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Some Thoughts on the Harry Potter Series
Lifecenter ^ | Michael O'Brien author of "A Landscape with Dragons" and "Father Elijah"

Posted on 11/02/2001 2:21:54 PM PST by Aquinasfan

Some Thoughts on the Harry Potter Series
by Michael D. O'Brien

Michael O'Brien is the author of eleven books, including several best-selling Catholic novels, notably, Father Elijah. He has authored children's books as well, and the critically praised assessment of the pagan invasion of children's culture, "A Landscape With Dragons: the Battle for Your Child's Mind," published by Ignatius Press.

There is currently a strong controversy raging over J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. Because I have six children of my own, all of them avid readers with an interest in fantasy literature, I have followed it closely. It is interesting to note that the truly reasonable arguments are all on the side of caution regarding the Potter series. By contrast, the pro-Harry articles lack any serious reflection on the issues involved. Their opinions can generally be boiled down to this: "Now, now, let's not get paranoid here. Isn't it wonderful to see kids enthusiastic about reading?" That is no argument at all, because there are a great many things to be cautious about in our present secular culture (calm vigilance is not necessarily paranoia), and children are frequently enthusiastic about unhealthy interests. Librarians around the English-speaking world have noted that due to the unprecedented marketing pressure and media attention surrounding these books, and the resulting fascination young readers have for them, a spin-off phenomenon is occurring. Among the young, an interest in witchcraft, sorcery, and allied occult activity is growing at an astonishing rate. Some libraries now put their occult section beside the Potter books, to make access easier for young readers. Thus, millions of children, including large numbers of Catholic children, are getting involved in spiritually and psychologically dangerous activity. Harry Potter provided the role model.

I was not impressed by the four books in Rowling's series, despite all the media hype that tells us how wonderful they are for young readers. And I strongly disagree with those reviewers (sadly, even some Catholic reviewers) who compare her work to solid Christian fantasy writing such as C.S. Lewis's Narnia series, or J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, or the imaginative novels of George MacDonald. The comparison is only superficial. At root, Rowling's objective is to interest the young in a spiritual path that is the converse of what healthy Christian fantasy is about. The use of "magic" in Christian fantasy is always for the reinforcing of the moral order of the universe, the development of man's proper use of freedom. Rowling, by contrast, tries to turn that order topsy-turvy. The subtle and unsubtle manipulation which she uses to control the child's mind is obvious from the first few pages, prompting one to wonder if this is a deliberate attempt at indoctrination. Among the many dubious messages, presented with charm and power, there are these: occult activity is liberating, noble, exciting, and not what your parents and Christians in general say about it. Coupled to this message is the gross characterization of traditional families, and anyone else who objects to the occult, as abusive hypocrites. The line between good and evil is significantly shifted, and the child enticed into a radically changed worldview, one in which activities known for over 4000 years to be extremely dangerous to mind and soul are now presented as positive forces.

Potter-frenzy and Potter-hype are suddenly everywhere, from school to shopping-center to library, affecting many millions of children. The promotion of such books even in Catholic schools should alert us to the fact that the Catholic community is suffering a grave loss of discernment. In a secular culture searching in all the wrong places for answers to the meaning of life, and for a "spirituality" to replace lost or weakened faith, occult movements and spiritual experimentation of all sorts are having a revival that has not been seen in the Western world since the early centuries of the Church. What is particularly disturbing is the fact that otherwise sensible people see no problem in introducing to children books that promote such activities-activities strictly forbidden by God and the Church (see Cathechism of the Catholic Church, sections 2116-2117).

The Potter series takes the old Gnostic worldview, makes it look glamorous and exciting, and does so in a way that is proving to be far more seductive than similar books in this field of children's literature. Early Gnosticism was a combination of cult and heresy that came very close to undermining Christianity at its birth, during the first few centuries of the Church. It was only defeated by the efforts of the Church Fathers as they taught, corrected, exhorted and debated with the naïve devotees of this perversion of genuine faith. And here it is again, popping up with unprecedented force, but now aimed at the most vulnerable, most impressionable part of the Body of Christ-our children. Paradoxically, the Potter books have been able to invade the Christian world due to the fact that there are a few admirable virtues promoted in them: Harry the orphan seeks a family-hey, isn't that a desirable family value? Harry the victim-innocent brings down justice on the heads of his tormentors-and don't we want to see justice done? Harry wins the reader's affection and empathy (and the child reader's identification) more readily than the bratty characters in much of children's fantasy literature-isn't it refreshing to have a "nice" boy as a hero? Harry seeks to discover his destiny and unique identity-don't we all? Yes, but in Harry's world, the ends are continually justified by the evil means (conveniently redefined as good). If the author has thrown into the plot a little moralizing for added measure, this is not a valid argument in defense of the books; indeed the whiff of morality makes them that much more deceptive. In this way, the moral order of the universe is deformed in a child's mind far more effectively than by blatantly evil books.

This raises the question: which is the most destructive form of paganism now invading children's culture? A direct assault upon faith by hard-core cultists recruiting on the streets, or an indirect seduction in the pleasant surroundings of your own home? I believe it is the latter, a "soft" form that will do the greatest damage over the long haul, because it brings a spiritually dangerous worldview into good families under the guise of promoting "values" and enthusiasm for reading. But it also prepares a child's developing imagination for worse things to follow. When he has finished reading the Potter series, what will he turn to? There is a vast industry turning out sinister material for the young that will feed their growing appetites. In the wake of likable young Harry's adventures, not-so-likable characters will appear, and they will become role models or, at the very least, images of alternative ways of living. And it should also be noted that Harry himself becomes less likable as the series gets progressively more murky. Regarding the argument sometimes put forward - "There is much good in the book, so why should we be so concerned about the flaws?" - this is not really a valid argument. The flaws in this case are grave distortions of reality in a field where such distortions have often proved disastrous. In my extended family, circle of friends and community, there are a number of people whose lives have been seriously damaged by involvement in the occult. I know three young people who have attempted suicide in acts of despair which they now attribute, years later, to dabbling in the occult. A significant factor in their attraction to the dark side of spirituality, they maintain, was their love of fantasy literature that portrayed this subculture as exciting and rewarding. Only later did they come to realize that, while occultism promises light, it actually delivers a gradual darkening of the mind and weakening of the will. I have talked with parents of children whose lives have gone seriously astray as a result of losing their moral bearings through involvement with the occult. Their anguish and puzzlement is evident as they state how their children were once stable and virtuous, how they had been so certain their child could handle anything. I have talked with priests and psychiatrists who deal with young people damaged in this fashion, and their assessment of the causes consistently points to some "experimenting" with the very activity Rowling presents as a healthy and liberating way of life. In the beginning they felt it to be no more than harmless play, simple imagining, or the acting out of fantasy. We should take note of the fact that in our sensually dominated culture the habit of acting out fantasy is becoming a widespread cultural norm. It varies from voracious consumption of expensive "toys" for all age groups, to trading in one's spouse for a new one found on the internet, to various clubs devoted to immoral activity, to high school murders. Why, then, do we presume that a sensually powerful series of children's books will not affect the young reader's interests and activities? Why have we come to assume so readily that such novels are simply entertainment, that they have no consequences, that the experience of plunging the imagination into that alternative world will remain sealed in an airtight compartment of the mind?

Of course millions of children are not going to suddenly start killing themselves and each other after reading the Harry Potter series, but studies by both secular and religious researchers demonstrate that something unhealthy is at work in the occult revival. And while we must never forget that Christ can forgive and heal the effects of any form of sin, he also calls us to guard the lambs of his flock against such sin, and the near occasions of sin. What is so often forgotten in this particular controversy is that occultism is gravely sinful. Both the Old and New Testaments warn against it with utmost urgency. Occult activity is a misreading of the nature of the war between good and evil on this planet, and the consequences of this in real life can be quite dire. Why, then, are we giving our children false tales about the nature of the war?

Fantasy literature can be a splendid way to introduce them to the great drama of existence, but we are terribly naïve if we fail to make a clear distinction between true fantasy and false fantasy-between healthy imagination and poisoned imagination. We would soon sicken and die if we applied the principle of "a little poison won't harm you" to our diet of food. Would we eat a cake in which a cook had mixed 1% cyanide with 99% good ingredients? It might not kill us, but why would we want to risk being even "mildly" poisoned. To use another metaphor, would we offer our child a bowl of fruit in which ten pieces of fruit were harmless and one had been injected with deadly poison, especially if the fruit were indistinguishable from each other?

How do we distinguish a good piece of "fruit" from a bad one, if in the mind there is no reliable criteria for doing so? How do we discern properly if we have no developed understanding of the moral order of the universe nor a consciousness of the reality of spiritual battle? If we have little or no sense of the crucial role of symbols in the healthy functioning of the mind, how can we accurately assess the spiritual realities represented by those symbols? Simply saying that the corruption of our symbol world, and in the worst cases the inversion of our symbol world, is not poison doesn't change the nature of the poisoned fruit. That's denial, not moderate reasonableness. By the same token, gathering "expert" opinions on the subject isn't very helpful either, because experts come in all varieties these days, even in Christian circles, and few are the people unaffected to some degree by the overwhelming subjectivism of our present social environment.

Parents often underestimate the power of imagination in shaping a child's sense of truth. Parents forget that they themselves grew up in another time and culture. Though theirs was an imperfect world (as is every era of history), basic truths still formed the solid architecture of their times. That is no longer so. Parents also forget that they can sort through good and bad material with more immunity than a child, because they are already formed. A child is still in a state of formation, and for that reason he experiences culture in a very different way than adults do. We can sift (although on the whole even we "grown-ups" aren't doing a very good job of sifting these days), but the child is not yet trained to recognize subtle and even unsubtle falsehood. He is busy learning about the world, and usually he is learning indiscriminately. He absorbs images and understandings of the nature of reality at a foundational level.

Getting our thinking on track according to Biblical and Church principles is essential to seeing what's really happening in this war. In other words, rational discernment. Equally important is the charism of spiritual discernment. Every parent needs to pray daily for an extraordinary grace of discernment, and for divine protection for his children. This isn't extremist or alarmist. This is just normal Christianity. Tragically, Christian faith has been so weakened in the Western world that such statements now strike many an ear as somewhat extreme. We're all a little too eager to prove that we're just normal folks, that our faith doesn't turn us into unpleasant critical people. But Jesus himself calls us to constant vigilance, to exercise the critical faculty of discernment. It is the spirit of the secular world, and the spirit of our adversary, which tells us we should all just relax and stop over-reacting. Of course, it's true that over-reacting doesn't help anyone, and usually makes matters worse. But at the other end of the spectrum is denial, a refusal to face facts, an inability to recognize a real threat to our child's well-being. This, I believe, brings about far worse consequences-again, in the long run. Neither apathy nor panic will reorient our present culture toward a condition of health. What is needed here is wisdom.

And what about the unity issue? Many of the husbands or wives who write to me about the Potter problem say that they can't come to an agreement with their spouses. A general and time-tested principle in Christian family life is that on issues where husband and wife disagree over what is or is not harmful for their child, more prayer is needed. The father's role is paramount in this, because by nature and grace his job is to watch the horizon carefully for anything that threatens the well-being of his family (tigers, bears, drunk drivers, drug-pushers, heretical teachers and unprincipled hawkers of kid-kulture). In a word, his primary focus is exterior.

The mother's role tends to be primarily interior, focused on nurturing (though of course there is considerable overlapping of roles in this regard). For that reason it's inevitable that there will be differences of emphasis and judgement. Most of the parents who contact me about these questions experience some difference of opinion between husband and wife. Prayer can bring these two "lenses" into a single unified focus. By this I do not mean that spouses should resolve their difference of opinion by bartering or compromise. Neither of the lenses work properly without the other; their harmonious function depends on earnest prayer and avoiding superficial decisions. Our culture is continuously pushing us to let down our guard, to make quick judgments that feel easier because they reduce the tension of vigilance. The harassed pace and the high volume of consumption that modern culture seems to demand of us, make genuine discernment more difficult in this regard. But in prayer and waiting on God, we do come through.

As a parent, my daily prayer is: "Oh God, please give me the wisdom of Solomon, the wisdom of the Holy Spirit, today. Every day." Without it, I would soon be shaped and molded by whatever forces are flying about in this society. My kids even more so. There is so much bombarding us all the time, with unprecedented power to overwhelm the senses and to confuse our interior radar, that we scarcely have time to make sound decisions before the next wave hits. In such a climate, if one has to choose between over-caution or under-caution, I would say that in the formation of our children's minds, hearts and souls, it's better to lean in the direction of caution rather than laxity-especially during these times when a relentless indoctrination comes at our children from every level of the culture.

A balanced, intelligent and spiritually discerning collection of articles examining the Potter phenomenon is available at the website of St. Joseph's Covenant Keepers, a large international organization for Catholic fathers. The address is: www.dads.org

If you want to consider some in-depth arguments about the nature of the new paganization of children's culture, see the Ignatius Press internet website where an entire section is devoted to what well-known Catholic authors think of the Potter series. The address is: www.ignatius.com See also the highly recommended Catholic Educator's Resource Center, which has a section dealing with the Potter phenomenon. The address is www.catholiceducation.org


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: harrypotter
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To: tuesday afternoon
Thank you. Heartwarming. I'll try to find the passage I mentioned from the fourth book. Do you know it?
101 posted on 11/03/2001 2:56:38 PM PST by Aquinasfan
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Highlights from Book 2:

"Second-year Students will Require: The Standard Book of Spells, Grade 2...Travel with Trolls... Voyages with Vampires...Wanderings with Werewolves". (page 43-44) 

"Harry took a pinch of Floo powder and walked to the edge of the fire. He took a deep breath, scattered the powder into the flames, and stepped forward; the fire felt like a warm breeze; he opened his mouth and immediately swallowed a lot of hot ash". (page 48)

  "A glass case nearby held a withered hand on a cushion, a blood stained pack of cards, and a staring glass eye. Evil-looked masks stared down from the wall, an assortment of human bones lay upon the counter, and rusty, spiked instruments hung from the ceiling".  (page 49)

"Draco paused to examine a long coil of hangman's rope and to read, smirking, the card  propped on a magnificent necklace of opals, Caution: Do Not Touch. Cursed-Has Claimed the Lives of Nineteen Muggle Owners to Date." (page 52)

  "Harry felt a hot surge of anger.-and as you see, certain of these poisons might make it appear-" (page 51) 

"The aged witch stood in front of him, holding a tray of what looked horribly like whole fingernails. She leered at him, showing mossy teeth. Harry backed away". (page 54) 

"For a few horrible seconds he had feared that the hat was going to put him in Slytherin, the house that turned out more Dark witches and wizards than any other-". (page 77)

  "We'll be repotting Mandrakes today. Now who can tell me the properties of the Mandrake"? (page 91-92) Mandrake causes hallucination and is poisonous. 

"Of course , Mother was slightly disappointed, but since     made her read Lockhart's books I think she's begun to see how useful it'll be to have a fully trained wizard in the family..." ( page 94)    

"And a few of you need to read Wanderings with Werewolves more carefully-I clearly state in chapter twelve that my ideal birthday gift would be harmony between all magic and non-magic people-". ( page 100)

  "Alicia shrieked, 'How dare you!', and Ron plunged his hand into his robes, pulled out his wand, yelling, 'You'll pay for that one, Malfoy!" and pointed it [wand] furiously under Flint's arm at Malfoy's face". (page 112)

  "And  then Harry heard it...rip...tear...kill...Listen! said Harry urgently, and Ron and Hermione froze watching him...kill...time to kill...The voice was growing fainter". (page 137). Harry was now hearing voices  (page 137) .

  "Mrs. Norris, the caretaker's cat, was hanging by her tail from the torch bracket". She was stiff as a board, her eyes wide and staring". (page 139) 

"No, said Ron, without hesitation. Hearing voices no one else can hear isn't a good sign, even in the wizarding world'. (page 145) Harry is hearing voices? 

"For a few years, the founders worked in harmony together, seeking out youngsters who showed signs of magic and bringing them to the castle to be educated". (page 150)

"He believed that magical learning should be kept within all-magic families. He disliked taking students of Muggle parentage, believing them to be untrustworthy". (page 150)

   "Sir-what exactly do you mean by the 'horror within' the Chamber?" ( page 151) 

"Peeves upset me so much I came in here and tried to kill myself. Then, of course, I remembered that I'm-that I'm-" "Already dead, said Ron helpfully".  ( page 156) 

"Regrowing bones is a nasty business". (page 174) 

"The holidays would be the perfect time to use the Polyjuice Potion and try to worm a confession out of him". (page 185)

  "I think I'd  better do the actual stealing". (page 186) 

"Potions lessons took place in one large dungeon...Twenty cauldrons stood steaming between the wooden desks, on which stood brass scales and jars of ingredients". (page 186) 

"Then they raised their wands like swords in front of them". (page 190) 

"A jet of silver light hit Malfoy in the stomach and he doubled up, wheezing". ( page 192) 

"I'm a what? said Harry. 'A Parselmouth!' said Ron.  'You can talk to snakes!". (page 195).

  "That's why the symbol of Slytherin House is a serpent". (page 196)

"It's not possible to live with the Dursleys and not hate them said Harry'. (page 200) 

"I'm sure I've done everything right said Hermione, nervously rereading the splotched page of Moste Potente Potions . It looks like the book says it should...once we've drunk it, we'll have exactly an hour before we change back into ourselves". ( page 215)

"Yeah... said Malfoy. Luckily, they didn't find much. Father's got some very valuable Dark Arts stuff. But luckily, we've got our own secret chamber under the drawing-room floor". Ho! said Ron". ( page 224)

"You'd be surprised, said Ron, who was looking apprehensively at the book. Some of the books the Ministry's confiscated-Dad's told me-there was one that burned your eyes out". (page 230) 

" Why not ask Professor Snape to show you how to whip up a Love Potion!".  (page 236) 

" I wish he was mine, he's really divine, The hero who conquered the Dark Lord".  This was a singing valentine for Harry". ( page 238)

  "It's never too early to think about the future, so I'd recommend Divination". ( page 252) 

"Kill this time...let me rip...tear... He shouted aloud and Ron and Hermione both jumped away from him in alarm. The voice said Harry...I just heard it again-didn't you?". (page 254). 

"Let me at him [Malfoy], Ron growled as Harry and Dean hung onto his arms. 'I don't care, I don't need my wand, I'm going to kill him with my bare hands".  (page 267).

Ron here has 2 weapons-his wand and his "bare hands". "A suspicious object like that, it was clearly full of Dark Magic-" (page 329)

102 posted on 11/03/2001 4:27:03 PM PST by Aquinasfan
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To: Dan Day; Mercat; Spyder
see above
103 posted on 11/03/2001 4:28:46 PM PST by Aquinasfan
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Comment #104 Removed by Moderator

To: WileyCoyote22
I'd be interested in the take of someone who's come out of an occult or witchcraft experience.
105 posted on 11/03/2001 4:33:16 PM PST by Aquinasfan
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To: Aquinasfan
Hello.... I've read the books two times so you don't have to quote them to me like I'm an idiot. It's fiction. If some kid reads this and becomes sucked into some evil cult, I'm sorry but he/she is already messed up and is going to find some cult to get into anyway. Good triumphs over evil. People are not always what they seem. Friendships are formed. Courage and loyalty are rewarded. I used to play cowboys and Indians but I never became one or even really wanted to. I would like to see some stats on kids who start out reading the Harry Potter books and then move on to the Lord of the Rings Trilogy and the Narnia series. Oh, another example, my kids and I loved the Mrs. Frisbee and the Rats of NIMH but we never wanted to become super intelligent rats. Lighten up.
106 posted on 11/03/2001 5:20:54 PM PST by Mercat
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To: Aquinasfan
O'Brien's "A Landscape With Dragons" is superb. After reading O'Brien's "Plague Journal" I decided to take a cue from the lead character and read Tolkien to my kids. We got the TV out of our house 5 years ago, so my little ones love to read and be read to. I finished reading them "The Hobbit" 2 weeks ago, and we bought a one volume copy of the entire "Lord of the Rings" trilogy last week. We're 140 pages into that now, over nine hundred to go still. Usually my oldest, my 9 year old son, is the only one of the three that listens much to it. The 7 year old daughter and 5 year old son aren't as interested yet. But it is wonderful time together none the less, and I haven't read Tolkien since I was a teen. I'm thoroughly enjoying it.

Obviously, mine will not be reading Harry Plotter or watching the movie.

Thanks for posting this.

107 posted on 11/03/2001 9:07:35 PM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Aquinasfan
In fact, I was given so much crap to read in high school that I began to associate reading with psychic pain. Upon graduation I vowed that I would never read a book again. When I was in my twenties, I used to brag to my friends, "if it's a book, I haven't read it."

Well *that* certainly explains much...

Forgive me if I prefer not to give much weight to the book reviews of someone who has proudly renounced reading.

108 posted on 11/03/2001 9:18:25 PM PST by Dan Day
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To: proud2bRC
Obviously, mine will not be reading Harry Plotter or watching the movie.

I've got a better idea -- why don't you, unlike "Aquinus", actually read the Harry Potter books before declaring them unfit for children?

Unlike him, I've actually read them, cover to cover. I find them entirely wholesome and charming. So do a great many Freepers.

There's far more truly "occult" material in "Lord of the Rings" than in "Harry Potter", and in LotR it's presented far more seriously and frighteningly (which isn't surprising, since LotR was aimed at a more mature audience than is Harry Potter).

If you consider The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings to be acceptable, I fail to see how you could object to anything in Harry Potter. Plus, Harry Potter contains a great many good lessons on the virtues of honesty, loyalty, hard work, respect for authority, not judging a book by its cover, and so on.

I have no reservations about recommending them for children, and I have yet to read any anti-Potter review (including the one that started this thread) that didn't strike me as either the work of someone who hadn't even bothered to actually read the books (e.g. Aquinus), or a frothing lunatic who could likewise denounce The Wizard of Oz as a work of anti-capitalist propaganda.

Please -- check it out and make up your own mind, don't let others do it for you.

109 posted on 11/03/2001 9:27:18 PM PST by Dan Day
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To: Aquinasfan
Yeah? So?

Is there any special reason you obsessively typed in several dozen random passages from the book?

It's hard to tell just *what* in the heck you think you're trying to prove here, especially when one of your "examples" is a *singing valentine*. Oooh, horrors!

Yeah, magic happens in the book. Ooh, big surprise! And a big whoop-de-doo.

Look, if you're one of those nancies who thinks that any mention at all of "magic", even clearly fictional, playfully presented magic, is somehow *EVIL!*(tm), then fine, we get it, you're not going to like Harry Potter, or Lord of the Rings, or the Wizard of Oz, Macbeth, the Odyssey, or a lot of other classics. Good for you, go off and enjoy your fringe opinion.

But if you think that most of the rest of us are going to fall quivering to our knees because you merely quote a book that mentions werewolves and magic wands, you're sadly mistaken.

110 posted on 11/03/2001 9:42:28 PM PST by Dan Day
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To: don-o
That leaves a question which must be answered. Where were Mom and Dad?

I'm responding to you, but there are dozens of others on this and similar posts making the same argument, and you're engaging in circular reasoning. The original author claimed there were problems with the Harry Potter books because of the witchcraft aspects. While I haven't read the books, I did watch a fairly lengthy interview with the author, in which she acknowledges studying witchcraft and using actual spells in the books that were in witchcraft books, written by wiccans. She goes on to explain that although she is not a witch, and does not believe in witchcraft, she uses actual spells and incantations to give the books authenticity. When someone points this out, you (and many others) call them the Taliban, accuse them of being bookburners, claim they're trying to reinstate the Meese commission, and fall back on the tried and true bumper-sticker one size fits all retort, "don't we have more important things to worry about?" (I realize you have been far more restrained, but if you look through these and similar threads, you will find all these more extreme statements made)

Then, when someone writes about cases where young people have gotten involved in witchcraft and there have been serious negative consequences, you write "where were the parents?"

First you slam parents for being concerned about the type of literature their children are reading, then you slam parents for not being concerned about what their children are exposing themselves to.

111 posted on 11/03/2001 9:43:06 PM PST by Richard Kimball
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To: Dan Day; father_elijah
I've got a better idea -- why don't you, unlike "Aquinus", actually read the Harry Potter books before declaring them unfit for children?

How do you know I haven't read them? I read the first two, with a critical eye. I enjoyed them. I would probably allow my children to read them as later teens. Not now.

As far as Potter versus The Lord of The Rings, go read O'Brien's "A Landscape With Dragons." You clearly are not properly grounded in the critical analysis of children's literature from a Christian standpoint to make such inane comments as you did here about Potter versus Tolkien/TLOTR.

112 posted on 11/03/2001 9:43:51 PM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: Dan Day
I have yet to read any anti-Potter review (including the one that started this thread) that didn't strike me as either the work of someone who hadn't even bothered to actually read the books...

Is there any special reason you obsessively typed in several dozen random passages from the book?

Let's see, first you slam people for not reading the book, then when they type in passages from the book to make their points, you call them obsessive. Sounds like you've got it all sewn up.

113 posted on 11/03/2001 9:49:14 PM PST by Richard Kimball
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To: art vandelay
And Mein Kempf is just a book.

Congratulations! You, at post #27, have just equated Hitler with Harry Potter. You lose!

(The unwritten Freeper debate rule is that the first side of an argument that brings up the Hitler comparison loses.)

114 posted on 11/03/2001 9:52:06 PM PST by malakhi
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To: Aquinasfan; OWK
I think you've done an excellent job of making your case. I'm going to throw in one more argument I've seen from the "anyone who questions the value of any writing or video production is a member of the Taliban who burns books and wants to outlaw everything but the Bible" crowd.

I listened to the Beatles, Black Sabbath, Grateful Dead, Alice Cooper and the Mothers of Invention, dropped acid 60 times, got busted four times for pot, shaved my head and cut a swastika into my cheek, raped three girls, knocked over a bank, shot a police officer making a getaway from a liquor store robbery, and am serving twenty years for attempted murder, and I turned out all right!"

115 posted on 11/03/2001 9:56:53 PM PST by Richard Kimball
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To: Aquinasfan
"Coupled to this message is the gross characterization of traditional families . . . ."

This is complete nonsense. There are good families (such as Harry's best friend's) and Harry's original one. The main bad family is a foster family with a kid (Harry) off at school (orphan Harry's relatives)--not what I would call a traditional family. It would be more accurate to say that the book pushes traditional families at the expense of one bad foster family. Harry's fondest wish is to see or be with his dead mother and father.

This particular Catholic writer's comments and stories that he believes must sound awfully superstitious to people of other religions. His plea is hardly for high rationalism.

I have no doubt that there is both good and bad in the kind of high mysticism that many religions and the Harry Potter books embrace.

Taken literally, the books don't teach Catholic doctrine--so what?
116 posted on 11/03/2001 10:11:40 PM PST by Professor Jim
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To: Richard Kimball
Let's see, first you slam people for not reading the book, then when they type in passages from the book to make their points, you call them obsessive. Sounds like you've got it all sewn up.

Look, typing in random passages from the book, without bothering to say what, exactly, the he objected to about any of them (presuming that even *was* his selection criteria), is not "making a point". It's being a stuttering fax machine. It's obsessive to spend lord knows how long typing in pages of text verbatim from the book, without having a single bit of reflection to add to the duplication effort. It's like the hundred typewritten pages of "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy" from the movie "The Shining".

What makes this especially ludicrous on his part is that he's the same person who has admitted not actually reading the book. So he can't even be objecting to these passages in context, because without reading the book he doesn't even understand what they're in reference to, or how they relate to anything. Nor does he care, it would seem.

He clearly just flipped through the book at random, and typed in any passage that mentioned anything at all "magical" (including a singing valentine!), as if that itself somehow made any sort of point that any of us would find lucid. Yeah, there's magic in the book -- BFD. No one is disputing that point.

I'd love to see what he would do with a copy of "The Wizard of Oz".

If he was actually trying to "make a point", he might want to actually discuss his snippets next time, instead of mechanically spewing them en masse as if seeing random parts of the book again (which I myself *HAVE* read) is somehow going to suddenly make me see it "Aquinasfan's" way instead of the way I saw it when I was actually reading the bloody books myself.

It's not even like he was offering them in response to any particular query which would have explained what he was trying to show by playing cut-and-paste -- he pinged multiple people with them.

Maybe you're impressed at his ability to do what any four-year-old could do given a copy of the books, a pair of scissors and a jar of library paste, but I'm not. If he had an actual point to make with his "book in a blender" post, he failed to make it in any coherent fashion.

117 posted on 11/03/2001 10:34:15 PM PST by Dan Day
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To: Aquinasfan
Isn't there a joke regarding taking snippets here and there out of context?

About the guy who asked the Bible how he should make decisions and run his life?

He closes his eyes, opens the Bible, and the first text his eyes land on is, "And Judas went and hung himself."

Thinking that couldn't have been what God intended, he decides to try again... "Go thou and do likewise."

Third try's the charm, right? "And what thou doest, do quickly."

118 posted on 11/03/2001 10:45:24 PM PST by Spyder
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To: Dan Day
I understand where you're coming from. My concerns with the Potter series are primarily from interviews I've seen with the author (I noted them in my post #111.)

I struggle, as I think any person should, with not only what my children should be exposed to, but what I should expose myself to. There are some things I don't think kids should be exposed to, and it can't simply be summed up by the subject matter covered, but must also consider the viewpoint from which it is covered. You, unlike some others, have made specific statements that indicate you've read the books and don't think the subject matter is covered in a way that is negative. I appreciate that, although I may not agree with your assessment. I have read all of the Rings books several times, and have read them to my daughters, along with the Narnia books, and several other fantasy pieces. OTOH, I didn't want my children to see "The Craft", because after viewing it, I concluded that (1) the people who created it were probably involved in witchcraft, and (2) that the movie tried to make a case that witchcraft and the occult were a way to overcome the insecurities of adolescence. You may disagree with that assessment, but that's where I'm coming from. As a Christian, I'm supposed to avoid such things. Other people are, of course, under no such prohibition.

Also, I don't think the topic for this type of discussion is "should the book be banned?" but rather, "is it appropriate for the age group for which it was intended?" As a parent, I really have a tough time with this issue. A few years ago, when the Police Academy movies were popular, and I was superising some young boys (ages 10-11), I had to deal with the fact that on one hand it was Three Stooges type humor, while on the other hand, I couldn't, in good conscience, allow young children to watch a movie in which a porno star performs oral sex on a man giving a speech, and there are strong suggestions of homosexual rape.

119 posted on 11/03/2001 11:10:46 PM PST by Richard Kimball
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To: proud2bRC
How do you know I haven't read them?

I didn't "know" that you hadn't, I made no such assumption. But your post left open the possibility that you had rejected them on the basis of the review that started this thread instead of on personal examination (since you thanked him for the review and said "obviously" your children wouldn't be reading Potter, with no other reason given), so I suggested that you should read them if you hadn't before making up your mind.

I read the first two, with a critical eye. I enjoyed them. I would probably allow my children to read them as later teens. Not now.

I can understand that, the books are definitely geared more towards a teen audience than children your age. But that's different from the impression I got from your first post, wherein you said "mine will not be reading Harry Potter", which sounded like a permanent injunction. Sorry if I misread that.

As far as Potter versus The Lord of The Rings, go read O'Brien's "A Landscape With Dragons." You clearly are not properly grounded in the critical analysis of children's literature from a Christian standpoint to make such inane comments as you did here about Potter versus Tolkien/TLOTR.

I'm on the verge of telling you to do something physically uncomfortable to yourself...

If you have any enlightening observations to make, or specific objections to any comparisons I've made between books to offer, why don't you do so, instead of just insulting me?

If you'd get off that high horse, you might realize that my comments about Harry Potter vs Lord of the Rings were clearly meant in a more general sense than the manner in which you have chosen to deride them.

Next, Mullah Omar will undoubtedly pop in to call my book reviews "inane" because they are not "properly grounded in the critical analysis of children's literature from a Islamic standpoint"...

If you want to do a specific "critical analysis from a Christian standpoint", feel free, but I think you're out of line if you beleive you have a right to call me "inane" for choosing to make an analysis which happens not to be narrowly "from a Christian standpoint".

I am not familiar with O'Brien's books (as you correctly surmised), and barring that there was nothing else in your post which would signal, "warning, Christian discussion ongoing here, any response not built directly on Biblical principles will be summarily insulted as inane and ungrounded."

120 posted on 11/03/2001 11:20:25 PM PST by Dan Day
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