Quote:
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Originally Posted by Thomas
Remember that a 'spell' is a superimposition of your will upon another person or thing to force them/it to perform according to your desire.
Remember also that there is evidence enough to believe that the practitioner will evoke any spirit, demonic or otherwise, to support him/her in this endeavour to bend another to his will?
Thomas
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I can understand your points, Thomas, and your concern, but I also see where Kaldayen is coming from. I should note that I am not that familiar with a Wiccan/Pagan protocol or approach regarding
spells, so I'm defaulting to my own understanding as an esotericist.
My feeling is that the Harry Potter books present Magic in the
proper Light, or at least in the most positive light I can imagine. It is shown that one can use magical ability for both good & ill,
just as we can manipulate the world around us for good or ill without magic. But Rowling emphasizes the importance of
White Magic (or
Good Magic, to be a bit more politically correct), just as was demonstrated as far back as
The Wizard of Oz in popular culture. At root, HP is
no different,
imho.
I have not read the HP books, and have only seen the first three movies, plus parts of the
Goblet, but I have read about Rowling, and have enjoyed a Biography special about her on the tube. I think she did a
marvelous and masterful job of presenting a morality ...
without being preachy, and without taking all the fun out it. She allows characters like Hermione to maintain her smarty-pants attitude, but when Hermione confronts Malfoy, we know quite clearly who is "in the right." The actor portraying Malfoy does an
excellent job of demonstrating all those
poor character traits which I trust every sensible & responsible parent will seek to eschew from developing in his attentive & impressionable youngster(s).
But when we are speaking of the issue of Magic, and bending wills, and possibly invoking the demon-spawn of hell ...
lol ... I'm sorry, but I think we're on
very shaky ground if we look to popular culture, or the writings of J.K. Rowling, for a culprit. I would be tempted considerably to delve a bit back into church history (or
christian history, since I'm thinking of Salem as much as the Inquisition) for a treatment of this sort of thing - but since the topic at hand
is HP, let's compare:
In esoteric teachings, one is taught that "White Magic" might just as aptly be termed
Good Magic, since it is precisely the
purpose and intention (or motive) of its practice that defines it. Even Forest Gump knew that.

And Dorothy had the good sense to ask Glenda whether she was a
"Good Witch or a Bad Witch,"
NOT recoil in horror, saying, "A witch! A witch! Burn her!"
Rowling has simply built upon the well-established foundation of
tolerance during the last century or so of
non-Christian religions & spiritual traditions, wherein one can
definitely have a clear moral distinction between Good and Evil,
without appealing to all the same theological concerns as must Christians. But she has gone one step further. She has been able, in a way that I can only describe as
magical (!), to captivate her audiences - both young & old alike - so completely, that she has added
substantially to some people's understanding of themselves, and of the
Magic of
Life Itself.
Of course it's "just a fantasy," and
of course this isn't the way our outward, physical world operates. But right down to Hermione's "time-turner," which was able to manipulate time
in order to accomplish Good and set things Right ... Rowling presents a fantasy that explores questions we have all asked, and leaves (many) of us
wishing it were so - and for the
right reasons, I should add.
I might point out that
Occultists, or Esotericists, seeking to walk the path of
White Magic, actively manipulate -
not the environment,
nor others - according to their individual will (
aka, `desire'). Rather, they seek to subjugate their (
own) entire
personality, or lower nature, consisting of body, emotions, & mind ... to the Spiritual Will, or that of the
Indwelling Christ (which St. Paul called "
the Hope of Glory"). This is done scientifically, systematically, and successfully, and the process is open to
any who wish to submit themselves to the necessary self-
discipline involved. Thus we have the root of the word
`disciple,' as well as the meaning of the words found in
Matthew 7:7.
Harry Potter was
quite able, we find, to handle the spiritual energy (pure
Christ-Force, as it appears to me) in the
Prisoner of Azkaban, when he sought to protect Sirius Black from the Dementors. Now I think it is
fairly clearly spelled out for us, that the Dementors in this movie/book, and particularly in the scene to which I refer, are representative of
evil, or demons ... while Harry, his wand, his intentions, and his effort to save the life of Sirius Black
all represent,
unequivocally,
GOOD.
Harry did not
accidentally invoke these demons as he sought to save his good friend, but he
did prove that at that juncture, he was as yet unable to fully harness the Higher Powers - or the
Christ-Force (gee, it was pure, white-light energy,
you can call it what you like ... I wonder, how did Rowling refer to it in the books?). Instead, he assumed his
Father was the one who stepped in and directed the energy. But as he later discovered - and truly spontaneously, in a moment of
courage (a strong, heroic quality of character,
imho) - he
was ready to handle the energy, since his Father was never involved, and
wasn't going to show. I admit I read the
following message into Rowling's storyline (at least, I presume), but I would go so far as to emphasize the message that -
The Lord helps the one who helps himself! So perhaps the importance of
self-reliance is also being shown! Regardless, Harry is not wildly invoking demons through his magic, accidentally or otherwise. He is
demonstraing, however, just what the healing, salvific powers of Magic
can do! And in my own, personal belief-system, that has
everything to do with Christ & Christianity!

Cheers,Andrew