The Archbishop of Canterbury does a good job in his Easter sermon dismissing the silliness surrounding the Da Vinci Code and the so-called Gospel of Judas:
We have become so suspicious of the power of words and the way that power is exercised to defend those who fear to be criticised. The first assumption we make is that we’re faced with spin of some kind, with an agenda being forced on us – like a magician forcing a card on the audience. So that the modern response to the proclamation, ‘Christ is risen!’ is likely to be, ‘Ah, but you would say that, wouldn’t you? Now, what’s the real agenda?’
Instead,
...this one rocklike conviction remains, the conviction that drove the writing of every word of the New Testament. Nothing to do with conspiracies, with the agenda of the powerful; everything to do with how the powerless, praying, risking their lives for the sake of Christ and his peace, are the ones who understand the Word of God. And to accept that is not to sign up to the agenda of a troubled, fussy human society of worried prelates and squabbling factions. It is to choose life, to choose to belong to the life-giver.
Amen.
Sunday, April 16, 2006
An Easter Sermon
Iain Murray gives us an excerpt of an Easter sermon by the Archbishop of Canterbury (h/t The Corner):
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