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Treasury of Sermons -
Contemporary Issues
Harry Potter: An
Innocuous Spooky Tale or A Disguised Occultic Scare?
By Rev Jack Sin
Preface (by Eld Tan Nee Keng)
Inviting Harry Potter into Our Lives?
THIS LETTER is written because of the concern that
many Christians are among the hordes going to the cinema to watch the
Harry Potter movie. A number of good Christian articles have been
written on this topic giving references from the Bible to warn us of the
dangers of following this trend of the masses. Among them are Rev Jack
Sin’s "Harry Potter: An Innocuous Spooky Tale of A Disguised Occultic
Snare?" (article reproduced below) and Sis Charlene Lim’s "The Christian
View on Pokemon and Harry Potter" (Burning Bush, Volume 7 Number
2, July 2001) To those thinking of going to watch the movie, please read
these articles and consider the following:
-
It is a fact that wizardry and witchcraft are exalted
in the movie. While the Bible warns against dabbling in the occult,
the devil has put it in a very appealing form known as
"entertainment". Why do people take drugs although the end result of
addiction and its terrible consequences are known? - because of the
"high" that it gives to the user! Why do people still indulge in a lot
of unhealthy foods in spite of health warnings given? - because they
taste so good! The consequences seem so remote, so unimportant. Has
sin ever been presented by its terrible consequences as much as by its
pleasure? Seeking the ‘fun’ of "Harry Potter" will displease God, not
to mention make us vulnerable to the devil’s attacks.
-
Do the hawkers who sell the "sinful" foods consider
what is good for your health? Do the author, movie makers and
businessmen consider what is good for you and your family in coming
out with the books, movie and paraphernalia? All these products are
meant to appeal to the masses with the aim of bringing in profit. But
the consumer is responsible for his own actions. Have you considered
that "Harry Potter" is not for Christians?
-
"It gives fun (pleasure)". "I know when to get out of
it if it is really bad". "Is it really true that it is bad?" Do these
sound familiar? "And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not
surely die: For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then
your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and
evil. And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that
it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one
wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto
her husband with her; and he did eat." Genesis 3:4-6. Are we falling
into the same sin as Eve, succumbing to the lust of the eyes/flesh and
doubting God’s Word?
-
Many say "I want to see it so that I can warn others
of the danger". So they watch the movie believing that they have a
good reason to do so. As a result, through this great deception,
Christians end up doing that which they should not be doing.
-
Then we want more. "It is harmless; see, I’m still
attending church. It doesn’t make me believe any less in God".
Subconsciously, more and more of what we have seen lurk at the back of
our minds, and influence our thinking without our realising it. Worse,
the very young children who see all these will want more because it is
so fun, and they begin to practise what they see -
witchcraft/wizardry, disobedience to parents, taking of drugs,
trickery, deception, etc. Would this be only a passing phase in their
lives? We certainly hope it would be, but at the time that we think
they will give up these things, they become youths. Contrary to what
we hope, there is great likelihood that they will continue, because
what is depicted as witchcraft in the stories have been shown to be
authentic and not just child’s play.
-
Are our wills subjected to God or are we more
concerned to be with the in-crowd? Do we really care about what God
says, whether He is pleased with us? You may say "I’m not sure if what
the Bible says is applicable in this case". Then wouldn’t it be better
to err on the side of caution then to take the risk?
-
Finally, brethren, is there profit for us in going for
the movie and reading the books? What is our real reason for going for
"Harry Potter"?
"I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of
God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable
unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not conformed to this
world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may
prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God."
(Romans 12:1,2)
May the Lord help us!
Introduction
Grossing more than S$160 million over 10 days, the
launch of Harry Potter’s first movie has shown that the entertainment of
fantasy and horror can be lucrative enterprises. This is an
age of spiritual inquisitiveness and many are easily enamoured
and enthralled by the seductive devices of the evil one. Critical
thinking and discerning evaluation are almost absent for some or reduced
to a barest minimum for many. The occult has successfully masqueraded
itself as innocuous games, movies or toys, books and computer games
today. Unsuspecting impressionable teenagers and adults are flocking in
drones to the latest diabolical entertainment in JK Rowling’s sinister
creation of Harry Potter & the Sorcerer’s Stone now marketed with
malevolent zeal as a latest blockbuster that hit the movie screens in
the UK, US, Malaysia, Singapore etc in November this year. A new
computer game on Harry Potter has also been developed and is available
in the marketplace now. The Straits Times reviewed that a 13-year old
boy enjoyed Harry meeting his long dead parents in the magical mirror
of Erised (ie occultic practice of calling up the dead) and other
favourable comments on the occultic activities shown in the movie on 27
November 2001. Daniel Radcliffe (the one who starred as Harry Potter)
himself confessed that the "set was so realistic that fiction became
fact even in his subconscious and he dreamt about it that he fell
off the broom and thought that he was dead."
It is planned that every year there will be a new
release of the series of the bestseller, Harry Potter. Potter Mania
is a new obsessional phenomenon with thinly disguised occultism that
accentuates on diabolical characters that were closely connected to
nearly every dimension of the occultic world; from alchemy,
astrology, spell-casting, clairvoyance, crystal ball gazing,
reincarnation, wizardry and mediumship.
Harry Potter’s books are so influential that many
young teenagers have written to Rowling to enrol in the imaginary
Hogwarts School of Wizards. It is crucial that as redeemed and justified
man, we need to be discerning to critically and objectively appraise the
phenomena from the lens of holy scriptures. Below is an analytical
perspective of the content of Harry Potter and the recommended responses
of the redeemed community.
Welcome to the Enchanting World of Seductive Horror &
Fantasy
The literary world has been mesmerised by a series of
the four bestsellers, namely Harry Potter & The Sorcerer’s Stone,
Harry Potter & the Chamber of Secrets, Harry Potter & the Prisoner of
Azkarban and Harry Potter & the Globet of Fire. USA Today quipped
that since the film release of Harry Potter; a bespectacled, orphaned
son of a murdered witch and wizard has been the soul mate of many
children and adults around the world (USA Today Nov 7, 2000).
Some (including believers) are celebrating these new
series and claimed that it has stimulated reading in children, which is
considered laudable. This superficial jubilation may be shortlived when
we discover and learn the sinister content of what the children are
reading.
During an interview in 1999, Rowling admitted that
she had studied mythology and witchcraft in order to write the books
more accurately. Rowling went on to say that about 1/3 of the sorcery
material appearing in her books are things that some people genuinely
(used to) believe in Britain. In other words, a lot of the material
in Harry Potter is actual historical sources that still play a
significant role in modern paganism, witchcraft and contemporary
occultism. To her credit, Rowling has been commended by modern
witches for her extremely well-developed and sophisticated knowledge of
the occult world; its legend, history and nuances. The world could not
have got a better promoter of witchcraft than one who has dabbled with
it before and popularised it to the world with about 100 million books
sold and translated into 46 languages.
For example, the Standard Book of Spells mentioned in
Rowling’s book has a real equivalent in the Book of Spells (1997) by
Arthur Edward Wask and Magical Draft and Potions has reference to Magick
Potions, "How to Prepare & Use Homemade Oils; Aphrodisiac, Brews and
Much More" (1998) by Gurine Dunwich. There are actual occultic books
still being used today as pointed out by Richard Abanes in his book on
Harry Potter & The Bible. Even the school supplies that Harry
Potter used in Hogwarts are used by contemporary witches [ie wanes,
black roses, cauldrons, owls (a favourite pet in the UK today) and other
diabolical instruments].
Is Harry Potter on Par with CS Lewis’ & Tolkien’s
books?
Rowling’s books have been touted as the best selling
fantasy literature since the CS Lewis & the Tolkien era. It has also
been remarked by some that Harry Potter is on the same plane as those
books written by CS Lewis’ & Tolkien (1892-1973) like The Chronicles
of Narnia and The Hobbits or The Lord of the Rings. Let it be stated
for a fact that Potter’s books are of an entirely different nature
from Lewis & Tolkien’s books for the latter although it has some
fantasy figures in its story line, it does not encourage or glamourise
witchcraft, wizardry, clairvoyance, reincarnation, consulting the dead
and dabbling with black magic and practical spell casting. John Murray
in the Citizen magazine aptly described this current strategy of the
evil one (cited in Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible,
67).
"In the 1941 preface of his book, Lewis
revealed two of the greatest mistakes in humanity’s beliefs about
demons…..One is to disbelieve in their existence. The other is to
believe and to feel an excessive and unhealthy interest in them.
They themselves are equally pleased with both errors and hail a
materialist or magician with the same delight. An even greater
error, and the one most valued by Lewis’ demonic characters, is the
fusion of the two errors. As Screwtape writes to Wormwood: "If once
we can produce our perfect work - the Materialist Magician, the man,
not using but veritably worshipping, what he vaguely calls ‘Forces’
while denying the existence of ‘spirits’ - then the end of the war
will be in sight."
Christians are not against the use of sanctified
creative imagination and the use of imagery, allegory (ie Pilgrim‘s
Progress and Holy War by John Bunyan), mythopoetic literature and
some fantasy figures in story telling or writing but when it crosses the
line in dabbling with the real world of spiritual darkness and
encourages actual entanglement of current occultic beliefs and
practices, we have gone too far, out of the will of God. The Lord
would not allow this to go unchallenged for long. It should be noted
that in Harry Potter, a direct link is established to paganism (ie
astrology and divination) and witchcraft via the presentation of
contemporary occultic beliefs and practices. Furthermore, Potter
series promote a concept of right and wrong that is radically different
from that of Lewis and Tolkien (ie there are vital issues of morality
and uprightness in the latter). Lewis’ good characters do not overcome
witchcraft by learning more witchcraft unlike Rowling’s Harry who
dabbled deeper into the occult to overcome evil (Richard Abanes,
Harry Potter and the Bible, 242).
Fortune-Telling, Mediumship & the Works of Darkness
in Harry Potter
There are diabolical practices that are subtly and
clearly taught and practised in Potter’s books and movies.
Fortune-Telling plays a prominent role in Prisoner
of Azkarban (Book III). During one of the classics / Hogwarts
divination teacher, taught the children palmistry (reading of our hands
to tell the past or the future), reading of tea leaves, crystal ball
gazing (also called scrying). Scrying is a very ancient form of
divination whereby a person gazes at a shining or polished surface to
induce a trance state in which scenes, people, word or image appear as
part of a psychic communication (Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the
Bible, 89).
Magical potion made from various herbs and fungi,
played an important role in the education of Harry and his friends. In
the Rebirth of Witchcraft, modern day witch
Doreen Valente explains that medieval witches did
indeed have an extremely specialised knowledge of herbs, plants and
trees for spells (Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible,
91). Rowling has taken great pains to ensure that the occult material in
her book accurately reflects modern day occultic practices by witch
covens.
In Harry Potter & The Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry
looked up Dittany, In 1000 Magical Herbs & Fungi, this herb is
the vital herb used by witches in Salem/ Halloween. It also aids witches
in astral projection on occult practice, which allegedly entails the
separation of one’s conscious self from the body to another dimension of
reality [Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible, (92)].
Palmistry, reading tea leaves, charms, fire omens (pyromancy) were also
taught in Harry Potter’s book and movie. These are not trivial or
harmless matters but actual diabolical practices that are still
prevalent and practised by witches and some New Agers as well today.
Potter Violence
Rowling has gone one step further to introduce
violence in her latest book, The Goblet of Fire. It has harsher
images and taught clairvoyance (ie communication with the dead) and the
use of the horoscope (to predict the future), in a class called
planetary divination. According to Ian Potter, a childhood friend of
Rowling, the latter likes to dress up as a witch all the time (Richard
Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible, 124). She would often send
her off to get herbs for magic portions for her. This gives us a clue
into the secret past life of Rowling who has turned from rags to riches
from the magical spell of Harry Potter’s book and movie to the second
richest woman in the UK. Harry’s behaviour is far from exemplary. He has
broken school rules, lied and disobeyed his elders and this was
presented favourably as acceptable demeanour before a young audience and
impressionable readers.
Children (and adults) are especially susceptible to
powerful images or the screen or vividly deployed on books and often
longed to be part of the story where they have immersed themselves
in. Rowling herself admitted that she received letters addressed
to Prof DumbleDore desperately seeking to be enrolled in Hogwarts
School. (Richard Abanes, Harry Potter and the Bible, 125). This
is how gullible and credulous children can be, in discerning fact from
fantasy.
The Cyber World of the Occult
A cyber world extension of this fantasy move is
greeted with glee by many Potter fans worldwide. It is a trend to have
fans creating Potter’s portals and hence showing their obsession with
this latest movie and novel.
Children are easily fascinated and obsessed with the
occult world of power, magic and entertainment. Rowling’s books have
successfully desensitised children and adults to the peril of occultism
and create in them a keen interest and sympathy for the malevolent set
of beliefs when these children grew up. Potter’s books alone will not be
able to satisfy them for long and may spark a fervent addictive desire
for the actual world of occultism, wizardry, witchcraft and Satan
worship. It is a slippery slope that we are witnessing today as the
reader’s inordinate craze for more. Paul said in 1 Cor 6:12 "All
things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient: all things
are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any."
Interestingly, the name of JK Rowling has been
‘honourably’ included in "A Compendium of the Para Normal Occult,
Unusual and Supernatural, and the Unexpected Phenomenon". She is listed
along with ESP (extra-sensory powers), Ghosts, Magic, Spells, Oujia
Board, Tarot Cards, Wiccan, Witchcraft, Zodiac and more (Richard Abanes,
Harry Potter and the Bible, 128).
Parents Beware! Spellbound by Harry
Harry Potter can hardly be used as a bed-time story
book. It has images of monsters, death and violence that haunt the young
reader. One five-year old had a troubled Saturday night after hearing
the first 100 pages from his parents on Voldermort (a character in Harry
Potter) who have the children checking under their bed for monsters, a
hardly comforting thought for parents. Godly prudence dictates that even
thinly disguised occultic stories are not suitable for any one before
bed-time (and all the time).
Harry Potter extends beyond the occult and violence.
Richard Abanes perceptively noted the immoral elements added by Rowling
in the latest, Harry Potter book on the Goblet of Fire (and watch
out for the future series to Harry Potter (Richard Abanes, Harry
Potter and the Bible, 141-142).
"A word must be said at this point about the
hints of sexuality that Rowling’s fourth book incorporates into the
series. She has stated that her young characters will be
"discovering their hormones" as they grow up, and Goblet of Fire
seems to include their first steps in that direction.
Indications of this theme first appear in Book IV during the
Quidditch World Cup. As it turns out, the Bulgarian mascots are
about 100 Veelas - ie extremely sensual, highly erotic and
indescribably attractive pseudo-human females. They are "the most
beautiful women Harry had ever seen".
Both Harry and Ron are utterly captivated by
these females, who made their presence known to the crowd by running
out on the playing field (somewhat like a cheerleading squad) for
apregame dance-show. Their intensely erotic movements cause "wild,
half-formed thoughts" to race through Harry’s "dazed mind." He is so
affected that he almost leaps onto the field from the stands. Ron is
similarly overwhelmed. Later in the book, Ron meets half-Veela and
instantly falls into puppy-lust. A final dip into the well of
sexuality occurs on the night of the Yule Ball, when numerous teen
couples are caught necking in the shrubbery and are subsequently
shooed back indoors by Professor Snape. How far might Rowling take
this particular subject in future volumes?"
Powerful and seductive verbal images of sex, violence
and occult are slowly and subtly introduced by Rowling and many youths
and adults are easy prey to this addiction to spiritual slavery and
immoral bondage. Harry Potter has the potential of leading
unsuspecting children and teenagers into greater obsession and deeper
occultic and unhealthy mental and physical involvement.
Biblical Thoughts on Sorcery & Occult
Rowling has successfully removed all caution and
disarmed readers to the dangers of a diabolical world of wizardry in
presenting a handsome and ingenious teenage wizard who apparently fights
for the good against the evil. The undiscerning unbelieving world is
more and more sympathetic and supportive of the world of darkness than
ever before. Sadly and oddly, could some Christians have lost their
discriminating sense between light and darkness, spiritual truth and
falsehood when they speak in favour of Harry Potter?
Rowling’s creation of Harry Potter is no harmless
fantasy book or movie but a deadly and effective occultic tool to
ensnare others into deeper involvement in the forbidden world of
witchcraft and the wizardry. The Word of God makes it clear what we
should do with regard to such books. In Acts 19:19 "Many of them also
which used curious arts brought their books together, and burned
them before all men: and they counted the price of them, and found it
fifty thousand pieces of silver."
We are to discard and destroy all such occultic
materials. We have already been warned in the Word of God. The
prophets of old inspired of God in the OT take a serious view of
occultic involvement in God’s people. Deut 18:10-13 says, "There
shall not be found among you any one that maketh his son or his daughter
to pass through the fire, or that useth divination, or an observer of
times, or an enchanter, or a witch, Or a charmer, or a consulter with
familiar spirits, or a wizard, or a necromancer. For all that do
these things are an abomination unto the LORD: and because of these
abominations the LORD thy God doth drive them out from before thee. Thou
shalt be perfect with the LORD thy God"
And the Lord warns in Lev 19:26-28, "Ye shall not
eat any thing with the blood: neither shall ye use enchantment, nor
observe times. Ye shall not round the corners of your heads, neither
shalt thou mar the corners of thy beard. Ye shall not make any cuttings
in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the
LORD."
Jer 27:9 says, "Therefore hearken not ye to your
prophets, nor to your diviners, nor to your dreamers, nor
to your enchanters, nor to your sorcerers, which speak
unto you, saying, Ye shall not serve the king of Babylon:" Isa
47:13-15 "Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels. Let now
the astrologers, the stargazers, the monthly prognosticators,
stand up, and save thee from these things that shall come upon thee.
Behold, they shall be as stubble; the fire shall burn them; they shall
not deliver themselves from the power of the flame: there shall not be a
coal to warm at, nor fire to sit before it. Thus shall they be unto thee
with whom thou hast laboured, even thy merchants, from thy youth: they
shall wander every one to his quarter; none shall save thee." Micah 5:12
"And I will cut off witchcrafts out of thine hand; and thou shalt
have no more soothsayers:’’
Saul consulted a witch at Endor and was severely
punished by the Lord demonstrating the divine disapproval of such
occultic practices (1 Sam 28:8-20). Harry effectively and subtly
beckons us back to partake of this forbidden fruit again with great
entertaining prowess.
Who are those that are outside the kingdom of God
according to holy scripture? The NT too has much to say about sorcery
and witchcraft. The Apostle John concluded the whole canon with this
crucial warning in Rev 21:8 which says, "But the fearful, and
unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and
sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part in
the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second
death." As sanctified men, we have a different perspective from the
world. Remember Paul’s exhortation in Phil 1:10 "That ye may approve
things that are excellent; that ye may be sincere and without offence
till the day of Christ." And Paul adds the list of the works of the
flesh in Gal 5:20, "Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance,
emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies."
One of Britain’s biggest teaching unions has issued a
stern warning to parents that the film Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s
Stone could lead children into the sinister world of the occult. From
The Straits Times: 5, 6 and 8 November 2001, we note the following
insightful comments:-
The Association of Teachers and Lecturers said the
movie had visually realistic images of witchcraft and wizardry, which
could cause many children to take an unhealthy interest in the
supernatural world.
Whereas children were limited by their own
imagination in reading JK Rowling’s books about the schoolboy wizard,
the movie’s stark, realistic and memorable images could spell danger to
youngsters by whetting their appetite for more information about the
mystic world, it said. The association also fears that the graphic
representations of characters from the book - including a three-headed
dog - could give impressionable youngsters nightmares. Mr Peter Smith,
national secretary of the teachers’ union, said: "Children must be
protected from the more extreme influences of the occult and be taught
in a responsible and positive way the risks of journeying into the
unknown." "The premiere of Harry Potter the movie could lead to a
whole new generation of youngsters discovering witchcraft and wizardry.
The risks are clear."
American children’s literature expert Theresa Fagan,
in an earlier write-up titled "Why Harry Potter is not on my list",
says: "Probably very few critics will agree with me, but I’d be cautious
about Harry Potter. The books are entertaining, and I enjoyed them a
lot. But all through these books, vice is exemplified much more than
virtue."
Conclusion
We live in an increasing spiritualised world of New
Age concepts, witchcraft, sorcery and wizardry. Many are still ignorant
or oblivious to the grave peril of dabbling with such work of darkness
until it is too late. Just like September 11’s incident forever
changed the way the world views air travel, security and terrorism,
Harry Potter’s books and movie will forever changed the way the world
looks at witchcraft, sorcery and the occult from henceforth.
End-time believers are to be wary and vigilant and to
take an uncompromising stand not to assist in the propagation of evil,
abetting and falling into the wiles of the adversary. Harry Potter is
not a simple, harmless fantasy tale or movie but it has the full
potential to fulfill the devil’s sinister intent of trapping and
incarcerating many into actual sorcery and witchcraft which has grave
and eternal consequences. True believers should have nothing to do with
this malevolent strategy of leading others into greater spiritual
darkness and eternal damnation.
Do not be seduced or be enslaved into the forbidden
and glamorised world of darkness and allow the devil to have a foothold
in your life. Toying with fire has its serious consequences one day.
Keep your young children and teenagers away (and adults too) from such
unedifying diabolical influences as well. Rather nurture them in the
knowledge of the truth of salvation in the word of God and in the fear
and admonition of the Lord (2 Pet 3:18) that they may grow thereby. The
Lord is coming again soon to judge the world of sin and that includes
those who peddle and dabble with sorcery, wizardry, witchcraft and the
occult. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the Living
God.
(NB: For a more comprehensive study of this subject and the occult,
read Richard Abanes, Harry Potter & the Bible, Camp Hill. Horizon
Books, 2001) and Examining & Exposing Cultic & Occult Movements,
available from MBPC office, FEBC and Tabernacle Bookroom. |