The Da Vinci Code is the latest of many books by popular writers that have questioned the New Testament’s portrayal of Jesus. The Gospels say that during His lifetime His enemies called him a drunkard, glutton, and the associate of disreputable people (Luke 7:34; 15:2). The Talmud, written hundreds of years after Jesus, says that He was sexually immoral, a sorcerer, and an idolater
1. Modern writers and cult leaders have claimed that He was a revolutionary zealot, an ascetic radical, a drug-influenced mystic, a Buddhist monk, etc.
The problem with all of these claims is that they ignore the only significant historical evidence about Jesus that has survived from the years immediately following His life, death, and resurrection. In fact, during the past two centuries the science of textual criticism has confirmed what Christians have always believed—that the main New Testament documents date from within the lifetime of many people who personally knew Jesus (1 Corinthians 15:1-10). If someone is unwilling to accept the veracity of the New Testament, they must rely on sheer speculation based on personal worldview and prejudice.