Category Archives: Harry Potter

Love never fails

Or as in the To the Moon (TTM) version of the Bible “Love is never unsuccessful” (see my last post) is not only biblically true – it is true in the magical world of Harry Potter. According to Wikipedia:

Magic and love

Arguably the most powerful form of magic is also the most mysterious and elusive: love. Lord Voldemort, having never experienced love himself, underestimates its influence—to his detriment. It was through love that Lily Potter was able to save her son Harry from death by sacrificing her life so that he might live. The exact nature of how “love-magic” works is unknown; it is studied in-depth at the Department of Mysteries.

Magic (Harry Potter)

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Book Review: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

Somehow, I have managed to see the latest Harry Potter movie AND have started reading the book. We got it by in a special Amazon box saying that it was delivered by an owl on Saturday. It was actually delivered by a mail person. Everyone in the family seems to be reading it at the same time. Josh decided to re-read the previous book and Hannah has dibs. The part I have read so far I really like! I work with an intern who finished it on Sunday (she slept 4 hours but didn’t eat anything).

There is a good review of it in Christianity Today –

The Gospel According to J.K. Rowling

which is a glowing review for Harry Potter.

The reviewer says:

Rowling begins to reveal that, like Narnia, her world has a “deeper magic.” Love, expressed as substitutionary sacrifice—choosing to lay down your life for your friends—has a power that Lord Voldemort, like the White Witch before him, is blind to. That blindness becomes his undoing—with the help of Harry and his friends. 

and he quotes C.S. Lewis:

When C.S. Lewis started out to write The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, he didn’t have Christianity in mind. “Some people seem to think that I began by asking myself how I could say something abut Christianity to children; then fixed on the fairy tales as an instrument, then collect information about child psychology and decided what age group I’d write for; then drew up a list of basic Christian truths and hammered out ‘allegories’ to embody them,” Lewis once wrote. “This is all pure moonshine. I couldn’t write in that way at all.”

He notes that something similar seems to have happened to J.K. Rowlings. She started out writing about wizards and quidditch – but “somewhere along the way, Christ began to whisper in the story”.

Heres to “deeper Magic”!

-Mark

 

 

 

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