[1] I've just returned from seeing Harry Potter and the
Sorcerer's Stone and for the first time I understand what all
the fuss is about. Well, maybe not ALL of it.
[2] I understand the best seller sales. I understand how people
of all ages have been captivated by the story. I understand why the
publisher was able to translate and market it in 30 different
countries.
[3] What I do not understand is the vilification that this story
has received by people who call themselves "Christian."
[4] Perhaps it is the wands and the word "witches" that trip the
wires? Indeed, the most excoriating criticism has come from some
Christians fixated on the literal meaning of things. However, it
requires more than literalism to get from Harry Potter's
watered-down version of whimsical witchcraft and wizardry to
serious Satanism. In fact, as I reflect on it now, the assertion
that this story is either blatantly or cryptically Satanic seems
downright absurd. Quite to the contrary, the plot, themes and
symbols in the movie I just saw (I - like a handful of American
adults - have still not read the book!) militate against the very
evil forces that Christian traditionally and doctrinally attribute
to both sin and Satan.
[5] This is precisely why I think every devout Christian should
see and relish Harry Potter.
[6] The plot of Harry Potter tells how a boy
courageously, albeit unwittingly, employs a deeper, truer magic to
defeat a wicked wizard and win a battle over the forces of evil. In
this way, the story is very similar to C.S. Lewis' novel, The
Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe in which the Christ-like
lion, Aslan, defeats the villainous White Witch by allowing himself
to be sacrificed, thereby appealing to a more ancient magic that
frees Narnia from her icy, punitive grasp. (I wonder what was said
of Lewis' work when it was published?) To Christians, both of these
stories should sound comfortably familiar. Hearing them should not
undermine, but instead strengthen our grasp and appreciation of our
own Christian narrative because they appeal to our understanding of
redemption by a deeper, greater power.
[7] Likewise, the themes in Harry Potter are not
insidiously wicked, but blatantly moral: Loyalty. Courage.
Perseverance. The power of love. The danger in failing to discern
good from evil. The certainty that vanity and selfish want will
lead to futile and disastrous ends. The movie is almost preachy on
these accounts. Granted, the Hogwart's academy is still more prep
school than Sunday School; but the morals it promotes are surely
"Christian" morals, too.
[8] Finally, and most striking, is the use of symbolism in
Harry Potter. For example, the Sorcerer's Stone is a
bright red, palm sized rock. It looks not unlike an apple and is
strongly suggestive of the fruit of the forbidden tree in the
Garden of Eden. (Of course, the forbidden tree in Genesis is the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil, not the tree of life.)
Also, Harry Potter himself is identified by a mark he received as a
child when he alone was left to live after his parents were killed,
his mother in sacrifice for him. Indeed, one is not far from
understanding baptism when one understands that on our foreheads we
bear the invisible mark of a parent's love (child of God!) and of
life given in sacrifice for us. This sign of the cross made on our
foreheads in baptism marks us forever, protects us and set us apart
to all who encounter us. The symbols don't match exactly, of
course, but they are similar enough to make us consider and
appreciate anew the rituals and symbols and realities of Christian
practice.
[9] I have read apologies for "Potter" that excuse it as
harmless since it is "just a story" or "fanciful tale." These
trivializations miss the mark as much as claims that "Potter" is
Satanic. If Christians have any complaint at all with Harry
Potter it is the degree to which its author, J.K. Rowling,
"samples" from the Christian narrative and tradition without giving
it credit. "Harry Potter" is a success the world over because it
speaks to a real battle between good and evil, a real encounter
with mystery, and a real longing for love that is at the heart of
humanity, the center of the cosmos and the base of the Christian
faith.
[10] A description of some of the differing views on Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone can be found on gospelcom.net.