The Da Vinci Code of Childhood

Eugenia 2022-03-21 09:01:11

My favorite movie booking this year. I borrowed a copy of "The Da Vinci Code" from a classmate in elementary school to open up my interest in religion. Now when I watch a movie, I think of a 10-year-old girl who read an obscure book. The film completely restores the book style content. As a book fan, I feel that the filming is perfect, just as I am satisfied with the drama version of the "Naples Tetralogy". The casting and scenes are very good, similar to what I imagined in childhood. In my childhood, I imagined characters and scenes countless times in my mind. We guard a secret so persistently, and guarding the secret is faith itself. The birth and development of most religions are always accompanied by lies, deceit, repression, and persecution. The oppression of pagans, the oppression of believers, and the oppression of women. If religions cannot keep pace with the times, how can decadent doctrines lead believers to happiness in this world. If even the religious doctrines can be tampered with by later generations to distort and obscure the will of Jesus Christ, then whether the believers now believe in the superior bishops or Christ himself. The miracles of Jesus are inexhaustible. Generations of believers have used Jesus' name to slaughter infidels, prostitute children, high religious taxes, discriminate against women and other sins. If there is really Jesus as God, Jesus will not forgive it. Starting a crusade for the imaginary god in your heart and persecuting infidels is a blasphemy from every dynasty and generation. God teaches you to love humans and asks you to slaughter infidels. Is such a god worthy of the sacrifices of believers one after another?

From another perspective, why women, as a sex with huge treasures, are in an oppressed position in most religions. Why is Eve in a subordinate role as a rib of Adam. Thousands of years ago, why did religion define women in this way? The church did not allow women to worship, and even chants did not allow women to sing. This resulted in a misshapen and poor product like castrate singers. With such a dark history, can today's female believers really believe that Jesus will bless them, and can they also bless them? This is true of Christianity, let alone Islam. Why does this religion still have so many female believers worldwide? How can a god who hates women love mortal women believers?

Facing religions maintain the spirit of doubt, even if the science in this world is verified as truth, the products of our thousands of years of experience need to remain doubtful, let alone religion, the truth is not afraid of questioning.

Well, I am an atheist.

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Extended Reading

The Da Vinci Code quotes

  • Robert Langdon: Have you ever heard those words before, Sophie, "so dark the con of man"?

    Sophie Neveu: No. Have you?

    Robert Langdon: When you were a child, were you aware of any secret gatherings? Anything ritualistic in nature? Meetings your grandfather would have wanted kept secret? Was there ever any talk of something called the Priory of Sion?

    Sophie Neveu: The what? Why are you asking these things?

    Robert Langdon: The Priory of Sion is a myth. One of the world's oldest and most secret societies with leaders like, uh, Sir Isaac Newton, da Vinci himself. The fleur-de-lis is their crest. They're guardians of a secret they supposedly refer to as "the dark con of man."

    Sophie Neveu: But what secret?

    Robert Langdon: The Priory of Sion protects the source of God's power on Earth.

  • Andre Vernet: Forgive the intrusion. I'm afraid the police arrived more quickly than I anticipated. You must follow me, please. For your own safety.

    Sophie Neveu: You knew they were coming?

    Andre Vernet: My guard alerted me to your status when you arrived. Yours is one of our oldest and highest-level accounts. It includes a safe-passage clause.

    Robert Langdon: Safe passage?

    Andre Vernet: [opening the back of an armored truck] If you step inside, please. Time is of the essence.

    Robert Langdon: [nervously, seeing the limited space available] In there?