Victory of the Cross
Jesus is the Word of God
sabby4life said:i agree with fletcher a person who hates harry potter because of witch craft but likes lotr is a loser
Then I am loser
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sabby4life said:i agree with fletcher a person who hates harry potter because of witch craft but likes lotr is a loser
Elrond of Rivendell said:Stop the Presses she says she is not a witch!!!! My goodness that settles it People Never Lie!!
All HP haters![]()
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Echuu Shen Jon said:Most Ex Witches would answer
Yes SHEESH!
Nanee5 said:Ok, so Rowling says she believes in God... that does not make her a Christian, contrary to popular belief. Even Satanists believe in God.
Obviously, belief in God does not equal being a Christian. However, in one of the interviews I posted, JK Rowling was asked if she was a Christian specifically, and she said yes. Her exact beliefs are between her and God, but that is what she says.
"It's not the fact that witchcraft is used in the story, beit Harry Potter or the t.v. show, "Bewitched".. the point is that it makes witchcraft seem benign, not dangerous in anyway... even ...FUN!"
The problem with this logic is that the magic in both works isn't really magic-- as several people in this thread have pointed out. You can't turn a rat into a teacup, and, in regards to "Bewitched", you can't wiggle your nose and make something appear. The magic of the story, which is used as a literary device, doesn't equal the occult, and siince the magic of the story isn't the occult, how can it make what it is not look fun?
"That is what ensnares children! Not that it makes them want to run out and get Anton Lavey's Black book, but it desensitizes them to what is really wrong, and what is really evil, to look not so bad after all..."
Children know this is fantasy. And if they don't, those attempting to turn a rat into a teacup will be sorely disappointed.
And again, I ask the question-- how are "Lord of the Rings" and "The Chronicles of Narnia" different?
-- Added note. If children actually believed that the magic of "Harry Potter" was real, they would know they could not do it. In Rowling's world, magic is an inhereted genetic trait. Unlike the beleif system of Wicca, its not something you can "tap into."
[/QUOTE]The problem with this logic is that the magic in both works isn't really magic-- as several people in this thread have pointed out. You can't turn a rat into a teacup, and, in regards to "Bewitched", you can't wiggle your nose and make something appear. The magic of the story, which is used as a literary device, doesn't equal the occult, and siince the magic of the story isn't the occult, how can it make what it is not look fun?
"That is what ensnares children! Not that it makes them want to run out and get Anton Lavey's Black book, but it desensitizes them to what is really wrong, and what is really evil, to look not so bad after all..."
Children know this is fantasy. And if they don't, those attempting to turn a rat into a teacup will be sorely disappointed.
And again, I ask the question-- how are "Lord of the Rings" and "The Chronicles of Narnia" different?
-- Added note. If children actually believed that the magic of "Harry Potter" was real, they would know they could not do it. In Rowling's world, magic is an inhereted genetic trait. Unlike the beleif system of Wicca, its not something you can "tap into."
Fletcher said:If you've just watched the "Harry Potter" movies I don't blame you for being bored. The movies (espicially the first two) are really annoying, in my opinion. The books are much better.
As for "Lord of the Rings" being written by a Christian-- that is true, but the point wizard-boy was trying to make, I think, was that it still has wizard protagonists-- and so its a bit hypocritical to love "Lord of the Rings" and bash "Harry Potter" for containing magic. As for "Lord of the Rings" being full of Christian symbolism, remember that Tolkien absolutely hated allegory.
I'm an ex occultist from practicing in the FCoS and OoP, as well as a lot of Crowlean philosophy. That's the entire basis of the whole 'modern witchcraft' garbage that's out right now, and anyone who knows anything about the symbology behind paganism and the occult would laugh at you for saying that. I know I am.Echuu Shen Jon said:Most Ex Witches would answer
Yes SHEESH
Lets call it a draw![]()
I am going to say something to shock you now
I don't care if the magic in Harry Potter is real. It isn't. Go ask your local wiccan. But, if it was, I still wouldn't care. I am not going to become a witch because of a book I read. In fact I have read many books that have 'real' witchcraft in them. Have I felt condemnation from God for this? No. Has my faith been challenged? No. Have I become intrested in becoming a witch? No. Do I care if the magic is real? No. Does this make it ok for everyone to read the books? No. I believe that God has laid restrictions on some Christians and not on others. You don't think that God wants you to read HP. Great. Don't read it. Just stop foisting your opinion on me.