One of the more curious aspects of  the cult of The Da Vinci Code is the lack of skepticism about novelist  Dan Brown's contention that Catholicism was a vast plot to steal from women the  feminist freedoms they had enjoyed under "the pagans" who worshipped  "the Goddess."
First, pagans didn't worship the Goddess because if they had, they wouldn't have  been pagans, they have been monotheists. Like his New Age feminist sources,  Brown is a slave to the intellectual prestige of monotheism. Let's face it, real  Greco-Roman paganism, as described in, say, Homer, has a tawdry People  magazine Jennifer Aniston vs. Angelina Jolie battle over Brad Pitt quality to  it. So, a bunch of goddesses get reduced down to the Goddess because monotheism  just seems more respectable.
Second, Brown, with all his talk of "the sacred feminine," is being  intentionally hazy about what pagans have tended to mean by it: i.e., fertility  goddesses. Now, you can see a bit of a problem for modern feminists in praising  ancient conceptions of women as most sacred when barefoot and pregnant, but Dan  Brown and his 60 million readers apparently can't.
Third,    hostility to paganism -- that's what the  Protestants, Jews, and Muslims complained about ... that Catholicism wasn't  hostile enough towards paganism. It's hardly a surprise that the  Renaissance started in Catholic Italy. Or that the Reformation was a reaction to  the High Renaissance in Rome. Here's a minor modern example: my younger son's  otherwise perfectly sane Lutheran school refuses to hold a Halloween party  because that's too pagan, so it holds a "Harvest Festival." To a  Halloween-loving Catholic like me, that sounds like nuts, but it makes perfect  sense to Lutherans.
Fourth, doesn't anybody remember basic Roman Empire sociology? Early  Christianity particularly appealed to women, especially widows. The pagans, and  anti-Christian philosophers like Nietzsche ever since, blamed Christianity for  making Rome too soft, too womanly to fight off the barbarians. Historian Rodney  Stark says in an interviews:
 
"Christian  women had tremendous advantages compared to the woman next door, who was like  them in every way except that she was a pagan. First, when did you get married?  Most pagan girls were married off around age 11, before puberty, and they had  nothing to say about it, and they got married to some 35-year-old guy. Christian  women had plenty of say in the matter and tended to marry around age 18.
"Abortion was a huge killer of women in  this period, but Christian women were spared that. And infanticide—pagans  killed little girls left and right. We’ve unearthed sewers clogged with the  bones of newborn girls. But Christians prohibited this. Consequently, the sex  ratio changed and Christians didn’t have the enormous shortage of women that  plagued the rest of the empire."
Fifth, the  idea that the Catholic Church kept women down is pretty odd: What  other monotheistic religion honored hundreds of women as saints? Made the Virgin  Mary the second most revered person of all? What other religion made women  writers like St. Theresa of Avila and St. Catherine of Siena part of the canon  of religious literature? What other religion encouraged women to found and run giant  hospitals? Protestantism? Judaism? Islam?
Here's what I think is the underlying reason this farrago of nonsense is so  popular with book-reading modern women: Even though the Catholic Church was more  favorable toward career women (e.g., abbesses of convents) than other religions,  the Church distinctly stood against the now popular idea that "You can have  it all!" -- i.e., a career and sex. The Catholic Church offered lots of  careers for women, but the careers required chastity. The Church saw motherhood  as a separate career that didn't combine well with other careers, which in the  days before effective contraception was more or less true.
So, the real complaint in The Da Vinci Code is that The Pill wasn't  invented until 1964.   
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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