Is Harry Potter a menace to our children's souls?
By Peter T. Chattaway
BC Christian News
Richard Abanes: Harry Potter and the Bible: The Menace Behind
the Magick, Horizon, 2001.
Connie Neal: What's a
Christian to Do With Harry Potter?, WaterBrook, 2001.
YEARS AGO, as a teen, I heard a man at a church speak on the evils of
popular culture. I expected him to rail against the usual suspects -- rock
and roll, Star Wars, Disney cartoons with grey-bearded magicians in
pointed hats -- but I was entirely unprepared for when he turned his
attention to My Little Pony. Some of these seemingly innocuous toys, he
noted, had wings or horns, like the unicorns and flying steeds of Greek
myth, and this, he said, was not good. "There's nothing wrong with
ponies," he said with utter conviction. "God made ponies. But God
didn't make little unicorns."
I was surprised that anyone could think such wonderful, imaginary
creatures were dangerous, especially since devout Christians such as C.S.
Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien had used these and other mythical beasts in The Chronicles of
Narnia and The Lord of the Rings, books that exemplified a
Christian worldview. But the speaker was unfazed when I asked him about
this afterwards. "Tolkien was a Catholic," he said, as though this
automatically disqualified his works. And Lewis -- well, he had his
problems, too.
I think of that speaker often when I hear people speak against the
perceived evils of the Harry
Potter books. J.K. Rowling's funny, dark and entertaining novels --
about a school for children who are born with magical powers -- have
proved immensely popular, and this success makes many Christians nervous.
Some condemn all stories which depict creatures and forces of
nature that God did not create in our world. But, curiously, many of those
who attack the Potter books are quite keen to promote the works of Lewis
and Tolkien, despite the fact that many of the reasons they give for
opposing the one set of stories should, logically, also apply to the
others.
This inconsistency seems to be tolerated because Lewis and Tolkien are on
'our' side, while no one quite knows how to peg Rowling, who claims to be
a Christian but has never publicly discussed her beliefs in detail. Thus,
instead of engaging with these stories as works of art that require and
encourage the reader's discernment, Potter's critics reduce them all to
boundary markers: if you like this book and hate that one, you are one of
us -- but if you don't, you aren't.
This inconsistency is one of the main flaws in Harry
Potter and the Bible: The Menace Behind the Magick, an otherwise
thorough and well-written critique of the Potter books by journalist and
occult specialist Richard Abanes.
Although he makes some valid points, Abanes is so determined to find evil
in Rowling's books that he neglects their better qualities; and when he
assesses Lewis and Tolkien, he has nothing but praise -- even though their
writings contain many of the things he finds so offensive in the Potter
books.
References to pagan gods? Juvenile heroes who use words like 'damn' and
other mild profanities? Centaurs who practice a form of astrology?
Narnia has them all. Disrespect for authority? Lewis hilariously
mocks both modern English schools and the British parliament in the
closing pages of The Silver Chair. Blurring the line between
reality and fantasy? Tolkien playfully wrote as though hobbits still lived
among us, albeit in hiding; and Lewis -- who was not above making himself
a character in his own fiction -- was quite clear that the Aslan of his
books was no mere symbol for Christ but, within the framework of his
stories, was actually Christ himself, in Narnian form.
Some of Abanes' criticisms, however, are worth considering. Rowling's
sometimes merciless depiction of Harry's fat, cruel cousin Dudley could
pose problems for younger readers who are overweight. And the way Harry
and his friends always seem to get away with breaking the rules is
problematic, but not necessarily for the reasons Abanes cites. Rules are
not always good, and they sometimes do need to be broken in the service of
higher principles -- but there are usually consequences for breaking them,
and if Harry consistently escapes facing these consequences, and if he
never learns how to discern between good and bad rules, then he won't grow
all that much as a character.
Much of what Abanes writes is designed to play on the fears of Christian
parents; when he asks if Rowling's success is due not just to good writing
and media hype, but to "an unseen spiritual force of darkness," he leaves
little doubt where he thinks the answer lies.
Lastly, despite his book's title, Abanes never explores the fact that the
Bible itself, like the Potter books, is a collection of stories which act
on the imagination in unpredictable ways. If children ought to avoid
morally ambiguous stories about young upstarts who lie to protect
themselves and sometimes engage in gruesome violence, then what should we
do with all those Sunday school stories about David, "a man after God's
own heart?"
For a more balanced assessment of the Potter controversy, parents may
prefer to read What's
a Christian to Do With Harry Potter? by Connie Neal. Neal makes no secret of
the fact that she likes the Potter books, but instead of promoting them
outright, she looks for ways to resolve the conflict between Christians
who disagree on this subject.
She says the Potter debate is a "disputable matter," like the several
issues that Paul addressed in Romans
14 -- and she says we need to understand each other better, though we
may continue to disagree.
Neal's writing style leaves a little to be desired, but she makes some
very thoughtful points, and she is especially good at explaining the
positive role that fantasy plays in children's psychology. She correctly
points out that those who try to link the Potter books to satanic or
demonic activity can only do so by imposing outside concepts onto the
stories, and she also provides helpful tips for reading the Potter books
in a way that is not merely permissible, but might also be profitable for
the body of Christ.
These issues will become even more pertinent in the months to come; the
first book in Rowling's series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's
Stone, is being turned into a movie that will come to theatres in
November, mere weeks before the movie version of Tolkien's The Fellowship of the Ring
hits the big screen. These films will give Christians even more of an
opportunity to debate the merits of stories in which wizards use magic to
defeat the forces of evil.