similar to someone converting to Christianity because thought he could then get into Narnia.
In a way, you’ve really hit the nail on the head here. Who on earth would convert to Christianity in order to get into Narnia? That would be ridiculous.
That’s not to say it couldn’t happen. If someone did, that would say
nothing negative about the
Narnia books themselves, but rather about the psychological state of that individual. The same goes for anyone who looks into Wicca or witchcraft because of
Harry Potter.
But my analogy doesn’t even go far enough, because
Harry Potter isn’t just harmless fiction. Its themes, character development, structure, and imagery are deeply and profoundly Christian.
Harry Potter really embeds a positive and spiritually wise experience of Christian truths and virtues into the souls of its readers.
The primary “magical” problem they create is that her understanding of magic is so flawed and her connections between fantasy and reality so weak, that she tends to encourage in her readers a belief that “all magic is fantasy,” which then leads to the belief, expressed by one poster, that ouija boards, tarot cards, etc are all “superstitious bunk.” This attitude, this lack of understanding of the reasons these things are forbidden, weakens our resistence to them and weakens our understanding of the dangers in the occult.
You speak of “Rowling’s complete misunderstanding of magic” and her “flawed” understanding of it. Maybe she doesn’t misunderstand it at all. Most people would maintain that she did not
intend her novels’ fictional magical parameters to reflect anything remotely real.
And here’s the thing:
(a) If HP “magic” is so distant to real-world magic, that’s a
good thing. The critics who think HP promotes the occult don’t believe that separation, that difference, is truly there; if they did, they’d rightfully change their minds.
(b) Furthermore, and
more importantly, I don’t think that
Harry Potter could lead anyone into thinking that the occult is harmless, because
Harry Potter does present certain kinds of magic as spiritually and morally destructive: precisely the ones that involve seeking power, control, or the avoidance of death (Unforgivable Curses, horcruxes (especially Riddle’s diary), Dark curses like fiendfyre, etc.).
Because Harry Potter is escapist fiction
I don’t see how you can call
Harry Potter “escapist fiction” when the experience of the series inculcates into its readers an awareness of the inevitability of death. What it inspires in people is a profound respect of and desire for courage, selflessness, hope, etc. - virtues that are real, not escapist.
To put it another way, a reader might fantasize about meeting death as bravely as Lily Potter, Albus Dumbledore, or Harry himself. But who’s going to fantasize about extra Potions or Transfiguration homework?
I am a sinner - no question about it, but Harry Potter has never caused me to sin nor drawn me to the near occasion to sin.
Me neither. In fact, they draw me closer to Christ. I cannot read Dumbledore’s exhortation to remember the difference “between what is right and what is easy” or Harry’s “death” scene in
Deathly Hallows without experiencing a profound and honest confrontation with my own sinfulness and a resolve to pursue virtue more strongly.
Harry Potter is the kind of book that inspires me to go to confession more often.