I was raised in a
fundamentalist home. Harry Potter was denounced from the
pulpit. I knew nothing of the stories, except that "the world" liked them and
they were forbidden. (A recurring trend in doctrine, actually.) I am extremely
grateful that some friends and family members of mine encouraged me to read them.
I know the Christian world has debated the topic for eleven years now, so in a
way, I’m late to the debate. In another sense, though, Harry Potter is
not going away from our society. It’s as popular now as it ever was, and a
younger generation is starting to love it. As every new generation is born, a
new set of parents will need to make the “Harry Potter decision”.
So perhaps I’m exactly on time.
1. YOU FEAR WHAT YOU HAVE NOT READ
The number one reason
why Christian parents won’t let their kids read Harry Potter is
that they have not read them. Personally, I think it’s a good rule of practice
to read everything your kids read. (I say this as a single, childless adult.) I
refuse to listen to any argument against Harry Potter from
someone who has not read the books or at the very least, seen the movies. It’s
basic common sense. You wouldn’t listen to a movie review from someone who
hadn’t seen the movie. You wouldn’t go to a restaurant on the advice of someone
who hasn’t been there. And you shouldn’t accept a book review from someone who
has never read the book. All I have to say to people who are reading this, but
haven’t read the books is: stop reading this and READ THE BOOKS. If you have
arguments after you’ve read them, then we can talk. Until then, everything you
say is hearsay and would not be upheld in a court of law.
Take Alan Jacobs, for
example, a Christian who was adamantly opposed to Harry Potter. He
began reading the books to have fuel to feed his anti-Potter fire,
but by the end of the second book, he was Rowling’s biggest fan. He went on to
teach college courses (yes, college courses-like I said, they aren’t a passing
fad that’s going to go away, folks) on Harry Potter at Wheaton
and Baylor Universities. This has been the case with many Christians whom I’ve
spoken with about Harry Potter. Once you read them, you understand
that they are not evil. They are impressive.
2. THE GREAT DOUBLE STANDARD
The double standard in
the Christian world is that some witchcraft is okay, while some is not. Before
you jump on the “hey-there-is-no-witchcraft-in-my-home” bandwagon, have your
kids seen The Chronicles of Narnia? More often that not, the same
parents who shun Harry Potter will rave about Lord of
the Rings or The Chronicles of Narnia or The
Wizard of Oz. (Okay, maybe less raving about Oz, but in most
homes it still is not forbidden.) As someone who has read the books and seen
the movies multiple times, let me assure you that the magic used by Rowling is
no different from the magic used by Tolkien and (dare I say) Lewis. I have
heard the argument that both Narnia and LOTR have
Christian allegorical significance, but I would argue that there are plenty of
books on the market showing Christian parallels in Harry Potter. I
will speak more to the magic in the next point, but my question now is “why”?
Why are certain magic stories immortalized and certain others seen as taboo?
Even Disney movies use quite a bit of magic, and very few families ban Disney
from their home. (Although I have known a few families who have, even their
reasons were not about magic.) I don’t have the answer to the question, but perhaps
you can help me with your opinion.
(Please note my use of
the words “SOME” and “FEW” in this paragraph. Thank you.)
3. SORCERY VS. FANTASY
To paraphrase C.S.
Lewis, you cannot be tolerant (or intolerant) of something that does not exist.
The sorcery and witchcraft of the Bible are real. The Bible commands that we
are to be intolerant of any power that is derived from Satan. (To be clear, it
is Satan that we are shunning, not any person who is under His control.
Christ’s love and grace is to be shown to all people. That’s another blog for
another day, though.) Satan does have power and his demons have power. There is
no doubt that some of them use their power to carry out his work. This is not
to be discounted, and is very serious issue. Modern day occult movements should
not be confused with the fantasy magic that is used in Harry Potter,
however. The magic in Harry Potter, the kind with wands and spells,
is fictional and is meant as a metaphor for the power of choice we have within
us. Rowling has borrowed from all the classic literature greats in creating her
counterworld of magic for Harry Potter. The magic of Harry
Potter can almost exclusively be attributed to classical literature.
(It bears mentioning that Rowling has a degree in Literature.) Magic wands,
spells, transfiguration, medium, etc, can all be found in respectable and
fundamental literature. Homer's Odyssey, Sophocles Oedipus Rex,
Virgil's Aeneid, Horace's The Satires, Physiologus,
Aelian's On Animals, Arabian Nights, The Book
of Lancelot, Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britian,
Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, Spenser's The
Faerie Queen, Grimm's fairy tales, Shakespeare's Macbeth, The
Tempest, A Winter's Tale, Hamlet, King Lear, Richard
III, and A Midsummer NightÂ’s Dream, Marlowe's Faust,
White's The Sword in the Stone, Bronte's Jane Eyre,
Dickens's A Christmas Carol and "The Story of the Goblins
Who Stole a Sexton", Tennyson's "Idylls of the
King", Carroll's Through the Looking-glass, Leroux's The
Phantom of the Opera, Stoker's Dracula, Baum's Oz series,
Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, James's The Turn of the
Screw, and Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia (which Rowling
admits had a huge impact on her as a child and which she still reads) all cover
enough magic to account for most of the magical things in Harry Potter.
I could list a few more, but you probably get the point. Modern Wiccans
themselves have agreed that these books do not in any way portray their
religion. (By the way, Wicca isn’t what you think, either.)
There is no reference
to a higher power in Harry Potter-Satan, God or otherwise. To go back to the original
point, since there is no worship of Satan present, there is no witchcraft of
the Bible present either. You cannot be intolerant of a sorcery that does not
exist.
4. GOOD VS EVIL
Many Harry
Potter nay-sayers will say that the lines between good and evil are
not as clearly defined in Harry Potter as they are in Narnia or The
Lord of the Rings, and in some instances, they would be right. The truth of
the matter is that Harry breaks plenty of school rules while saving the
wizarding world from Voldemort, and the headmaster Dumbledore turns a blind
eye. Harry is often faced with the choice of saving his entire world and the
lives of everyone loves or following Hogwarts curfew. Spoiler alert: he chooses
to save the world. Admittedly, this is pragmatic. Sin is sin. I am aware of
that. I hope you look at this, not as reason to ban the books from your
household, but as a stepping stone to having real world conversations with your
children about right and wrong. Newsflash: the real world is complicated, and
it’s going to be full of complicated choices for your child. Renowned child
psychologist Bettelheim put it this way: "More can be learned from [fairy
tales] about the inner problems of human beings, and of the right solutions to
their predicaments in any society than from any other type of story within a
child's comprehension." Fictional stories, or fairy tales (which Harry
Potter essentially is) are an excellent catalyst for opening difficult
conversations. One of the things I love about Rowling is that she allows
certain characters, even Harry, to question good and evil. No character is only
good or only evil. In life, I want my future children to be empathic to those
who may not be the same as them or as nice as they are sure to be (Draco
Malfroy, Luna Lovegood). Rowling presents an excellent way to help them begin
to think that way about people by showing the struggle within all characters,
good and bad. I love that we see the main antagonist’s struggle with
evil, and how he eventually (spoiler alert) overcomes it. I believe that Alan
Jacobs sums it up best:
The
clarity with which Rowling sees the need to choose between good and evil is
admirable, but still more admirable, to my mind, is her refusal to allow a
simple division of parties into the Good and the Evil. Harry Potter is
unquestionably a good boy, but, as I have suggested, a key component of his
virtue arises from his recognition that he is not inevitably good.
When first–year students arrive at Hogwarts, they come to an assembly of the
entire school, students and faculty. Each of them sits on a stool in the midst
of the assembly and puts on a large, battered, old hat—the Sorting Hat, which
decides which of the four houses the student will enter. After unusually long
reflection, the Sorting Hat, to Harry’s great relief, puts him in Gryffindor,
but not before telling him that he could achieve real greatness in Slytherin.
This comment haunts Harry: he often wonders if Slytherin is where he truly
belongs, among the pragmatists, the careerists, the manipulators and deceivers,
the power–hungry, and the just plain nasty. Near the end of the second book,
after a terrifying encounter with Voldemort—his third, since Voldemort had
tried to kill Harry, and succeeded in killing his parents, when Harry was a
baby, and had confronted Harry again in the first book—he confesses his doubts
to Dumbledore.
"So
I should be in Slytherin," Harry said, looking desperately
into Dumbledore’s face. "The Sorting Hat could see Slytherin’s power in
me, and it—"
"Put
you in Gryffindor," said Dumbledore calmly. "Listen to me, Harry. You
happen to have many qualities Salazar Slytherin prized in his hand–picked
students. Resourcefulness . . . determination . . . a certain disregard for
rules," he added, his moustache quivering again. "Yet the Sorting Hat
placed you in Gryffindor. You know why that was. Think."
"It
only put me in Gryffindor," said Harry in a defeated voice, "Because
I asked not to go in Slytherin. . . .”
"Exactly,"
said Dumbledore, beaming once more. "Which makes you very different from
[Voldemort]. It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more
than our abilities." Harry sat motionless in his chair, stunned.
Harry
is stunned because he realizes for the first time that his confusion has been
wrongheaded from the start: he had been asking the question "Who am I at
heart?" when he needed to be asking the question "What must I do in
order to become what I should be?" His character is not a fixed
preexistent thing, but something that he has the responsibility for making:
that’s why the Greeks called it character, "that which is engraved."
5. RUMORS, RUMORS, RUMORS
There are plenty of
rumors associated with JK Rowling and her motivation for writing Harry
Potter and (not surprisingly) most of them have to do her views on
witchcraft and whether or not she herself is a witch looking for young,
impressionable converts (as was preached from my childhood pulpit). The facts
about JK Rowling are actually rather boring in comparison to the rumors, which
is often the case. JK Rowling is not, in fact a witch. She’s a ….wait for
it…Presbyterian. (Technically, church of Scotland, which translates as a
Presbyterian in America.) Many rumors about the books can be answered simply by
reading them, so I will not address those rumors. (Refer to Point One.) Below
is an article revealing what JK Rowling has actually said about the occult.
In conclusion, I would
like to acknowledge the fact that this has not been a very unbiased view of Harry
Potter. One of my weakness is that I tend to have very strong opinions and
I tend to become frustrated when others don’t share them. I hope that, with me,
you will see this issue as a I Corinthians 8-10 and Romans 14-15 “meat
sacrificed to idols” issue. It’s okay for some Christians but not others. Either
way, it is not an issue which should cause discord in the body of Christ.
Another disclaimer
that I would like to take the opportunity to make is that I have mentioned that
I do not have children. This being the case, I would never presume to tell you
how to raise yours. You know your child. You know what works in your home.
There is no judgment from me if you decide not to allow Harry Potter into
your household. I am only trying to convey my opinion (laced with a facts) in
order to give you more information, and perhaps a different perspective. I only
know that as I was reading Harry Potter, a distinct thought that I
had was, “I can’t wait to read this to my kids one day.”
4 comments:
For starters I can here these words pouring right from your lips as I read, and I was reminded of your freedom speech in college. Very good. :) I am glad you have researched these books. It is a whole different ball game when you have children. I realized recently that I have to start drawing lines as far as magic goes in our home. But, where does Bibidi-Bobidi-Boo end and the world of wizards begin. With some things I would feel ok and with others I just didn't like it. I couldn't figure out why really. I told avery I don't like my little ponies because of the magic but she watches Cinderella. A complete double standard. As I watched the pattern of my likes and dislikes I started to understand my reasoning. In Avery's mind "magic" is pretend, but on my little ponies she is stirring a cauldron, looking up spells- it is much more like witchcraft than pretend. I don't want her asking for a caldron for Christmas and she doesn't have a magic wand. I explain to her that it is just pretend. I do not allow her to watch anything with strong magical elements simply because she is not of the age to understand what magic is actually used for in real life. As a rule if I don't want her to pretend to be it I don't let her watch it or play with it. When I see a witch I turn it off. I suppose it is a double standard as far as it goes but when it comes to children it isn't so black and white. You understand how certain things affect your child and in what way and you take into consideration when you want to introduce certain realities to them. She knows fairies aren't real and there are no fairy Godmothers. But she is not at the age to understand how satan and demons play into true magic but what I can do is discourage her from believing in any way that it good. Basically my standard is if I can tell her that is pretend then I will allow it, but if these things really exist in the realm of true magic is it not allowed. I don't want magic to become appealing- That is a gear concern as well. Like I said with kids there is a lot more to consider than you think. I knew you would want a nice long comment ;) lol
Erica, thank you so much for your comment! You're right, I do appreciate a nice long comment! Ha! I completely respect your view. I can't imagine how difficult raising a child is. Everyone tells me it's the most difficult thing you will ever do. With someone as young as your Avery, I would totally do what you are doing and limit the witchcraft. She would not be able to differentiate between real and make believe. I do think any story like this is for older children who don't have issues with the occult and is spiritually able to handle it. Only a parent can know what their child can handle and what they struggle with. You are awesome! Keep up the good work.
Following your blog btw - keep posting ;)
You have given me so much to think about! Keep it coming!
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