I just saw this review and thought I would pass it along.  Some 
of my boys have been talking about the book lately.

The Trouble with Harry
By John Andrew Murray 
Some Christians think Harry Potter is a hero. Others think the 
young wizard's best-selling adventures are simply evil. What's 
a concerned parent to think? 

Having sold more than 8 million copies, the three Harry Potter 
books released so far have created a stir in public schools 
across America. Some Christian parents have complained that 
J.K. Rowling's tales of young witches and wizards are 
terrifying to young children and inappropriate for classroom 
use. They've been rewarded for their concern with ridicule in 
newspapers and editorial cartoons.
Complicating the matter is the fact that several Christian 
leaders and conservative magazines have praised the series's 
ability to captivate even the most reluctant young readers.
And the controversy has just begun.
Warner Bros. purchased movie rights to the books two years ago, 
along with the potential for building a billion-dollar 
franchise. Steven Spielberg has been mentioned as director of 
the film, and Warner will reportedly spend $45 million for 
special effects alone.
What's more, The Wall Street Journal says the company is 
counting on big profits from sequels, TV broadcast rights, 
cartoon spin-offs, home-video sales, theme-park rides and 
interactive games.
Rowling, a single mother in Britain, has said she will write a 
total of seven books, the last to be released in 2003. She's 
already written the final chapter of the last book. (She's also 
made it clear that the books will grow along with the 
adolescent Harry�he'll discover the opposite sex, for example�
and darker themes, including the death of a friend, are not off-
limits.)
If you think it's bad now, in a year or two, there may be no 
avoiding the Harry Potter craze. That's why it's important now 
to understand just what sort of worldview the books present.
Lower Than a Dog
I can admit now that when I graduated from Vanderbilt 
University in 1990 with a degree in English and history, I had 
little awareness of the media's effects on children. I would 
have jumped at the chance to read Harry Potter to my sixth-
grade English class. Instead, I used an old television series, 
Alfred Hitchcock Presents, each Monday to teach my students 
about plot development within a story.

One week I stopped the video before the show's end and asked 
the students to write their own endings. They were so excited, 
they wanted to read their work aloud in class. I allowed them 
to do so, but the slasher-film endings I heard horrified and 
sickened me. After about the third student, I decided to read 
the rest silently. There were only a few that I thought were 
appropriate to share with the class.
When I later expressed my concern to the students, they 
defended their compositions, insisting that media violence had 
no effect. After all, they said, they understood that the 
killings they saw on TV and movies were "fake." But when I 
asked them how they would feel if they saw a TV program in 
which a dog was machine-gunned, they expressed their disgust in 
unison.
That presented me with a chance to make a simple point: The 
reason they found the shooting death of a dog so horrible is 
because they hadn't been desensitized to it, as they were to 
the murder of a human.
So how does this relate to teaching Harry Potter?
With the growing popularity of youth-oriented TV shows on 
witchcraft�Sabrina, the Teenage Witch; Charmed; Buffy the 
Vampire Slayer�a generation of children is becoming 
desensitized to the occult. But with Hollywood's help, Harry 
Potter will likely surpass all these influences, potentially 
reaping some grave spiritual consequences.
Who is Harry Potter?
As noted above, Harry has inspired a variety of differing 
reactions, even among evangelicals. One Christian father of two 
daughters, ages 10 and 12, says that his youngest girl is "in 
love" with the Potter books.
"They are her all-time favorites," he said. "She and her 
friends have read them multiple times."
The father said that his daughter had grown weary of Nancy Drew 
mysteries�"these are all the same," she told him�and that books 
from Christian publishers are too "formulaic" and "will not 
stand the test of time as literature." He doesn't want his 
children to turn to television for stimulation, so he's 
actually pleased by the Harry Potter craze.
"Even if that literature may not necessarily espouse Christian 
values, if it excites them in ways that compete successfully 
with TV, it is making a wonderful contribution to their 
developing worldview," he says.
What makes Harry Potter's world so attractive�even to 
Christians?
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, the first of Rowling's 
three books, introduces Harry as an orphaned baby. Readers 
quickly learn that Harry has survived an attack by the series' 
evil wizard: Lord Voldemort. Although successfully destroying 
Harry's parents (a wizard and witch), Voldemort mysteriously 
fails in his attempts to kill Harry, leaving a lightning-bolt 
scar on the infant Harry's forehead. Furthermore, in the 
process, Voldemort loses most of his power, thus making Harry 
an instant legend in the world of witchcraft.
Rescued by the "good wizard forces," Harry is deposited on the 
London suburb doorstep of his Muggle Aunt and Uncle. (Muggles 
are everyday people who are oblivious to the workings of the 
witches' and wizards' world.) Forced to sleep in a basement 
cupboard, Harry is tormented by his unloving relatives for the 
next 10 years�a Cinderella-like persecution that readily earns 
the reader's sympathy.
Upon his 11th birthday, which occurs early in the book, Harry's 
life takes a dramatic turn. He learns the true origin of both 
the lightning-bolt scar and his parents' cause of death, and is 
rescued from his Muggle relatives. He's enrolled in Hogwarts�
the premier boarding school for "Witchcraft and Wizardry."
With Hogwarts as the main setting, Harry displays loyalty to 
his new friends and school, and bravery when battling the evil 
Lord Voldemort.
"The good is always more attractive than the bad," said the 
father whose daughter cherishes the books. "Loyalty, honesty, 
charity are celebrated. Harry has friends he respects." 
The Materialist Magician
If so many people like Harry Potter, what could possibly be 
wrong?
To answer that question, it may help to look at another 
supernatural novel, C.S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters. 
Framed as fictional correspondence between the high-ranking 
demon Screwtape and his nephew Wormwood, the book explores some 
of the ways that demonic forces seek to build walls between 
humans and God.
In the 1941 preface of his book, Lewis revealed two of the 
greatest mistakes in humanity's beliefs about demons:
There are two equal and opposite errors into which our race can 
fall about the devils. One is to disbelieve in their existence. 
The other is to believe, and to feel an excessive and unhealthy 
interest in them. They themselves are equally pleased with both 
errors and hail a materialist or a magician with the same 
delight.
An even greater error, and the one most valued by Lewis' 
demonic characters, is the fusion of the two errors. As 
Screwtape writes to Wormwood:
If once we can produce our perfect work�the Materialist 
Magician, the man, not using but veritably worshiping, what he 
vaguely calls "Forces" while denying the existence of "spirits"�
then the end of the war will be in sight.
By disassociating magic and supernatural evil, it becomes 
possible to portray occult practices as "good" and "healthy," 
contrary to the scriptural declaration that such practices 
are "detestable to the Lord." This, in turn, opens the door for 
less discerning individuals�including, but not limited to, 
children�to become confused about supernatural matters.
This process is already well underway in American culture. A 
December 1997 study published by George Gallup, taken from the 
Princeton Religion Research Center, revealed that 31 percent of 
Americans believe in ghosts, 20 percent believe in witches, 24 
percent believe in astrology, 17 percent had consulted a 
fortuneteller and 24 percent believe in reincarnation.
Gallup found that born-again Christians�defined as those who 
believe God's Word to be literally true and have tried to 
encourage someone to accept Jesus Christ as his or her Savior�
held almost the same beliefs percentage-wise as non-Christians.
What about Narnia?
Christian fans of Harry Potter insist that the series is no 
different than C.S. Lewis' The Chronicles of Narnia, a series 
that many Christian parents accept.*
It is true that both authors create fantasy parallel worlds 
involving young British children who encounter magical 
creatures. Both develop admirable characters and evil villains. 
But this is where the comparison ends.
The difference between the two hinges on the concept of 
authority. From a Christian perspective, authority and 
supernatural power are linked.
Take a look at Mark 2, where Jesus heals a paralytic. When 
Jesus first sees the paralytic, He says, "Son, your sins are 
forgiven." This sets up the following scene:
Now some teachers of the law were sitting there, thinking to 
themselves, "Why does this fellow teach like that? He's 
blaspheming! Who can forgive sins but God alone?" Immediately 
Jesus knew . . . that this was what they were thinking . . . 
and He said to them, "Why are you thinking such things? Which 
is easier: to say to the paralytic, 'Your sins are forgiven,' 
or to say, 'Get up, take your mat and walk'? But that you may 
know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive 
sins. . . ." He said to the paralytic, "I tell you, get up, 
take your mat and go home." He got up, took his mat and walked 
out in full view of them all. (Mark 2:6-12a) 
Christ's power flows from His authority. That's the nature of 
all legitimate power�it is granted and guided by authority. 
When we read Rowling's series, we find that she effectively 
divorces power from authority. There is no sovereign person or 
principle governing the use of the supernatural. 
Magical power is gained through inheritance and learning. It is 
not granted by a higher authority, because there is no Higher 
Authority�at least none higher than Harry's mentor, Albus 
Dumbledore, and the evil Lord Voldemort. The two are equal, 
antagonistic and unaccountable to a higher authority.
In C.S. Lewis' Narnia, power and authority are welded together. 
That authority is Jesus, in the character of the great lion 
Aslan�creator and sovereign ruler of Narnia, son of the Emperor 
Beyond the Sea. Good power is power that is bestowed by Aslan 
and exercised in accordance with his will. This good power is 
at work when the children Peter, Susan and Lucy use gifts 
bestowed on them by an agent of Aslan.
Evil power, on the other hand, is power that is seized or 
conjured�rather than bestowed�and exercised for selfish ends. 
Those who resist the temptation to use such power are 
commended, as was Digory, in The Magician's Nephew. But those 
who wield it (such as Jadis, also in The Magician's Nephew) and 
the White Witch (in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe) are 
eventually vanquished by Aslan.
Despite superficial similarities, Rowling's and Lewis' worlds 
are as far apart as east is from west. Rowling's work invites 
children to a world where witchcraft is "neutral" and where 
authority is determined solely by one's cleverness. Lewis 
invites readers to a world where God's authority is not only 
recognized, but celebrated�a world that resounds with His 
goodness and care.
It's a difference no Christian should ignore. 

POTTERMANIA
As the old song goes, they're "just wild about Harry." The 
young wizard and his creator�author J.K. Rowling�have been 
featured on 60 Minutes, the Today show and the Rosie O'Donnell 
Show. Libraries and bookstores across the country are hosting 
Harry Potter parties complete with broomsticks and witch 
goodies mentioned in the series.
Another gauge of Pottermania is the fanaticism surrounding 
Rowling's personal appearances. Rowling recently held a reading 
at a high school gym in Santa Rosa, Calif., where 2,500 rabid 
Potter fans stomped on bleachers and chanted "Har-ry! Har-ry!" 
until the author emerged. 
Rowling's book-signing events regularly draw well over 1,000 
people, prompting Scholastic, Inc.�publisher of the Potter 
series�to warn stores of the need to properly prepare.
The throngs that line up to meet Rowling are often teeming with 
children clad in wizard cloaks and sporting imitation lightning-
bolt scars tattooed�temporarily�to their foreheads. The line of 
Pottermaniacs often extends for blocks, assembling hours before 
Rowling is scheduled to appear.
Not everyone walks away from the book signings happily. The 
crowd was so large at the Book Stall in Winnetka, Ill., that 
600 children had to be turned away. A police officer guarding 
the store's door tried to console crying children.
Things went drastically awry at the Borders bookstore in 
Livingston, N.J., when the crowd�estimated at 2,000�became 
unruly. Police were called in and recommended that the store 
end the signing after one hour. The store's manager was 
reportedly bitten and punched by angry Potter fans.
"It was a total fiasco, really ugly," said one attendee. "Irate 
parents were screaming."
No one knows if Pottermania will maintain its intensity 
throughout the several years it will take to complete the 
series. In the meantime, Scholastic couldn't be happier about 
the Rowling-inspired craze.
"It's amazing," said Scholastic's marketing vice president, 
Jennifer Pasanen. "It's like traveling with a rock star." 

PARENTAL OBJECTIONS
Parents in South Carolina, California, Nebraska, Georgia and 
Minnesota have complained to public school administrators about 
the Harry Potter series's inclusion of gore, evil and death. 
Among the concerns about the first installment, Harry Potter 
and the Sorcerer's Stone:
Witchcraft
The book's main characters engage in occultic and Wiccan-style 
exercises. Harry and his colleagues routinely practice sorcery, 
cast spells, fly on broomsticks and talk with spirits of the 
dead. 
Gruesome Imagery
Author J.K. Rowling incorporates graphic depictions, including 
a professor whose leg is mangled by a three-headed dog; a 
mysterious figure who is caught drinking blood from a unicorn 
carcass; Lord Voldemort's horrific appearance as a ghastly face 
on the back of a professor's head; and Nearly Headless Nick�a 
ghost whose head is barely attached. 
Disrespect 
Harry frequently�and unapologetically�lies, breaks rules and 
disobeys authority figures, including the professors at 
Hogwarts. He specifically disregards a direct order from one of 
his teachers and takes off on a broom. Instead of being 
punished, Harry is honored for his riding skills. 
Vengeance 
Harry resents his cruel relatives and�rather than extending 
forgiveness�is eager for retribution. Upon returning to family 
members at the end of the school year, Harry is pleased at the 
opportunity to torment them.
Family Friendly Libraries (FFL), which keeps parents informed 
about questionable content in popular books, has a detailed 
analysis of the Harry Potter series available on its Web site 
(www.fflibraries.org). In response, the American Library 
Association has denounced FFL's supposed efforts to "ban" Harry 
Potter. At presstime, the ALA reportedly had plans to laud 
Rowling at an upcoming meeting in San Antonio.
For her part, Rowling doesn't believe her books should be off 
limits to anyone.
"I don't think you should censor kids' reading material," she 
told reporters. "It's important just to let them go do what 
they need to do." 


Cdr. Dick Wm. Waskey         

"Don�t wait to make your Son a great man. Make him a great boy."
  
Faith Assembly of God
Royal Rangers Outpost # 81
 
Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
WEB SITE:  http://expage.com/page/royalrangers




________________________________________________
Get your own "800" number - Free
Free voicemail, fax, email, and a lot more
http://www.ureach.com/reg/tag
_______
 To unsubscribe, send "unsubscribe rangernet" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 "Eat the hay & spit out the sticks! - A#1's mule"     RTKB&G4JC!
 http://rangernet.org    Autoresponder: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to