Dear Fone Bone,
Cordial greetings and thank you dear friend for your courteous responses to my recent post.
Likewise. I’m glad you’ve come back to participate in the thread some more, Portrait.
First, whilst it is freely admitted that good wholesome fiction need not necessarily be overtly Christian, or even religious for that matter, the fact is that the central metaphor and plot engines of the Potter series are witchcraft and sorcery, activities forbidden by God in Sacred Scripture. The Potter books disturbingly and repeatedly portray in a positive light the very activities, albeit in a fictional context, that are denounced in the strongest possible terms in both the Old and New Testaments. Thus, for example, in Deutronomy 18: 9-12 enchanting, divination, charms, consulting with familiar spirits or a necromancer are described as an “abomination” in the sight of God and must therefore be driven out.
But why doesn’t it matter that no “magic” in the series resembles real-world occult practices?
For instance, it is perfectly true that in the books Hogwarts offers a class on “Charms.” But the kind of “charms” they learn are blatantly and obviously fantastical and therefore fictional, with no occult undertones. For instance, in “Charms” class Harry learns “the Summoning Charm,” in which a “witch” or “wizard” raises his wand and speaks the phrase “Accio + [object],” which causes that object to magically fly into the witch or wizard’s hand.
Harry uses this charm, for instance, when he’s facing a dangerous dragon in
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. He needs his broomstick - a “Firebolt” model - to be able to get by the dragon, so he yells, “Accio Firebolt,” causing his broom to fly out of the castle and into his very hands. Then he flies around on it.
So, yes, there is a “Charms” class at Hogwarts. But this example best illustrates how ridiculous it would be to fear such a portrayal as even a potential gateway into the occult. There’s a reason real-world occultists and pagans - like kenofken here on this thread - scoff at the notion that Harry Potter magic resembles what they do. The occult is real, but this “summoning charm” is obviously fantastical, and in fact it requires a wand to do it, and an integral part of wands in this series is a magical core - a unicorn hair, or a dragon heartstring, etc.
And there are no such things in real life as dragons and unicorns. (a) Children understand this, (b) even if they don’t, this “magic” doesn’t resemble real-world occult practices at all anyway, and (c) if a child
does choose - for fun - to run around pretending to have Harry Potter-style wizard duels and pretend to “cast” this “Summoning Charm,” it’s quite literally no more harmful than if he or she pretends to be a Jedi in a lightsaber fight.
The “Divination” class is literally the only one that even superficially approximates potentially occult practices. But Rowling portrays it as a fruitless endeavor, and something that even human witches and wizards should not bother pursuing. In Rowling’s novel, it is the centaur Firenze - not a human being at all - who excels at it.
In fact, Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia actually go at least as far as Rowling’s series does in positive portrayal of potentially occult practices. In Prince Caspian, the centaur Glenstorm - a good guy who receives nothing but praise from the narrator for his courage and fidelity - explains that he used astrology to predict regime change in Narnia. Why don’t you have a problem with that?
I can tell you why
I don’t have a problem with it: because the portrayal of astrology loses its danger for two reasons: (1) the fact that, like all
Narnia’s magical elements, it is thoroughly Christianized by the context and the work’s fantasy substructure; and (2) because it’s not a human being doing it at all, but a centaur.
Likewise, in
Harry Potter, even the witches and wizards are a
completely separate kind of human being. In Rowling’s world, you are either born with innate magical ability or not. Normal humans like you and I
can’t do magic in Rowling’s series. It would be fruitless to try.
That’s why the comparison to Tolkien’s elves is an apt one. Tolkien’s elves can do things that men consider magic, but it’s not invocational or occult; it’s because they’re elves. Likewise with Harry Potter’s witches and wizards: they have innate abilities due to their very nature, not to any alliance with spiritual powers.