Harry Potter and Christianity
5 August, 2011 1 Comment
A very small (but very vocal!) minority of Christians view J.K Rowling’s series as a gateway to the occult for young people (“look how popular it is! Anything today’s kids like must be evil!”).
A much larger group of Christians view it as harmless fun (many have actually read the books, and I imagine the others simply rely on the fact that of all the millions of kids who’ve now read Harry Potter, the percentage who’ve actually started worshipping Satan as a result is zero).
But the rest of us Christians think Harry Potter is not just harmless fun. It’s extremely-beneficial-to-humanity fun.
We believe J. K. Rowling is a Godsend. Here are a couple of reasons why:
For one, the Harry Potter books are chock-full of good moral values:
- Guess what, that terrible guy Snape wasn’t so evil after all – guess you can’t judge anyone, can you?
- The recurring theme about “purebloods” – showing how evil prejudice and bigotry are
- The recurring theme that our choices, not our circumstances or innate talents that determine who we are: “It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.” and “…the world isn’t split into good people and Death Eaters. We’ve all got both light and dark inside us. What matters is the part we choose to act on. That’s who we really are…”
- Harry’s Mum, and that bloke Dumbledore, actually sacrificed their lives to save others (who do we know who’s done something like that?)
… just off the top of my head. Here’s some more MissInterpretation added last time I wrote on this topic:
- Doing what’s right instead of what’s popular is its own reward (Longbottom trying to stop Harry, Hermione, and Ron)
- Magic doesn’t fix real-world problems (peer pressure, homework, etc) even if you’re a wizard
- Adults are there to help you in situations too big to handle (in the beginning, Harry & friends did not trust the teachers enough to bring their problems to them; by the end, Harry learns that he can benefit from the guidance and council of those older and wiser)
This is no big surprise really, as Rowling identifies herself as a church-going Christian.
But the excellent morals in Harry Potter, while leaving most of popular entertainment in the dust, aren’t even the best argument in favour of Harry Potter, even strictly from a Christian perspective. That honour belongs to their ability to encourage people to read.
How many children (and adults), worldwide, now read books regularly that never would have picked one up if not for Harry Potter? 50% more? 10 times as many?
Think how much more literate the world is, as a result of this one woman. Think how much a person’s life (and the lives of those around them, and often the lives of many others only vaguely connected to them) are improved by that person’s acquiring a lifelong love of learning and knowledge from an early age.
In a world where video games are entertaining enough to entice kids to play literally all day, where enough movies and TV shows are released to take up all our waking hours many times over, young people are actually reading books.
Christ taught that if you want to know whether something is good or not, you have to look at the actual results:
A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit… Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.
Matthew 7:20
That’s why Christians should be the last people on Earth to condemn these books.
“extremely-beneficial-to-humanity fun” That’s so great! I love it!
When the first Harry Potter book was released and I was about 8-years-old my dad refused to let me read them because he was worried that I would be lured into the world of witchcraft and satan worshiping (like many of the people you’ve mentioned above). However, even at a young age, after having read the first book, I could tell that that was not what these books were about. The greater good and the them of love just exude from Rowling’s writing. Even though I had to disobey my dad, I finished the series and when I explained the overall theme and outcome of the books to him, he felt pretty silly for having thought they were somehow “evil.”