I’m Not Wild
About
Harry Potter
by Dennis Pollock
It was one of
those awkward moments that could not
be avoided. My wife and I were
attending that annual American
ritual known as “open house” where
parents get to meet their children’s
new teachers and ask them that
classic question, “How’s he doing?”
We were discussing our youngest
son’s progress when the teacher got
around to sharing a few means by
which we could encourage our son to
read at home. Her intentions were
excellent, I have no doubt, but the
method she chose was one I could not
be silent about. She told us that
the Harry Potter books were
wonderful for motivating children to
read on their own. When I informed
her we could in no way allow our son
to read such occult material, there
was an awkward pause, and then the
usual defense and protestations
about Harry Potter being a well
written fantasy and so on.
I suppose I made
a rather poor impression upon this
teacher that night. I’m sure she
thought of me as being one of those
humorless, right wing
fundamentalists whose only joy in
life is to rant and rave against
innocent pleasures.
Joanne Rowling,
the author of the Harry Potter
books, was asked in an Internet
interview about the controversy
stirred up by her novels. She
replied, “Are we talking about the
religious right again? If so, I’d
say ‘hogwash’ was a pretty good
description!”
Ms. Rowling has
done numerous interviews about her
books and has often been asked about
the so-called fundamentalist
Christians who dare to oppose her.
Besides her “hogwash” comment, she
has one major justification that she
uses again and again. In fact this
argument has been picked up by many,
even many professing Christians, to
justify a book series where the main
character is attending a school to
learn to be a proficient wizard. (By
the way, in case the word wizard
throws you, a wizard is simply the
male form of a witch. Girls become
witches, boys be-come wizards.)
Rowling’s argument is that these
books are highly moral books. They
present a definite picture of a
universe where love is better than
hate, and nice is superior to nasty.
Children who read these books will
learn to be good little boys and
girls, because Harry is a good boy.
Cayce’s Morality
Edgar Cayce was a
man who seemed to do people a lot of
good. While still a young man, Cayce
had the gift to be able to lie down,
go into a sort of trance, and tell
people what was wrong with their
physical bodies. Because he lived in
a day when things were a lot looser
in the medical community, he also
could prescribe remedies for their
ailments. Some of them were
medicines that could be found on a
shelf, and some were various herbs
and natural remedies. Lo and behold
the people got better. Many
testified to near miraculous cures.
Cayce would give
these readings, as he called them,
and advise people not only of their
physical problems, but would also
counsel them in more spiritual
matters. He always took a highly
moral tone. Cruelty to others,
greed, lust, and various sins of the
flesh were always strongly rebuked
and warned against. These things
were harmful to the human spirit and
contributed to the weakness of the
body.
Yes, if you went
to Cayce for one of his readings,
you could always be sure to get a
great big dose of morality thrown
in. Love was the best way; treating
others as you would have them treat
you was the pathway to health and
success.
And yet after a
while Cayce went deeper still. He
began to not only tell people of
their physical and moral conditions,
he also started telling them of how
their past lives had contributed to
their present situations. Yes, Cayce
soon established himself as a full
fledged promoter of reincarnation.
Of course, he never counseled anyone
to come to Christ and be born again.
After all, if you had an almost
never-ending number of lives to get
things right, the whole idea of the
new birth would be meaningless.
You see, the
devil does not really mind if you’re
a bit moral, as long as you keep
your distance from Jesus Christ.
When God’s plan of redemption is
completed, hell will be filled with
moral people – good, solid pillars
of their communities who paid their
taxes, kept their lawns neat and
trim, attended their children’s PTA
meetings faithfully, and perhaps
even served on many committees at
their churches. They just never got
around to coming to Christ for the
forgiveness of their sins and being
born again.
To say that the
Harry Potter books are OK because
they insert morality here and there,
while promoting witchcraft and
wizardry, is to show a spiritual
naiveté of the highest order.
Witchcraft is not
Fantasy
Just why are we
evangelicals (at least many of us)
so bothered by these fantasy books?
After all, no one really takes them
seriously. The problem lies with the
nature of evil. If there was no such
thing as evil, if witchcraft and
sorcery, curses and spells, demons
and Satan were merely inventions
from the fertile mind of a creative
children’s writer, we could easily
write the whole thing off. It’s all
just pretend.
The truth is that
these things are not fantasy. Harry
Potter may be invented, and the
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft may be
fictional, but witchcraft is most
decidedly real. God had some
definite things to say about
witchcraft to Israel, when he
established His people in the
promised land of Canaan:
When you
come into the land which the
Lord your God is giving you, you
shall not learn to follow the
abominations of those nations.
There shall not be found among
you anyone who makes his son or
his daughter pass through the
fire, or one who practices
witchcraft, or a soothsayer, or
one who interprets omens, or a
sorcerer, or one who conjures
spells, or a medium, or a
spiritist, or one who calls up
the dead. For all who do these
things are an abomination to the
Lord, and because of these
abominations the Lord your God
drives them out from before you.
(Deuteronomy 18:9-12)
In the book of
Second Kings, here is what God says
about Manasseh, considered the most
wicked king in Israel’s history:
Also he
made his son pass through the
fire, practiced soothsaying,
used witchcraft, and consulted
spiritists and mediums. He did
much evil in the sight of the
Lord, to provoke Him to anger.
(2 Kings 21:6)
And why does God
hate witchcraft so much? Because
through witchcraft one is put into
contact with the realm of demons,
and the archenemy of all that is
good, Satan himself.
In the Harry
Potter series, you will read of
spell casting, levitation, animal
sacrifices, astral projection,
crystal gazing, and communing with
dead souls. Young, impressionable
children are getting a rich exposure
to the very things that are part and
parcel of real witchcraft.
The headmaster at
a school in Raleigh, North Carolina
noted: “The throngs that lined up to
meet Rowling (to auto-graph their
books) are often teeming with
children clad in wizard cloaks and
sporting lightning-bolt scars
tattooed – temporarily – to their
foreheads.” A representative for the
Pagan Federation in England
described a flood of new interest in
witchcraft and attributed it to such
cultural icons as Harry Potter,
Sabrina the Teenage Witch, and Buffy
The Vampire Slayer. A San Francisco
Newspaper printed what children were
saying about the Harry Potter
series. A nine-year-old girl named
Catherine wrote: “I’d like to go to
a wizard school, learn magic and put
spells on people. I’d make up an
ugly spell, and then it’s payback
time!” An eleven year old boy named
Jeffrey said, “It would be great to
be a wizard because you could
control situations and things like
teachers.”
If Harry were a
Nazi…
If you still
wonder why evangelical Christians
take all of this so seriously,
consider this: Suppose you wrote a
play, a comedy, in which the main
character of the play was a lovable,
funny, cute little … Nazi. The whole
play dealt with how this cute,
lovable little boy went to a Hitler
school for youth and learned all the
ins and outs of Nazi philosophy.
Further suppose
that you took that play, went out
and hired actors, and gave it a
premier showing in Jerusalem, in the
heart of the Jewish quarter of the
old city. Do you suppose that it
would be very popular? Would there
be rave reviews throughout Israel
over your wonderful little play?
Of course you
know the answer. The play would
never get through the first act.
Considering what Hitler had done to
the Jewish race, considering the
horrific death and destruction that
this madman was responsible for, the
thought of taking this gruesome
character, and the insane philosophy
which he spawned, and trying to make
it cute and lovable would be roundly
condemned by all. This would be
especially true of those older Jews
who had lived through the horrors of
the concentration camps. They would
have a pretty difficult time trying
to accept this play as escapist
fantasy that does no one any harm.
That, my friends,
is exactly the situation with the
Harry Potter books. To try to reach
into the dark side, and turn the
concepts of witchcraft into
something cute and lovable, is utter
folly to anyone who understands the
real nature of both good and evil.
Yearning for the
Supernatural
One thing the
Harry Potter books and movie do
reveal to us is man’s constant quest
for the supernatural. Instinctively
we all look for something which goes
beyond the humdrum scope of our
lives, something which is a little
above and beyond normal experience.
The sad thing is,
you don’t have to look to witchcraft
to find this. The devil is not the
only one who can supply us with
supernatural experience. God
Almighty, our wonderful loving
Heavenly Father, has provided a
supernatural life through the Holy
Spirit.
When you read the
book of Acts, you find the
supernatural element all over the
place. It begins with Jesus
promising the disciples, “You shall
receive power, after the Holy Spirit
has come upon you.” On the day of
Pentecost, the power falls. The
disciples are supernaturally
endowed, and the rest of the book is
one supernatural event after
another.
We, too, can be
filled with the Spirit of God. And
while God doesn’t promise us a
miracle a day, we can experience
that wonderful blessing of being
led, directed, empowered, and filled
with the Holy Spirit.
For those of you
who crave fantasy reading, let me
encourage you to check out C. S.
Lewis’ books. His Chronicles of
Narnia, and other fantasy books are
written with a Christian emphasis,
and in fact, are often parables of
the great New Testament stories and
teachings.
And one last word
to parents: Your children’s greatest
leverage, the magical key that opens
way too many doors for them, is that
time-worn phrase: “But everybody’s
doing it!” (or in this case reading
it). Hold fast to your convictions,
Mom and Dad. Let your children know
that they are not everybody else;
they are special. They belong to
God. He has chosen them, and they
cannot live like everybody else. God
has a great plan for their lives,
and they must live by a different
standard from their unbelieving
neighbors.
Let Harry go to
the Hogwarts school; our children
have a far greater school than that,
the school of discipleship, that
school whose Headmaster is the
spotless Son of God, Jesus Christ.
In His school we shall be equipped
to be a blessing on the earth, and
to enjoy eternity in the presence of
God. |