Posted on 12/03/2017 11:13:35 AM PST by Simon Green
Two graduates from Harvard Divinity School (where else?) began a podcast called Harry Potter and the Sacred Text. Some people are taking it way too seriously,
Since time immemorial, people have found certain things profoundly fulfilling. Things like faith and family have helped us to look outside ourselves and to a higher power, making us feel whole. As young people today turn away from these things, it is no wonder that they are feeling empty and end up searching for meaning in fruitless and increasingly strange pursuits.
One of the unlikely places to which they are turning to fill that void is the world of Harry Potter. Not just Harry Potter as an enjoyable series into which one may escape or even a series with some truly meaningful messages, but as sacred text.
It began with a podcast. Two graduates from Harvard Divinity School (where else?), Casper ter Kuile and Vanessa Zoltan, began a podcast called Harry Potter and the Sacred Text. It debuted just last summer and quickly shot up the iTunes chart, becoming the number-two podcast in America. The podcast inspired listeners to hold Bible study-type groups like the one ter Kuile and Zoltan hold in Harvard Square, which the Washington Post describes as a weekly church-like service for the secular focused on a Potter texts meaning. They are now on a national tour, taping the podcast in different cities before hundreds of Potter acolytes.
From the Bible to Harry Potter
Mark Kennedy, who attended a Washington DC event, is a non-spiritual who was raised Catholic. He told the Washington Post the podcast had changed everything for him. I feel like Im born again, he said. Meanwhile, Zoltan and ter Kuile are skeptical of secularism, with Zoltan saying It doesnt speak to peoples hearts and souls.
So they hope Harry Potter will help others learn traditionally religious themes like duty, forgiveness, mercy, love, and grace. To me, the goal of treating the text as sacred is that we can learn to treat each other as sacred, Zoltan said, If you can learn to love these characters, to love Draco Malfoy, then you can learn to love the cousin you havent spoken to for 30 years, then the refugee down the street.
For thousands of years, these lessons were taught from the Torah, the Bible, and other religious texts, but young people are turning away from them in droves, left feeling rudderless. More than a third of millennials consider themselves non-religious, which is double the number of baby boomers and triple the number of the generation before. Even those who do identify with a religion dont necessarily practice it. Only two in ten people under 30 think that going to church is important or worthwhile.
Where, then, are they to learn morality? Where, then, are they to get this guidance? They arent, and they are feeling its lack. When someone offers them something as ridiculous as guidance from Harry Potter, is it any wonder they cling to it? Twenty-three-year-old Sally Taylor, who said she didnt have any religion, attended the Washington DC event and said the podcast always gives me guidance in a way I didnt know I needed. So, while ter Kuile and Zoltan say they dont intend actually to create Potterism as a religion, they also understand that secularism doesnt work, and those who were never taught true religion are looking for something to fill the void.
Im Very CommittedTo Myself
It isnt just religion from which society is drifting, but other things that have traditionally kept us centered and fulfilled. Millennials are also putting off marriage in unprecedented numbers, or not marrying at all. Heck, some people are even marrying themselves, an ultimate expression of looking inward instead of outward.
As for children, many are skipping that altogether (although some are finally buying homes to make their dogs more comfortable). Millennials arent big on tradition, relationship expert April Masini told Bustle. They prefer hanging out to dating, renting to buying and living together to marriage. Its not that they dont want a commitment they do. They are having meaningful relationships and there have been studies that show theyre actually having less sex at their age than prior generations so its not they want freedom to sleep around. They just dont want to get married.
I would disagree that these are not people who want a commitment, as her own examples clearly illustrate avoiding commitment. Every example of then as compared to now shows less of a commitment today as compared to previous generations, giving us a life of unknowns and uncertainty where there used to be stability. Not committing to a religion is part of that. Why commit to Jesus when you can just worship Harry Potter, hope it will fill the void, and pretend its ironic?
This makes me sad, and we should have seen it coming. As a society, we have turned our backs on the things that have fulfilled us and pursued instead the answers that make us feel good temporarily. One can hardly be amazed, then, when we seek fulfillment in the strangest of places. It is unfortunate not because these people are behaving foolishly, although they are, but because it wont work. Harry Potter isnt going to fulfill you.
I recommend you read the original book from which the movie was made. I think you will like it better. Rowling uses Christianity, perhaps inadvertently, as her model for the values of the good witches and wizards in the story. My daughter, born in 1988, pointed that out to me when she read “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” I then read it myself and had to agree with her. The entire story line is about good versus evil.
I believe it was in the last book of the series ("Deathly Hallows" I think) where Rowling referenced a Bible verse, "The last enemy to be destroyed is death" (I Cor. 15:26) on the gravestone of the parents of Harry Potter.
Speaking for myself, I use the Klingon Book of Gatthh.
Yes.
Also, the good wizard Albus Dumbledore quotes the Bible word-for-word in placing an inscription on the tomb of his mother and sister, “Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”
Rowling is an annoying Liberal, and I do not look to her for deep wisdom on the salvation of my own soul, but the Harry Potter books do actually contain a surprising amount of Christianity.
I see this generation, the millennials in time coming home to faith in the God of the Holy Bible. Please try to remember that my generation, the baby boomers generation raised is AGING. I am a member of that generation, though towards its tail end. When we begin to hit our own mortality, they will to what is lasting.
Correction: they will accept what is lasting.
Cute book and fun tale of good triumphant over evil....BUT, grown men and women (especially the men!!!) using the books as a religion makes me shudder!
“I guess. It worked for L. Ron Hubbard. Lets take a science fiction book and make a religion.”
And the Scientologists are very wealthy.
5.56mm
And the Church of... something or other is still around.
Just saw an article about the chief Druid or whatever the other day.
(As you can tell it made a real impression on me.)
Mystery is right, Only God has the masters degree, the
rest of us are infants.
Thanks for the ping. I liked her first book best. They seemed to go downhill and get darker thereafter.
Thanks. I don’t recall any other Bible verses in Rowling’s books.
Didnt college students do that back when Robert A. Heinleins STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND was popular?
I don't think many actually did. Though, I recall seeing something about RAH putting in a security system with gate and intercom, to keep the obnoxious at bay.
(Wm. Patterson's biography of Heinlein is worth the read.)
I told a friend that the first book was like “The Hobbit” The last book was like “Saving Private Ryan”. I would never promote this to anyone younger than 13 depending on their maturity level and reading level. The last books are dark. Depressing....lots of death.
Thanks for your post #34. I agree.
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