Ashlea
New Member
I finished this, and would recommend it to anyone as a good casual read. It's not the sort to keep me up all night wondering about this and that, but it pleasantly filled my day.
What surprises me is that I have been recommended this book by all sorts of people, and have heard not one person mention how subversive it is to Christianity. Not that the points raised haven't been raised before, but they certainly haven't been raised by a novel, especially one that stayed on the best seller list for, what, a year and a half now. Perhaps no one else viewed it as such, or anyone who might be offended by a sharper than usual reading of Christian history is off reading that Tim LaHaye series. But I can't imagine that out of all of the millions of this book out there, some misguided conservative person didn't get all huffy and protest their local library for having a smutty book that says that Jesus wasn't divine and was married to Mary Magdelene, etc.
What surprises me is that I have been recommended this book by all sorts of people, and have heard not one person mention how subversive it is to Christianity. Not that the points raised haven't been raised before, but they certainly haven't been raised by a novel, especially one that stayed on the best seller list for, what, a year and a half now. Perhaps no one else viewed it as such, or anyone who might be offended by a sharper than usual reading of Christian history is off reading that Tim LaHaye series. But I can't imagine that out of all of the millions of this book out there, some misguided conservative person didn't get all huffy and protest their local library for having a smutty book that says that Jesus wasn't divine and was married to Mary Magdelene, etc.