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Is Harry Potter merely entertainment?
BP News ^ | 6-3-04 | Phil Boatwright

Posted on 06/03/2004 9:38:49 AM PDT by BobbyBeeper

FIRST-PERSON: Is Harry Potter merely entertainment? Jun 2, 2004 By Phil Boatwright

"Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" Photo courtesy of harrypotter.com

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (BP)--"I love Harry Potter. I think it would be so cool to be a witch," Sharon, age 11, says.

That's my answer to anyone who says J.K. Rowling's adventure series is harmless fantasy.

While the Harry Potter book and film series has held a hypnotic fascination for youngsters, its thematic foundation is troubling. Arguably, perceptive children can view such material without succumbing to the snare of the occult, but it would be naive to think that movies and TV programs containing witchcraft are not aiding the rise of Wicca in our culture.

In a television special titled "Hollywood Spirituality" which aired several years back on E! Entertainment, Raven Mounauni, a professing witch and owner of an occult paraphernalia store, credited the 1996 movie "The Craft" with inspiring young women to explore the world of witches. "I get a lot of teenage girls in here. You can always tell when 'The Craft' has been on TV, 'cause we get a big influx of girls looking for supplies."

Occult practices shouldn't be considered just diverting amusement. Ouija boards, psychic readers and other forms of misleading supernatural entertainment should not be taken lightly. In Leviticus 19:26 we are instructed, "Do not practice divination or sorcery." There are several warnings in the Scriptures, both Old and New Testament, making it clear that we are to avoid witchcraft or anything associated with the occult. So if God is instructing us to avoid occult practices, how can we justify using it to entertain ourselves?

This may not be a popular view right now. The first Harry Potter film installment earned $969 million worldwide. J.K. Rowlings' five books on the young wizard have become a phenomenon, allowing the author to become the richest woman in England, with assets beyond $1 billion. That would indicate that many parents find nothing wrong with these children's adventures.

There are even a couple of books out right now exclaiming parallels between the Potter books and the Gospel. One author suggests the books help relate Christian themes and truths, opening the door for talking about things such as right and wrong, the nature of faith, loyalty, bravery and trust. Honestly, I think that's a bit thin. Yes, Rowlings’ themes deal with honor, friendship and self-sacrifice, but the kids in Harry Potter gravitate to sorcery in order to accomplish these attributes. And even if there are positive elements associated with the series, you simply can't ignore the witchcraft equation.

Members of Wicca teach a philosophy that embraces no absolute truth or sin and replaces the patriarchal male creator God of the Bible with a belief in both male and female gods. Its credo instructs members to embrace spirits and conjure spells in order to control their lives and the lives of others. There are millions of practicing witches worldwide. Indeed, Wicca has become one of the fastest-growing religions in the world today.

OK, it's good that children are reading. But what is it they're reading? Shouldn't that be considered? When an author makes $1 billion on five books that have sorcery as a main theme, and renowned secular critics hail the films as incredible filmmaking without examining their occult roots, I question what's really behind this phenom.

Is it merely entertainment? Or is there a dark spiritual source feeding and supporting it? I realize that may sound like a stretch, but often Satan is most deceiving with a glossed-over package. Wouldn't it be a shame if kids got pulled into witchcraft, while their folks thought of the books and films as merely children's fantasy? --30-- Phil Boatwright is a film reviewer and editor of The Movie Reporter, on the Web at www.moviereporter.com. (BP) photo posted in the BP Photo Library at http://www.bpnews.net. Photo title: HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKAB


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: backtodu; bennyhinn; devilmademedoit; harrypotter; muchadoaboutnothing; potterreligion; theriseoflegalism
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To: LanPB01

I wanted to be a ninja like Snake Eyes.


101 posted on 06/03/2004 10:48:00 AM PDT by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: Proverbs 3-5
Thanks for the explanation of the difference between the movies.

I think the Harry Potter series is junk-food trash for kids as so much garbage is on TV. But I didn't see the difference in the way magic is portrayed in Potter vs. LOTR.

I loved LOTR.

102 posted on 06/03/2004 10:48:39 AM PDT by what's up
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To: BobbyBeeper
She's a witch!


103 posted on 06/03/2004 10:51:02 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (No can do. Abbreviate, contract, RunWordsTogetherIfYouMust. ~ John Robinson)
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To: Blood of Tyrants
If they want to learn "magic", I'll buy them some trick cards.

Don't buy them trick cards. Buy them a book on card magic. The best one out there for beginners and even experienced is The Royal Road To Card Magic

104 posted on 06/03/2004 10:53:00 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain)
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To: Bella_Bru

I am also excited about the new Harry Potter movie. It's my favorite book out of the series. After watching Gary Oldman in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead I really want to see him as Sirius Black. In fact, for this summer my kids are doing a five week Hogwarts Summer School course. (potions=science experiments; arithmancy=math; defense against the dark arts=safety lessons. I think charms covers or something similar covers Latin.)


105 posted on 06/03/2004 10:54:09 AM PDT by HungarianGypsy
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To: exile
You know, witchcraft is pure superstitious garbage, but I don't know if I'd let my kids practice stage magic, either. I wouldn't want them to end up like Seigfried & Roy ;)

Or having your son saw his sister in half and forgot how to put her back together!

106 posted on 06/03/2004 10:54:09 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain)
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To: BobbyBeeper
When I grew up, I thought things like ouija boards and tarot cards were just innocnet fun and no worse than believeing in Santa Claus.

They are not just innocent fun, they are downright useless, and as big a waste of time as reading the New York Times. It is as stupid to believe that ouija and the tarot can draw you into the clutches of the devil as it is to believe that they have some sort of predictive capability.

107 posted on 06/03/2004 10:54:26 AM PDT by webheart
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To: Frank_Discussion; pgkdan

If either one of you wanted your Mom to have magical powers, you weren't getting into enough trouble. Shame! I'd have been a newt a long time ago.


108 posted on 06/03/2004 10:54:51 AM PDT by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: Frank_Discussion
Galadriel, a magicaly elf, was tempted by the ring, Saruman (a wizard) had formerly been good, but was corrupted, Boromir went off his nut for a bit, but was a good guy,

Thanks for helping me make my point. Galadriel (and Gandalf) chose not to use the magic of the one ring because of its corruptive nature. Boromir and Saruman were corrupted by it, even though as you point out they started off as good fellows.

The mission was to destroy the ring, not to use it.

Article snip..."Gandalf, the wizard in 'The Lord of the Rings,' is an angelic. He is a being created by the One True God who is kind of an arch-angel who is sent to help people accomplish the will of the One True God...

In 'Harry Potter,' the wizard is a human being who is supernaturally empowered to perform magic tricks that may be used for selfish and even evil purposes, Parker said.

In a lecture on the life of Tolkien, James Parker, said the most obvious declaration of Christianity in the trilogy is found in another book by Tolkien, "The Silmarilion." In it, Tolkien details the historical background of Middle Earth -- the fictional world in which the story of "The Lord of the Rings takes place."

In "The Silmarillion," Tolkien speaks of The One who is the creator of the universe and everything in it. This parallels the Genesis creation account, Parker said. The providence of God is also obvious throughout "The Lord of the Rings" because Tolkien's Middle Earth is clearly a moral universe with a set of universal absolutes regarding right and wrong, good and evil, Parker said.

"Not only is God superintending Tolkien's Middle Earth, but He is governing it according to His will and accomplishing His own ends; this comes through in many places in the story," he said.

complete article: http://www.christianitytoday.com/ch/2003/002/
109 posted on 06/03/2004 10:55:17 AM PDT by Proverbs 3-5
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To: exile

This comedian had a funny line. For those who say there isn't someone in the world for you, a soulmate, just ponder how incredible it is that two gay lion tamers found each other.


110 posted on 06/03/2004 10:56:15 AM PDT by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: zeugma

Shrek 2 cleverly talks about racism, too.


111 posted on 06/03/2004 10:58:12 AM PDT by GraniteStateConservative (...He had committed no crime against America so I did not bring him here...-- Worst.President.Ever.)
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To: jaime1959
Too bad the nutbars who see.............SATAN! behind every tree and under every bed don't bother to actually read the books.

Actually many of us have read the original though perhaps not all of the books. I've known parents who read them first before making their decision. So you can't lump all the nutbars together as not "bother(ing) to actually read the books..."
112 posted on 06/03/2004 10:59:19 AM PDT by Proverbs 3-5
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To: webheart
Thanks for injecting a note of sanity.

I plan to take this season off from acting at the Festival, and will perhaps be a Tarot reader for one of my friends. I can't wait to see the flak I catch when that comes out.
113 posted on 06/03/2004 10:59:33 AM PDT by Xenalyte (Lord, I apologize . . . and be with the starving pygmies in New Guinea amen.)
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To: Xenalyte
We DO have it. It's just that the ones who survive are such good witches, they have mind control over us and can make us forget we saw the "unfortunate incidents."

Must be a strong memory charm!

114 posted on 06/03/2004 11:04:25 AM PDT by DelmarvaMike
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To: BobbyBeeper

Ouija boards and tarot cards ARE evil. They (& dungeons and dragons) are a game that directly involves you and calls you into INVITE AND PLAY with evil powers. Harry Potter is a STORY about GOOD AND EVIL. GOOD WINS. When there is a Harry Potter game that invites you to call on the powers of witchcraft to pinch the head off your best friend, I will be against it. But these stories are no different than Peter Pan.


115 posted on 06/03/2004 11:05:42 AM PDT by Integrityrocks
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To: Junior
Well, you gotta admit they have something there -- what with all those millions of kids casting curses and conjuring demons out there ... Oh wait. None of that's occured, has it?

Two articles follow:
Satanic killers tell of blood drinking rites
Teen Accused of 'Vampire' Killing

Satanic killers tell of blood drinking rites

By Hannah Cleaver in Berlin (Filed: 18/01/2002)

A WOMAN who says she and her husband killed a German friend with 66 knife wounds on orders from the devil has claimed that she became a satanist in Britain.

German police say any evidence pointing to possible crimes or an illegal satanic ring in Britain will be sent to the relevant authorities.

Manuela Ruda and her husband, Daniel, have admitted killing their friend, Frank Haagen, "for Satan". She said she got a taste for vampirism and the occult while in London and Scotland.

She appeared at the regional court in Bochum in full gothic garb, her head partly shaved to reveal an upside down crucifix and a target tattooed on her skull.

Mrs Ruda, 23, gave a chilling account of drinking blood from volunteers contacted on the internet. She said: "I was in England and Scotland, met people and vampires in London. We went out at night, to cemeteries, in ruins and in the woods.

"We drank blood together, from willing donors. You can't drink from the arteries, no-one is allowed that. I had implanted pegs put in the teeth which were pulled out and were replaced with fangs.

"I also slept on graves and even allowed myself to be buried in a grave to test the feeling. I signed over my soul to Satan two and a half years ago."

The couple have denied responsibility for killing Mr Haagen, 33, although both have admitted committing the crime.

Mrs Ruda told the court: "It was not murder. We are not murderers. It was the execution of an order. Satan ordered us to. We had to comply. It was not something bad. It simply had to be. We wanted to make sure that the victim suffered well."

Her husband compared himself and his wife to a vehicle involved in a fatal accident. "The car would not be charged," he said. "The driver is the bad guy. I have nothing to regret because I haven't done anything." Mrs Ruda said she and her 26-year-old husband lured their victim to their flat. When they arrived a "strange force" and "other beings" were present.

"We were sitting on the couch the whole time, then my husband stood up," she said. "He had terrible, glowing eyes and hit out with the hammer.

"Frank stood up and said something, or wanted to say something. The knife was glowing and a voice told me: 'Stab him in the heart.'

"He then sank down. I saw a light flickering around him. That was the sign that his soul was going down. We said a satanic prayer.

"We were then exhausted, and alone, wanted to die ourselves. But the visitation was too short. We could no longer kill ourselves."

After killing Mr Haagen the couple cut an occult star on his stomach, drank his blood from a bowl and had sex in an oak coffin in which Mrs Ruda usually slept.

The couple were arrested in their flat, the walls of which were covered in satanic slogans and hung with an array of knives, axes and machetes.

Mr Haagen's mutilated and partially-decomposed body was found next to the coffin in the living room.

Dieter Justinsky, the public prosecutor, said: "I have never, ever seen such a picture of cruelty and depravity before. They simply had a lust for murder.

"Both believed in Satan, they worshipped him. A death list found in the flat contained the names of future victims. They drank his blood, slept in coffins and believed they would achieve immortality as vampires."

Several witnesses have testified that the couple suffered from personality disorders. They could both face long terms at secure psychiatric institutions.

The Rudas told police that they went to Britain twice, spending five months in Scotland in 1996 and visiting London in February 1997. The gothic phenomenon, an off-shoot of the punk scene, emerged in the late 1970s. A spokesman for Bochum police said last night that any information relating to crimes in Britain would be passed to the relevant authorities.

,b>Teen Accused of 'Vampire' Killing Tue Jul 16,11:37 AM ET

LONDON (AP) - A teenager obsessed with vampires killed an elderly neighbor and drank her blood because he believed that would make him immortal, prosecutors said Tuesday at the start of his murder trial.

The 17-year-old youth, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is accused of killing 90-year-old widow Mabel Leyshon at her home in Llanfair in north Wales on Nov. 24. He denies the charge.

Prosecutors said Leyshon's chest was ripped open and her heart removed, wrapped in newspaper and placed in a saucepan on top of a silver platter. Blood was drained from her legs, probably for drinking, prosecutors told the jury at Mold Crown Court. Two fireplace pokers were left crossed at her feet.

Prosecutor Roger Thomas said the teenager was obsessed by "his two main questions — how do I become a vampire and how do I become immortal?"

The defendant decided "a sacrifice, the murder of another human being, was necessary," Thomas said. With his parents away, the youth committed a "planned, deliberate murder to satisfy his own grotesque and selfish ends," he said. The prosecution said the teen entered Leyshon's house by breaking glass in the back door and attacked her from behind as she watched television, stabbing her 22 times and removing her heart.

Thomas said the defendant "was fascinated by" vampires. "He believed they existed, believed they drank human blood, and believed most importantly that they could achieve immortality — and he wanted to be immortal. What may have started out as a bizarre interest became an obsession and led ultimately to murder."

Thomas said the youth had been arrested a month before the killing after using force to get a 16-year-old German exchange student he believed was a vampire to bite his neck so that he, too, could become a vampire.
116 posted on 06/03/2004 11:08:43 AM PDT by Proverbs 3-5
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To: Xenalyte

Whatever.... I will pray for you - judge not lest thee be judged.


117 posted on 06/03/2004 11:09:49 AM PDT by Integrityrocks
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To: Proverbs 3-5
"Thanks for helping me make my point."

?

I don't say these things lightly, but:

You're a loon.

"Article snip..."Gandalf, the wizard in 'The Lord of the Rings,' is an angelic. He is a being created by the One True God who is kind of an arch-angel who is sent to help people accomplish the will of the One True God..."

So is Saruman. So?

Gandalf was spiritually stronger than Saruman under temptation. Harry and his friends, his "fellowship" likewise were stronger than the Death Eaters under similar temptations.

The character that hid out as Scabbers the pet rat was likewise a Boromir-esque character, with exception that he never snapped out of his descent into evil.

Look, you are trying too desperately hard to find an evil message to the HP series, when there is none. At least not anymore than someone who thinks they could find and use Saruman's palantir.

This misguided piety is the same kind of thing that eventually sprang forth the Spanish Inquistion, which is something nobody ever expected.
118 posted on 06/03/2004 11:10:10 AM PDT by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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To: Xenalyte

Xenalyte: Do you even know ANYTHING about C.S. Lewis or J.R.R. Tolkein? Apparently not. Your ignorance is really coming through loud and clear.


119 posted on 06/03/2004 11:12:25 AM PDT by Integrityrocks
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To: Integrityrocks; Xenalyte

SOMEBODY'S sarcasm toggle button is set to 'off'...


120 posted on 06/03/2004 11:15:22 AM PDT by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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