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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

British cathedral agrees to part in ‘Da Vinci’ movie

Jill Lawless Associated Press

Westminster Abbey said no. But Lincoln Cathedral was happy to oblige, as was a small Scottish chapel.

British churches are divided over whether to allow filming of “The Da Vinci Code,” an adaptation of Dan Brown’s biblically revisionist megaseller.

The novel has drawn strong protests from the Roman Catholic Church, and the movie version has fanned whispers of discontent in Lincoln, where Tom Hanks and the crew were filming this week.

“To a believer, any believer, what is happening is blasphemous,” said a woman identifying herself as Sister Mary Michael, who held a solo prayer vigil outside the medieval cathedral.

The head of Lincoln’s Anglican cathedral, the Very Rev. Alec Knight, conceded that the novel was “far-fetched and heretical” but defended the decision to allow filming. The cathedral in central England accepted a reported $180,000 to double as Westminster Abbey in the Ron Howard-directed film.

“It has clearly touched the public imagination, and the church needs to open up a debate about it rather than throw one’s hands up and walk away from it,” Knight said.

Brown’s fictional thriller follows professor Robert Langdon as he investigates the murder of an elderly member of an ancient society that guards dark secrets about the quest for the Holy Grail and the story of Jesus Christ.

The book’s mix of code-breaking, art history, religion and mystical lore has helped sell 25 million copies since it was published two years ago. But many Christians have been offended by its central claim – that Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had descendants.

Westminster Abbey, the 1,000-year-old London edifice where British monarchs are crowned and buried – and whose Chapter House is featured in the book – said it would be “inappropriate” to allow filming there.

“Although it is a fine page-turner, we cannot commend or endorse the contentious and wayward religious and historic suggestions made in the book – nor its views of Christianity and the New Testament,” the Abbey said in a statement.

Other Anglican institutions have been more welcoming. Winchester Cathedral in Southern England has given permission for filming to take place later this year, as has Rosslyn Chapel near Edinburgh.