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Harry
Potter. Do you remember when he first came into your
life? Did you notice that kids whose attention span
formerly stopped at the end of a Pokemon card could
suddenly read for hours on end? Did your children suddenly
come home from school telling exciting tales of wizards
and witches?
Author
J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books have captured the
hearts of millions of children and adults. They’re arguably
the most quickly embraced children’s books in history.
You’d have to be tucked away in the remotest of hermitages
to have avoided the books thus far, and you’d have to
be just about as isolated to have avoided the controversy
surrounding them.
Controversy does abound, and Harry Potter stirs up strong
emotions. Some parents are thrilled that their children
are reading enthusiastically for the first time. They
love the way the books pit good against evil, and they
use the books to help their children learn the difference
between right and wrong. But other parents are deeply
disturbed about the subject matter in the Harry Potter
books. They’re concerned to see so many children embracing
a world of witchcraft and wizardry.
I’m a parent who falls within the latter category, and
I often find myself uncomfortably trying to explain
to the dearest of friends why I’m so disturbed by the
books. It’s not pleasant to say to someone, “I know
you love these books, but . . .”
When I do, I’m forced to share a bit of my pre-Catholic
background that I’d prefer to keep quiet. But it’s become
critical to open up about things I’ve done, if only
because those of us who share similar experiences seem
also to share a feeling of dread about the popularity
of Harry Potter. Despite my discomfort with the Harry
Potter books, I have to admit that they helped me see
how an old unconfessed sin was troubling my life.
Astrology,
Hypnotism, Witchcraft
Baptized Catholic in a non-practicing home, I spent
my childhood in various Protestant churches. I was taught
to say my bedtime prayers. My parents emphasized good
morals. I had a deep, abiding sense of God’s presence
in my life.
I knew He loved me, and I always knew that I could turn
to Him. But as I recall, by the time my parents divorced
when I was fourteen, God wasn’t much emphasized in my
home. What I do recall is a heavy emphasis on the importance
of astrology in explaining people’s personalities, a
fascination with fortune telling, and an incredible
zodiac-themed party that my mom and I threw, complete
with black lights for ambiance and levitation games
for entertainment.
Not too much later, I went to see a stage hypnotist
whose shows I began to attend frequently, as it gave
a stage-hungry teen like me the opportunity to sing
in front of an audience. I considered the hypnotism
a sham until the evening that hypnotist chose me for
his show’s finale. Telling me that my body was “stiff
as a steel beam,” he laid me across the back edges of
two folding chairs and then stood on top of me.
Having a 250-pound man stand upon my airborne body taught
me that something really does happen to you when you’re
hypnotized. Christian friends tried to tell me this
“something” was not healthy for me spiritually, but
I wouldn’t listen. I really didn’t think it could affect
me; it was all just a lot of fun. But looking back over
my life, I can now tell you that the end of the two
years I spent attending that hypnotist’s show coincided
with my conscious decision to turn away from God.
Was it a direct result of being hypnotized? Probably
not. I can assure you, though, that regularly allowing
someone to take over my conscious choices didn’t do
my meager faith life any good.
The most frightening event of my life occurred when
I tried witchcraft. I had been a lonely child who had
grown into a lonely teen, always looking for love. One
day I picked up one of those ubiquitous little books
sold at the grocery store checkout, and this one was
about casting love spells. I took it home, stood in
my bedroom, and started to cast a spell over my on-again,
off-again boyfriend. I don’t remember the words I spoke
(thank you, God), but I’ll never forget what happened.
I started to cast the spell. Wham! A huge black door
(picture the monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey) slammed
shut as if traveling from my left hand to my right.
“God doesn’t want you to do this,” said a deep voice
within me.
Wham! A door just as large slammed shut the other direction,
and a voice responded, “It doesn’t matter. There is
no God.” I was tempted to listen.
Wham! The door slammed back the original direction and
a voice stated firmly and slowly, “Yes . . . there .
. . is.”
I put the witchcraft book down, never to pick it up
again. I was deeply shaken, and I knew that I had encountered
something beyond this world. Doubt had entered my life
for the first time, and I knew that I could have embraced
a Godless universe at the moment that second door slammed
shut. I knew that something out there had wanted me
to turn away from God forever, and that it had its opportunity
when I participated in the world of witchcraft.
Were there consequences from this aborted act of witchcraft?
Most assuredly. Shortly thereafter, when the movie The
Exorcist came out, that boyfriend became enamored with
the Devil, both drawn to him and desiring his power.
Eventually he began to cruise the streets of Hollywood
looking for homosexual sugar daddies, and I ended our
friendship.
I too felt consequences, but they didn’t surface until
I’d left God, then returned to Him and become a Catholic.
At that point I found that I had a remarkable sensitivity
to the occult. Anything even remotely associated with
the occult — horoscopes, palm readers, metaphysical
bookstores, or crystal healing — would disturb me deeply.
I would feel a dark whirlpool tugging at my soul, drawing
me towards the preternatural. I would fight this whirlpool
both by praying for the people involved in such practices
and by shielding myself from exposure to anything occultic.
Along
Comes Harry
Then along came Harry Potter. I was introduced to him
when my dearest friend found that Harry inspired her
oldest son to enjoy reading for the first time in his
life. The next thing I knew, Harry Potter was everywhere,
and my eighteen-year-old daughter was reading the books.
But I felt that whirlpool tugging, so I knew I had to
find out if my fears had any basis in reality.
Too scared to read the books at first, I instead read
what other people had to say about them. I began to
notice a pattern. Of the commentators I read who loved
the Harry Potter books, virtually none of them had ever
experienced the occult. To them this was a delightful
fantasy in the same genre as J. R. R. Tolkien and C.
S. Lewis. In contrast, almost every commentator I read
who had experience with the occult found the books disturbing,
almost as if they were primers on witchcraft.
Why the difference of opinions? I read the first two
books, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (Scholastic Press,
1997 and 1998), and came up with an answer. Much of
the Harry Potter books are in fact delightful fantasy.
The author, Joanne Rowling, tickles our imaginations
with tales of unicorns, Quidditch games, and owls who
deliver mail.
But among these charming depictions are much darker
sections, particularly in the early part of Harry’s
education. This combination — darker elements introduced
early and a delightful finish that can only be considered
imaginative — leaves many readers with an overall good
feeling about the books.
So why did I feel such dread when I read Harry Potter?
Why do other people who’ve left the occult feel such
distaste for the books? John Gibson, who converted out
of neopaganism into Catholicism and whose conversion
story appears in Surprised by Truth 2, wrote this to
me: “First and foremost, most people who have been involved
in the occult still have something like a fingerprint
of it on their soul. It gives us a kind of sensitivity
to the occult that others don’t have.”
“A fingerprint on the soul” — that was the difference
I was seeing between readers who loved Harry Potter
and those of us who didn’t. That “fingerprint” was being
touched again whenever we read Harry Potter, and our
souls were growing troubled. We were recognizing things
we’d known in the past and had rejected for the love
of God.
To clarify what I mean here, let me offer just a few
stories of people whose lives at some point intertwined
with the occult and who today voice concerns about Harry
Potter.
“There
Is Only One Kind of Magic”
Clare McGrath Merkle is a former New Age healer,
well educated in the occult, and a revert to Catholicism.
Her concern about the Potter books runs deep, because
she recognizes within its pages so many of the arts
she once practiced. She and her friends in the occult,
psychologists, physicists, and other professionals (who
were also wizards, warlocks, and witches) defended their
studies together “as being of the white magic category,
much like [Hogwarts,] the wizardry school of Harry Potter.”
But having removed herself from the world of the occult
back into the loving fold of the Catholic Church, she
now recognizes that in reality there is only one kind
of magic, “variously known as black magic, occultism,
diabolism, or the dark arts.”1
Jacqui Komschlies provides a similar warning, telling
her readers “we need to remember that witchcraft in
real life can and does lead to death — the forever and
ever kind.” For over ten years she was fascinated with
the supernatural, an appetite she says she developed
from reading stories of “wizards, magic, power and adventure.”
(Sound familiar?) Eventually she found that the supernatural
was taking over her thoughts.
One day the spirits, powers, and goddesses who filled
even her dreams began actually to speak to her. Frightened,
she cried out to God. He rescued her, and the voices
ceased.
Today she warns: “Our world is exploding with interest
in real witchcraft. Type ‘How can I become a witch?’
in Google.com and you’ll get listings for dozens of
related sites. The same query in AskJeeves.com brings
up many articles — the main one giving a simple eight-step
process for becoming a witch on your own.”2
Though Vivian Dudro has no background in the occult,
she shares Mrs. Komschlies’ concerns about children’s
increased fascination with the occult. Her own research
has shown that “in San Francisco, the Potter stories
already have inspired countless children to seek other
books about witches, wizards, and spooks. The city’s
libraries have stocked their juvenile collections with
this subject matter. … The trend concerns me because,
apart from serious sin, occultism is the main way the
diabolical can enter a person’s life.”3
“Playing
With a Fire From Hell”
The editor of that same newsletter, Steve Wood, weighed
in with the revelation of his own background in the
occult. Many readers of this magazine will recognize
Mr. Wood as the soft-spoken host of the St. Joseph’s
Covenant Keepers radio show. Having read the first three
Harry Potter books, he holds a strong opinion about
them.
“Before my conversion to Christianity,” he recalls,
“I was involved in New Age and false religious movements
that actually practiced several of the things casually
described in the Harry Potter novels. . . . I have led
young people out of the very world described in the
Harry Potter novels to a commitment to Christ. . . .
I have personally confronted and ministered to demonically
possessed individuals involved in Satanism and the occult.
In light of this experience, I warn fathers that exposing
your children to the enchanting world of Harry Potter
is playing with a fire from hell.”4
It’s not only laymen who worry about Harry Potter. Fr.
Phillip Scott is a priest who lives near a community
of “Gothics” in Florida. The young people in this community
practice Satanic “masses,” live the occult, and engage
in spiritual warfare, regularly cursing Fr. Scott and
his fellow priests.
Fr. Scott believes that the entry into this horrendous
lifestyle begins with curiosity, and he believes that
books like Harry Potter can stimulate such curiosity.
In an interview with Steve Wood, Fr. Scott tells of
having ministered to a young boy whose mind was filled
with the images in the Harry Potter books. What is most
frightening is that the books had not been written at
the time the boy received ministry; Fr. Scott in retrospect
recognized within the pages of Harry Potter the very
images that had been tormenting the young man.
What does Fr. Scott say about the Harry Potter books?
He calls them “poison.”5
Spells
and Brews
What are some of these images and their ensuing
dangers? In her 1991 book, Ungodly Rage, Donna Steichen
shared this insightful quote from a repentant former
practitioner of Wicca, Carmen Helen Guerra:
When
I was a witch, I performed rituals. I evoked spirits.
I called entities. I cast spells, burned candles,
concocted brews. The only thing I didn’t do was fly
on a broom, but I probably would have figured it out
if given time. But where did it lead to? Into darkness,
depression, and the creation of an aura of gloom around
me. I was frequently under demon attack. The house
where I lived was alive with poltergeist activity
. . . due to residual “guests” from rituals. My friends
and family were afraid of me. I knew I had no future;
all I had was a dark present. I was locked in by oaths
and “destiny.” But I had power, something I’d always
wanted. It wasn’t Satan’s fault. He didn’t exist —
or so I thought. I gave it all up, and came to Jesus
on my knees. . . . He freed me from the oppression
and gave me back my soul — the one I had so foolishly
given to evil in exchange for power.6
Does this have anything to do with Harry Potter? You
bet. Though it’s all dressed up as sweetness and light,
the first Harry Potter book has rituals (for example,
“the Sorting Ceremony,” pp. 117-122); spells (Hermione
casts the full Body-Bind spell on Neville, p. 273);
spirits and other non-human entities (Voldemort inhabits
Quirrell’s body, pp. 293-295, and the myriad ghosts
of Hogwarts); candles (thousands floating above the
tables at Hogwarts, p. 116); and brews (Professor Snape’s
potions class, pp. 136-139).
It’s not pleasant to contemplate, but there really are
people out there who practice witchcraft, who cast spells
and perform rituals, and who see results. J. K. Rowling
writes as if their powers can be channeled into good,
and that is the great danger of her books. Rituals and
spells and brews are used by witches in the real world,
and they work because of the power of evil spirits.
As such they can never lead to good. Portraying these
innately evil practices as if they can be harnessed
for good is a dangerous lie.
Rowling further confuses the issue by portraying witchcraft
not as a moral issue, but as an issue of heredity. In
Rowling’s world, the ability to practice witchcraft
is inherited. But in reality, you don’t need to possess
a particular bloodline in order to make witchcraft work.
All you have to do is tap into evil spirits, turn over
your will, and leave Jesus Christ for the world of the
occult.
We thus have two falsehoods presented to the children
who read these books: first, that their status as a
witch is written in their genes; and second, if they’re
one of the “lucky” ones, they can use their powers for
good. These are harmful lies to teach, because the reality
is so different and so dangerous. Just ask Carmen Helen
Guerra.
The
Church’s Warning
The Catechism of the Catholic Church states unequivocally:
“All practices of magic or sorcery, by which one attempts
to tame occult powers, so as to place them at one’s
service and have a supernatural power over others —
even if this were for the sake of restoring their health
— are gravely contrary to the virtue of religion. …
The Church for her part warns the faithful against it”
(2117).
This is strong language in the catechism, the same language
used to condemn lust, fornication, and abortion. Catholics
cannot in good conscience take such a warning lightly.
If Harry were using lust, fornication, or abortion to
save his friends at Hogwarts, would we still think these
books were acceptable children’s fare?
It’s important to note that the witchcraft about which
Rowling writes stands in stark contrast to fantasy magic
as it’s portrayed in Tolkien and Lewis. The good characters
in Middle Earth and Narnia don’t cast spells on people,
don’t call up spirits and commune with them like beloved
neighbors, don’t perform rituals, and don’t mix potions.
The good characters at Hogwarts do.
In Narnia, a ring transports you to another world, and
in Middle Earth lightning flashes at a critical time
to perform some powerful feat. But at Hogwarts, the
evil Voldemort enchants a diary to take possession of
a girl’s soul. These are vast and substantial differences,
requiring us to view Rowling’s witchcraft in a much
different light from Tolkien’s and Lewis’s magic.
Bad
Role Models
What about the argument that the Potter books help
to teach the difference between right and wrong? Putting
witchcraft aside, it’s true there are definite “bad
guys” in the books, and that they are consistently fought
by the “good guys.” But I found those “good guys” to
be less-than-stellar role models.
At first glance, Harry Potter seems a noble little boy,
one who will put his own life at risk to save his friends.
He defends the weak, comforts the sad, and fights evil.
But I found he also had a nasty propensity to flaunt
school rules and to lie.
In fact, at the end of the first book, Harry saves the
world from the evil Lord Voldemort by screwing up his
courage and telling a lie. Now, telling a lie to save
the world may at first seem to be acceptable, but we
have to remember that this is a work of fiction, and
the author could have easily found a truthful way for
Harry to save the world. A close reading of the second
book shows that lying now comes much more easily to
Harry than it did in the first book, so we see Harry’s
character growing weaker rather than stronger.
I’m also concerned about the way Harry is allowed to
avoid proper discipline. He’s famous, he’s talented,
and he’s a celebrity. Time after time in both the first
two books, when Harry breaks school rules, he is either
clever enough to get away with it or he’s a skillful-enough
liar not to be chastised.
Repeatedly threatened with expulsion, he is always forgiven.
In the worst case of all, he’s threatened with expulsion
from Hogwarts if he flies on his broomstick. But when
he in fact does, and does so with great talent, he’s
actually rewarded with a prime spot on the school Quidditch
team.
Much like some American college football heroes, he
receives not a lick of punishment precisely because
he’s such a great athlete. Even the points that Harry
and his friends lose for their schoolhouse during the
course of the first book are handed back to them with
bonuses at the end, and enough so that their house wins
the coveted school cup. What’s the overall message?
If you’re cute enough, talented enough, strong enough,
or clever enough, you don’t have to worry about following
the rules in your little corner of the universe. This
is hardly teaching the difference between right and
wrong.
Disturbing
Religious Elements
I further noticed some disturbing religious elements
in the books — an apparent twisting of Catholic terminology,
symbolism, and even theology. Whether or not all the
instances of such twisting were intentional, the dangerous
confusion resulting in the minds of young readers remains
the same.
Picture this. In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,
pages 51-52, Harry is hidden in a shop that sells paraphernalia
of the Dark Arts. He sees a customer express interest
in a withered hand sitting on a cushion. Turns out it’s
called the “Hand of Glory,” and it’s considered the
“best friend” of thieves and plunderers.
Wait a minute. “Glory” is a term of worship used by
angels and humans alike. Why is it being used to describe
the favorite tool of robbers?
Later, when attending a “deathday party” for ghosts,
Harry and his friends notice “a group of gloomy nuns
. . . and the fat friar” (p. 132). This was a dark and
dreary party of obviously tortured souls, and the friar
and the nuns could have easily been left out. Did Rowling
think this was cute or did she mean to give insult?
Blink and you’d miss it, but in two short paragraphs
of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Rowling twists
and perverts the meaning of a word of tremendous significance
to Catholics. The word is “transfiguration,” which should
call to every Catholic child’s mind the glorification
of our Lord on the mountaintop with Moses and Elijah.
Instead, Rowling uses the word to mean “some of the
most complex and dangerous magic you will learn”: that
of changing one object into another (p. 134).
Having thus assigned “transfiguration” a decidedly un-Christian
meaning in the first book, she peppers the second book
with numerous references to the subject. My heart breaks
when I think of how many children will forever more
listen to the Gospel reading about the Transfiguration,
and will find their minds drawn to the Hogwarts School
of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
The book of Revelation is arguably the least understood
book of the Bible, but the significance of one element
in it is generally agreed upon: The number “666” is
the diabolical number of the beast (see Rev 13:18),
and it’s not a good thing. Yet J. K. Rowling has chosen
to use this number as significant for one of the most
unselfish and noble of her characters, Mr. Nicolas Flamel.
Always portrayed as a good character, at the end of
the first book he is raised to heights of actual heroism
when he decides to lose his life for the sake of the
world. We the readers are introduced to Flamel when
Harry and his friends read Flamel’s biography on page
220. Figuring prominently in this biography is the fact
that last year Mr. Flamel celebrated his six hundred
and sixty-fifth birthday. That means that the year in
which his biography was written, the year in which he
is immortalized for all of us, Mr. Flamel is in the
666th year of his life. The symbol of the beast for
Christians is the age of the savior of humanity for
Hogwarts.
Rowling then presents a perversion of Catholic theology
when a unicorn is killed just before the climax of the
first book. “The blood of a unicorn will keep you alive,
even if you are an inch from death, but at a terrible
price,” writes Rowling on page 258. Drinking blood will
keep us alive?
When I first read this, I wondered if we were about
to see a Catholic metaphor that might redeem the entire
book. The next phrase kept my hope alive, “You have
slain something pure and senseless to save yourself.
. . .” Yes, I thought, we are about to see a Eucharistic
analogy, but then my eyes traveled to the next line
on the page: “You will have but a half-life, a cursed
life, from the moment the blood touches your lips.”
I felt as if I’d been punched in the stomach. It isn’t
the crime of killing the pure and defenseless unicorn
that curses, but the act of drinking its blood. What
a horrendous twisting of the biblical promise that drinking
the blood of Jesus, who is the purest of the pure, will
bring us eternal life. The antithetical notion that
a pure creature’s blood will bring us “a half-life,
a cursed life” is a slap in the face of Catholics.
An Agent of Conversion
There’s a lot I see wrong in the Potter books, but
I’ve left out an important way in which they’ve changed
my life for the better. Remember the love spell I tried
to cast as a teenager? Not having been raised Catholic,
it never occurred to me that I needed to take that act
into the confessional. In my great distress over the
books, feeling that dark whirlpool tug at my soul just
looking at them, I finally realized that I needed the
grace of Reconciliation for having once tried to cast
a spell. I could have argued that I didn’t need confession
(I hadn’t quite met all the qualifications for mortal
sin), but I’m so glad I went.
Through my confession, God in His mercy gave me a great
gift: His forgiveness has blessed my life, and I’ve
experienced palpable benefits from the sacrament I received
that day. That whirlpool, that dragging, dark force
that used to draw me back toward the occult, is gone.
I still pray for fortunetellers and witches when I come
across them, and I regularly pray for protection from
the occult, but I no longer have to protect myself fearfully
from its drag.
What blessed freedom! In that sense, I must view Harry
Potter as an agent of my conversion. It’s in that sense
that I hope you too will see him as an agent of conversion
in your children’s lives.
Not everyone who reads Harry Potter will be harmed spiritually.
While I do see danger in the books stimulating an interest
in the occult, I’m the least worried about children
who are protected by the sacraments and well grounded
in their faith.
If your children haven’t yet read Harry Potter, I hope
I’ve given you plenty of reasons why they shouldn’t.
But if they’ve already read the books, as have so many
American children, I hope you’ll use this article to
spur a discussion in your family. Share with your kids
the teaching of the Catholic Church on witchcraft, and
share with them the destructive influences the occult
has on people.
If Harry Potter can become an inoculation against the
occult instead of a gateway into it, he will have unwittingly
done your children a great favor.
Contact
Toni Collins at Tonicollins@aol.com.
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