By J.P. Freire on 7.14.05 @ 12:06AM
Lead us not into temptation has meaning to Benedict XVI.
News was abuzz, as news ought to be, about how Pope Benedict,
a.k.a. Cardinal Ratzinger, speciously abetted derisory comments
toward one Potter, comma, Harry as a threat to Christianity as we
know it. I can just imagine the headlines: Is the blacklist back?
Are those Catholics ex-communicating authors? Is the Christian
Right going to protest the Potter films? When does the book-burning
begin? You would think children would soon have scarlet P's etched
into their chests.
There's a benefit to mystifying liberals with, well, mysticism.
They become silly, not afraid, when faced with what they do not
understand, and adherence to dogma and Christian doctrine is a
decent enough catalyst. What the liberal has typically offered in
light of Vatican denouncements has been that the holy men
themselves have gone silly and cannot stand the sight of that which
they do not understand. The reporting of the affair belies
astonishment. The Church! Taking a stand?! Round
and round they go, and Benedict is bereft of the prospect of
writing book reviews for the New Yorker.
Yet the Pope wasn't speaking ex-cathedra, nor nasally
threatening to add J.K. Rowling to his "list." Simply put,
Benedict's response was even predictable. I just interviewed the
Pope, at least in my head, and the pinnacle of my questioning
resulted in this: Mr. Most-Notable-Christian-Leader, what do you
think of a children's book that forgoes conventional morality,
God's grace, and divine intervention, in favor of witchcraft and
magic, often with relativist undertones? And should I have bothered
with the question?
In March 2003, when Benedict wasn't the "Pope who was a Hitler
youth," but rather the "Dogmatic Enforcer," the then-Cardinal noted
to an author critical of the young magician:
It is good, that you enlighten people about Harry
Potter, because those are subtle seductions, which act unnoticed
and by this deeply distort Christianity in the soul, before it can
grow properly.
If only he had explained "subtle seduction." A holdover we have
from John Stuart Mill and Darwin is the naive thought that the
stronger idea will survive, and if immorality appears in the
Goblet of Fire or elsewhere, nascent Christian souls will
be nowhere harmed from exposure -- they will only become stronger.
An odd argument when criminal acts are attributed to the influence
of the neighborhood, and not the individual. If we are to accept
that criminals often come from weak families, we accept that
negative influences take their toll. Harry Potter may not exactly
lead young Jimmy into a lake of fire, but it is not a reach to say
that it could without guidance detract from the Church's message --
just as a child watching
Desperate Housewives might get
the wrong idea about what marriage is really like.
In Paradise Lost, Milton's Satan is a seductive
character contrasting the bland Son of God, but the comparison
isn't lost on the author nor the informed reader. Satan, as all
evil, is supposed to be seductive. One must resist temptation to
sin -- that is, when occasion faces him with it. It's commendable
when people stare down evil and resist, but preferable not to have
them do it -- after all, human will is often frail. Sir Thomas More
says to an overly ambitious Richard Rich in the film A Man for
All Seasons, "Man should not go where he will be tempted."
Richard Rich went, got tempted, perjured himself, and got More
beheaded. So much for Mr. Mill. And so much for liberals who would
sooner say that on the whole, exposure was better for Rich. Tell
that to More's daughter.
Yes, the Potter books have the kids reading in their spare time,
which is enough for some to settle for. Ironically, this argument
was ridiculed by its own progenitors once a deal had been struck
for movie rights based on the books. And they follow a long,
wonderful tradition of fables the kids can enjoy. But if the Potter
books are on loan to help forge a Christian child's soul, without
its being informed by the moral lessons of Christ, then how would
they not be seductive? Put another way, what would encourage a
child to accept God when the tales he hears involve other children
overcoming problems by using powers they themselves hold?
That is the Pope's business, to worry about what might intervene
in a child's relationship with the Church and God. I would rather
he do it than Joycelyn Elders, Janet Reno, or Sandra Day O'Connor.
Even if you dissented (which is allowed, regardless of what the
New York Times tells you), he brings up a point so few are
willing to heed: you are influenced by what you choose to
experience, so choose carefully -- which does not directly
translate to being "close-minded." It simply means, do not go where
you may be tempted. Strength does not necessarily follow
temptation.
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