, “Gosh, what if these things are true!”
Ridiculous?
Yes. But worse.
Scandalous!
As you know, giving scandal
is one of the most serious sins anyone can commit. God does not
take it lightly when someone causes one of his children to fall.
That’s why Jesus’ words about
causing scandal were recounted in three of the Gospels, when he said:
Whoever
causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better
for him to have a great millstone fastened round his neck and to be drowned in
the depth of the sea. (Matt. 18:6; cf. Mark 9:42; Luke 17:2)
The Da Vinci Code—written by novelist Dan Brown—did indeed
give scandal, both as a novel and as a Hollywood movie.
The novel sold more
than 70 million copies (more than any other fictional work in U.S.
history) and has been translated into over forty languages.
The movie has been seen
by more than 60 million people worldwide.
And with every screening, more
souls are brought nearer to the point of losing faith in Christianity in general and in the Catholic
religion in particular.
You see, all it takes is to
plant a seed of doubt—which is what The
Da Vinci Code does so cleverly—to shake the faith of weak Catholics,
nominal Christians, and anyone who was even considering
a conversion.
Dan Brown knows his book
is pure fiction, but he doesn’t care. According to the New York Times, Brown has made $250
million off The Da Vinci Code novel.
And that’s not counting what he made from the movie. (He was paid six
million just for the rights. Tens of millions more ended up in his bank
account from movie tickets and DVD sales.)
And now he’s
going to do it again—with yet another attack on the Catholic Church.
His first novel in this anti-Catholic series (written
and published before The Da Vinci
Code) is titled Angels and Demons—and it too has become a best-seller because
of the media hype over The Da Vinci Code.
Angels and Demons is described as “a science vs. religion thriller
set within a Swiss physics lab and Vatican City.”
Whatever.
I won’t go into detail about
the plot. But it’s basically another one of Brown’s fictional conspiracy
theories—complete with Vatican intrigue, dark secrets,
sex scandals, murders, Masons, assassinations, you name it. The only thing he
didn’t include is a Keystone Cops chase scene.
I have no problem with mysteries/thrillers.
But Dan Brown is trying to slime the Catholic faith to make a buck.
And when he leads audiences
astray—as he clearly did with The Da
Vinci Code—he gets into serious trouble on a moral level.
As I mentioned, God does not
appreciate being mocked. Nor does he look kindly on those who cause his
children to sin.
But again, Dan Brown doesn’t
care. He calls himself a Christian—and he claims that his movies cause people
to “think,” “debate,” “dialogue,” etc.
He says Christians should “use the book as a positive catalyst for
introspection and exploration of our faith.”
Right.
But introspection and exploration should be based on fact, not outright
fiction. And especially not fiction that blasphemes the Son
of God.
Would Brown write a similar
novel encouraging “debate” about the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion?
Or “exploring” the idea that the Nazi Holocaust never happened?
Would He Even Live to See Another Day
If He Wrote Insulting Fiction about Mohammed?
No. So he picks on the
easiest target of all: Catholics.
We’re an easy target for
several reasons: A. We don’t fight back like we
should; instead, we just hope that this guy will get lost. B. We’re used to
being picked on and misunderstood, so we’ve lost our sense of outrage. C. We
know we’re right, so it doesn’t bother us when people attack our faith. And D. Many of us don’t know our faith and just clam
up and offer zero resistance.
We’re easy prey for bullies.
But that’s not the case here at Catholic Answers. Not by a long
shot.
We do defend the faith.
And when it gets dragged through the mud (as in The Da Vinci Code and Angels
and Demons), we stand up and fight.
Often, we take the fight to the
enemy.
And that’s why I’m writing to
you today.
I need your help to persuade director
Ron Howard to decline the invitation
to make the Angels and Demons movie.
Howard was the director of The Da Vinci Code—and he’s being wooed
to come back and direct Angels and Demons.
But it’s not a done deal.
Why? Because
the critics hated The Da Vinci
Code. People were falling asleep during the movie or else getting up
and walking out—even at the Cannes Film Festival where it debuted.
Howard is quoted as saying that the overwhelmingly
negative reviews were “frustrating” to him. Serves him right, though. Catholics
and Protestants alike—by the millions—asked him to take out the
anti-Catholic/anti-Christian stuff, and he ignored us.
Apparently he didn’t mind making an
anti-Catholic/anti-Christian movie. In an interview with Newsweek, he was quoted as saying, “It would be ludicrous to take
on this subject and then try to take the edges off. We’re doing this movie
because we like the book.”
The “edges” Howard describes
are what the Da Vinci controversy is all about: a deep, dark conspiracy about
hiding the true nature of Jesus.
But the hit he took for making
that movie should tell him that a director of his talent shouldn’t make
movies that insult and mock God.
And that’s what we need to
communicate to him—before he signs on
as director of Angels and Demons—by
sending him the enclosed postcard by the tens of thousands.
Ron Howard needs to re-think his role as director of another mediocre movie based on a mediocre novel with a controversial, highly insulting, and blasphemous message.
And this time, it’s different.
Howard has been stung by The Da Vinci
Code because of the poor reviews it received.
Now it’s time to tell him to decline
Angels and Demons—if for no other
reason than to redeem himself for making The
Da Vinci Code.
So right now, I ask that you sign and mail the enclosed postcard to Ron
Howard.
And when you do that, please donate now so we can have
the funds necessary to do battle against Angels
and Demons, which is set to be released right before Christmas of next
year. (How convenient.)
We’re going to produce a special
report to expose Angels and Demons
for what it is: Catholic-bashing of the worst sort. And then we’ll distribute
it to parishes across the country in order to alert our fellow Catholics
about the danger of this new movie.
We need gifts of $35, $50, $100, and even $500 and $1,000 to make that happen. Or else Angels and Demons will do more damage to our people.
Donate now, and receive FREE—5 copies of Angels and Demons!
We fight now or regret it later.
Please let me hear from you soon.
Sincerely
in Christ,
Karl
Keating
P.S. The latest reports in the news media
indicate that Tom Hanks has signed
on to star in Angels and Demons, as
he did in The Da Vinci Code. But apparently
it took a really big paycheck. One source says, “It’s the biggest salary ever paid to an actor in the history of Hollywood.”
I’m reminded of the question Jesus
asked in the Gospel, “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world but
lose his soul?” Answer: nothing. So please
pray for Tom Hanks.
In
the meantime, please mail the enclosed postcard to Ron Howard—and send a special gift to Catholic Answers. It’s time to fight—and we need your help!