i love the harry potter series. and anyone who knows me today can tell you that i do. i’m always quoting it and using it for illustrations. it even came up once at montreat last week during evening devotions. i’ve read each book at least twice…some more…and i’ve listened to each book on tape at least 6 times…some more…and i’ve seen all the movies. i can’t get enough.
last summer, i took the group to see order of the phoenix during our mission trip to ohio. we had a blast going to see it together on opening night. most of the youth in GOOTH are HP fans, also…so, most of them get my references. with the next movie opening in november, i’m excited about taking the group to see it, too.
last summer was not the first time i took a youth group to see a harry potter movie. back in 2001, i took my then middle-school group in raleigh to see harry potter and the sorcerer’s stone on opening night during a lock-in. that was quite the adventure. several parents stood in line early in the morning, while drinking coffee and reading the newspaper, to get the group tickets. the place was so packed that we couldn’t all sit together…we were all over the theater.
i’ve already invited the facebooking GOOTH crowd to see the movie together, and will invite the rest very soon. i think it is important to see movies that generate a lot of controversial publicity – particularly religious controversy – as a group so that we can discuss any questions people may have. but aside from that, i think that the harry potter stories and movies have a lot to offer as illustrations of christian and religious themes.
the sixth book really begins to get at the heart of the themes in the harry potter books that make it so powerful. at the end of book five, we discover more about harry’s past and the reasons for voldemort’s actions. with that, we discover the power of love in the jk rowling-created world. dumbledore says there is a room in the department of mysteries that remains locked at all times, because it contains powerful magic. that magic is love. it is the magic that gives harry’s mother (lily) the ability to sacrifice herself for her son. in book six, we see harry learn the significance of love in his ongoing battle with voldemort and how it is love that will enable him to defeat him in the end. without love, one cannot grief the loss of a loved one. harry, who is initially disappointed to hear that love is the magic power that he has the “voldemort knows not,” finally realizes that it is more powerful than he can imagine. it is by love that he is able to face voldemort because of his own free will and not as a result of voldemorts actions. “It was, he thought, the difference between being dragged into the arena to face a battle to the death and walking into the arena with your head held high. Some people, perhaps, would say that there was little to choose between the two ways, but Dumbledore knew – and so do I, thought Harry, with a rush of fierce pride, and so did my parents – that there was all the difference in the world.” ~J.K. Rowling, “Horcruxes,” Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, 2005. i hope this scene is brought out in the movie.
the series is a powerful series on love, friendship, and forgiveness, among other themes. if you haven’t read the books, i encourage you to do so. but i warn you, you will enjoy it…and you will not get the full meaning of the themes until you have finished the entire series…all 4100+ pages.
if you haven’t seen the new trailer, view it at: http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi215810329/
