Harry Potter and the religious fanatics

Guest Post by Morbo

I have to say, I’m really disappointed. The last Harry Potter book comes out today, the fifth movie was just released, and what am I getting from the Religious Right? Nothing. Nada. Zip.

TV preachers and self-appointed fundamentalist guardians of public morality used to go crazy over these books. With the frenzy building for the release of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” I expected the Religious Right to be on full alert, warning America’s children of the dangers of witchcraft. But this time many are silent. It’s like they’ve given up in the face of the Potter juggernaut.

Just to make sure, I made the rounds of some major Religious Right sites on Friday morning. Here is what I found:

Family Research Council: Not one word about the book on the home page. A search for “Harry Potter” returns NO RESULTS.

American Family Association: The home page warns me that the Ford Motor Company is sponsoring a gay pride parade in Seattle. It contains nothing about J.K. Rowling’s twisted world of wizards, witches and werewolves.

Christian Coalition: No mention of Harry. I check the press releases and find the most recent one, hailing the Supreme Court’s decision on late-term abortions, dated April 18. I think this group has about nine dollars in its budget these days.

Vision America: The Rev. Rick Scarborough warns us that the Senate is trying to criminalize Christianity, bashes Islam and reminds us that liberalism kills kids. Harry and his seductive powers get a free broomstick ride.

700 Club: At last! The latest movie is reviewed by Ted Baehr, who runs a film review site for fundamentalists. He calls the film boring and writes of the series’ popularity, “Regrettably, however, this means that even more children will be lured away from God and His Infallible Word, which says that witchcraft is evil and abhorrent. Instead of dreaming about the joys that God gives us through Jesus Christ, they will be dreaming of casting spells, using magic spells, riding brooms, and rebelling against their parents.” Compared to the fulminating the Religious Right used to do over the Potter books and films, this is rather weak tea. (And Ted, I hate to break it to you, but kids were rebelling against their parents before Rowling came along.)

Focus on the Family: Another hit!

James Dobson blasts Harry on the FOF website — but only because The Washington Post inaccurately reported that the Ayatollah of Colorado Springs likes the boy wizard. Fumed a Focus press release: “Magical characters — witches, wizards, ghosts, goblins, werewolves, poltergeists and so on – fill the Harry Potter stories, and given the trend toward witchcraft and New Age ideology in the larger culture, it’s difficult to ignore the effects such stories (albeit imaginary) might have on young, impressionable minds.” Thanks for weighing in, Jim. Good to know you’re still insane.

Finally, I decide to do some real slumming, and here I hit pay dirt. Bill Keller, a TV preacher in St. Petersburg, Fla., offers a two-part type of “fan fiction” called “Harry Potter and the Search for a King,” in which Harry is persuaded to accept Jesus as his personal savior by Dudley after Uncle Vernon dies. (Keller’s name may be familiar. He’s the guy who recently opined that voting for Mitt Romney is the same as voting for Satan.)

Keller’s take on Harry Potter is so poorly written it’s amusing. Let me assure you his site it not a parody, nor did this piece originally appear in The Onion. If you choose to read Keller’s column, don’t worry about spoilers. I think it’s highly unlikely the seventh book will end with anyone converting to fundamentalist Christianity.

Today, children and adults all over America will run through a doorway to hell held open by Harry Potter, and the kook right apparently no longer cares. I have to say I’m impressed. Harry has vanquished the Religious Right — a villain far scarier than Lord Voldemort.

… they will be dreaming of casting spells, using magic spells….

Magical characters — witches, wizards, ghosts, goblins, werewolves, poltergeists and so on – fill the Harry Potter stories … difficult to ignore the effects such stories (albeit imaginary) might have on young, impressionable minds

Much the same things could be said of the most traditional forms of so-called Christianity. Spells? what about praying for your team to win the football game, praying to making a killing in business, etc. Magical characters? guardian angels, seraphim, cherubim, the devil and his helpers saintly intercession, blessing any object. Young minds? Sunday school, faith camps, First Communion, Mormon missions, Young Life, etc.

  • Add-on to #1:

    The difference is that everybody knows that Harry Potter is fiction. Unlike those for whom politics is based on Santa Claus for big people. No one proposes turning the process of governing over to nitwits who believe Harry Potter is real or that Harry Potter, if real, gives a crap about a political leader’s usurped Presidency.

  • I first got involved with the Harry Potter books back in 1999 or 2000, after the religious wingnuts started foaming at the mouth about them. My reasoning in purchasing the first two or three books was that I was just doing my part to piss off the religious right. I was hooked from the first chapter of the first book, which surprised the heck out of me.

    Today, I await my delivery from Amazon.com for the latest, and expect to be occupied for the duration.

    Thanks for the update (and the laugh), Morbo.

  • And thanks for your post, Ed. I was think much the same thing, but you said it before me, and probably much better than I would have.

  • It’s not as if the wingnuts really care one way or another about Harry Potter, they just glommed on the bandwagon to make money. After awhile it is the law of diminishing returns, that vein is dry.

  • I too think God’s word is infallible. I just haven’t heard God speak lately. In fact, for about the last 2000 years, the only words we Christians have been hearing is by some guys in uniformed cloth tellling us what God’s word is on our chosen day of sabbith. Of all the men of cloth I’ve had the occasion to meet, I’ve not discerned one to be infallible, so to me, the infallibility of God’s word can only come from him/her. What I choose to hear on any given Sunday will always have the filter of man upon it. I wander WWJD with the 700 Club? -Kevo

  • Okay which volume of the Harry Potter series will be appropriate for our first Sorcerer President to take his oath of office on?

    BTW, has anyone noticed there have been no significant terrorist attacks during Cheney’s presidency? Nuff said.

  • I agree with Ed Stephan at 1 and my additional thought is that for the bigger fundy groups it’s all about $$:

    Kids are reading Harry Potter. One day those kids will grow up and have jobs. If those kids have been driven away from 700 Club etc because some mean old adult told mom and dad to burn Harry, they might give their money to some other religious organization or [shudder] the ACLU!

    Think of it as investment.

    And for all I know those greedy hypocrites have stock in Scholastic and whoever produces the movies.

  • Something to keep in mind is that these people who claim to be Christian don’t represent the whole. I dislike these people as much as you do, but I am Christian. I think Harry Potter is great. While I haven’t read all the books, I dig the movies. I just can’t get into the books for some reason.

    My father is an Episocpal Priest and so is my stepmother. They both love the books and my father uses Harry Potter examples in his sermons for the kids to show how the stories represent the classic struggle of good and evil.

    I know it seems like it at times, but not all Christian are nut cases. You have to remember that these people thing magic, demons and the whole lot is real. They aren’t peopel driven by reason.

  • Personally I don’t care for fantasy or sci-fi, but I have never understood why so-called Christians condemn the Harry Potter books and movies while they adore those of C.S. Lewis and Tolkien. They seem the same to me: witches and lions and wardrobes, oh my. Someone, in exasperation I guess, told me that the Lord of the Rings was about good and evil, but I think a movie grounded in realism like Blood Diamonds is also about good and evil.

  • Before I get any flack, I’d like to say that I am not recommending Blood Diamonds for children.

  • Who decides which books get press (Harry Potter) and which get censored? After all, censorship is becoming America’s favorite past-time. The US gov’t (and their corporate friends), already detain protesters, ban books like “America Deceived” from Amazon and Wikipedia, shut down Imus and fire 21-year tenured, BYU physics professor Steven Jones because he proved explosives, thermite in particular, took down the WTC buildings. Free Speech forever (especially for books).
    Last link (before Google Books caves to pressure and drops the title):
    America Deceived (Book)

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