Harry Potter and the Mission of the Church
(I
have shamelessly stolen this approach and some of its main ideas for this piece
from Chris Crass,” Expecto Patronum: Lessons From Harry Potter for
Social Justice Organizing,” Sunday, December 15, 2013, Truthout)
J.
K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series is
far more than a work of young adult fiction. Like Lewis’ Narnia Chronicles and Tolkien’s The
Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings,
her Potter stories encode a way of
being she promotes. It’s not the Christian vision underwriting the Lewis and
Tolkien tales. But neither is it antithetical to it. Rowling’s vision seems to
reflect the kind of secularized Christianism that used to order life in the
West. I say
“used to” because of late He Who Must Not be Named and his Dementor and Death Eater minions are shaking the already rickety foundations of that secularized Christianism.
“used to” because of late He Who Must Not be Named and his Dementor and Death Eater minions are shaking the already rickety foundations of that secularized Christianism.
They
are the antagonists that threaten Rowling’s similar world in the Potter stories. And that attack is
focused on Hogwarts, the wizarding academy whose magic powers are ranged
against the unholy trinity just named. Hogwarts is among various wizarding
schools which populate the “world beyond the everyday world,” the muggle world
in the stories. Though the wizarding and muggle worlds are to be kept separate,
Voldemort’s attack and takeover of Hogwarts, however, compromised that buffer
and evil magic begin to destabilize the muggle world.
There’s a
certain similarity here between a Christian view of the world and Rowling’s.
And many observers identify the weakness of the church as a key part of what is
weakening the foundations of our world. Sam Speers at New City Commons lists
the factors in this weakening including, “the waning cultural influence of
churches and other virtue-forming institutions (and, too often, the silence or
inarticulacy of American churches in times of moral crisis).” His
colleague Emily Gunn describes the cost of such weakening:
“the only response to daily rituals of
dehumanization is to combat them with daily rituals of dignity. It will be
impossible to respond well to extreme moments of racial hatred and nationalist
delusion—and when those moments come, we must respond—if we do not immerse
ourselves in the daily task of respecting our neighbors and our enemies,
insisting on their dignity and our own.”
The
world of muggles and wizards goes through a crisis similar to our own world in
the stories. Infernal powers attack the most important site of resistance to their
designs: the wizard school at Hogwarts. This bastion of resistance to the
machinations of Voldemort for total power requires the defeat of Albus
Dumbledore, the great wizard and headmaster at Hogwarts, and his work to resist
Voldemort centered at the school. I suggest that the church is a fair analogy
for the role Hogwarts plays in Harry Potter’s world.
Opposing
the church in our world is a foe of great power with its own design on world domination.
Whether we personify this power in a devil figure or see it as an impersonal
power or force is less important than recognizing the existence of malignant
intent in the universe and its strategic plans to usurp God’s place in the
world. I like to picture this power as an unholy trinity – Mars, Mammon, and
Me. The undoing of our Hogwarts, the church, has its focal point in the primacy
of the self, the power of “stuff”, and the efficacy of violence.
I
want to explore some ways I see Rowling’s Potter
epic suggesting ways for the church to effectively resist the Voldemortian
attacks on its integrity and identity by the unholy trinity. But first a quick
look at the kind of world Voldemort wants:
-a classist society based on socially accredited
biological differences. -criminalize
those on the margins and divide classes based on ethnicity and politics.
-those at the top claim to be the defenders of the way Tradition and the
Natural Order have constructed the world. -Use
fear and hate to weaken the bonds of human connection while simultaneously
uniting those at the top.
That’s a pretty good description of
our world too, don’t you think?
**********
Part of (d)evil’s work is to get inside our heads and distract
and divert us from faithfulness to God. If we attend to these distractions and
diversions we will find ourselves far from where we want to be and far from who
we want to be. While we never fully and finally ward off these attacks, we can
make progress. When Harry is paralyzed by thoughts Voldemort used to distract
and divert him, suggesting how similar the two were, Dumbledore comes to his
aid whispering to him “Harry, it isn't how you are alike, it is how you are
not."
Harry then sees his family and tells Voldemort, "You're the weak
one, and you will never know love or friendship. And I feel sorry for
you."
Wise mentors and genuine community are two resources God has
given us in the struggle with our Voldemort. Further, our experiences of being
loved both heal and strengthen us to act from love. It is our essential
difference from who we were and how we lived that constitutes our witness. As
MLK, Jr. noted, it is the community that generates this difference: "Our
goal is to create a beloved community, and this will require a qualitative
change in our souls as well as a quantitative change in our lives."
**********
Dementors were among Voldemort’s chief minions. Greatly feared,
these creatures were armed with the power, as Professor Lupin explains, to
"drain peace, hope and happiness out of the air around them . . . every
good feeling, every happy memory will be sucked out of you. You will be left
with nothing but the worst experiences of your life." Harry and his
friends have one weapon to defeat and repel Dementors with: A Patronus Charm.
This entails summoning a protective guardian in the shape of an animal that can
rid one of their Dementors. These foul beasts guard prisons. They seek to
imprison us in our fears or prevent us from breaking out of them. Our Patronus
emerges out of our deepest, fondest memories, one rooted in love.
We can parse this process in a number of different ways
depending on our particular experiences. I find one of mine in a little used
but quite remarkable passage in 2 Peter 1. The writer there lists a number of
virtues all of us would like to mark our lives: faith,
goodness, knowledge, self-control, endurance, godliness, mutual affection, and
love. If, however, these marks of growth and maturity in Christ do not mark our
lives, this lack comes from one simple (or perhaps not so simple) factor: “For
anyone who lacks these things is short-sighted and blind, and is forgetful of
the cleansing of past sins” (v.9.) I still recall with joy and tears the day I
realized how fully, completely, and unconditionally God has forgiven me in
Christ.
**********
Community is essential. There’s no way to be Christian alone. We
need each other as we have already seen. And we also need an institutional
embodiment of this community. It doesn’t have to be elaborate or highly formal.
But it does need to be organic. Hogwarts, and the Order of the Phoenix illustrate
this in Potter’s wizarding world.
Every movement has a life and that life needs to take on a form
and shape to sustain itself. We can’t start with the form unless it is highly
elastic. Organic institutions or forms have five characteristics. They are
-nourished by and are the primary
place where new and existing participants experience the counter-narratives which
constitute their call, identity, and vocation in their world. In Walter
Brueggemann’s words, they share and savor dangerous memories.
-partakers of the mystery of life
that sustains them. Baptism and eucharist are the forms of partaking that
sustain the church. A dangerous presence lives at their heart.
-even as their boundaries form and
shepherd the life they share the life within pushes them to transgress those
boundaries perpetually incorporating a wider cross section of people than they
have before. This ongoing rhythm of establishing/transgressing boundaries is
ingredient to the life of God’s people. This constant integration and
reinterpretation of the boundaries builds the beloved community which serves as
a prototype of God’s design for human life. The church, then, is a dangerous
demographic that breaks boundaries and taboos and remains endlessly open to new
life and the gifts of others (Michel De Certeau).
-dangerously different not pliantly
domesticated to the word around them. The community is immersed in the daily
life of their context and in the crucible of that life learn the ways to help
and serve others, to become a “church for others” following Jesus who is the
“man for others.”
-Finally, they remember their saints
and martyrs. “At the end of the Goblet of Fire, Dumbledore challenges everyone
at Hogwarts to ‘Remember Cedric. Remember, if the time should come when you
have to make a choice between what is right and what is easy, remember what
happened to a boy who was good, and kind, and brave, because he strayed across
the path of Lord Voldemort. Remember Cedric Diggory.’"
We are struggling in our culture at present with the meaning of
monuments and remembering the past. The capacity of the people of God to
remember truly and well the people worthy of it and the lives is a gift we must
carefully cultivate in our congregations and share in appropriate ways with our
world.
**********
The life and mission of this community is based on gifts. The
apostle Paul lists the fivefold gifting of leadership God gives his people in
Ephesians 4: apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers. These
folks curate the life that grounds and nurtures the people to discover and
express their gifts in serving Christ.
In Harry’s world it is Hermione Granger who demonstrates the
importance of giftedness. For she is the “pastor” par excellence in the
stories.
Harry, and to a lesser degree Ron, exhibit apostolic and
prophetic gifts and it is Hermione who turns that energy into building a
movement rooted more broadly in the hopes and dreams of the Dumbledore
supporters at Hogwarts. She understands that the struggle cannot be simply
Harry against He Who Must Not be Named. That’s how he sees it most of the time.
But Hermione is often able to integrate his passions and exertions into a
larger movement for freedom and justice. Without her Harry would never become
who he needed to be to truly defeat Voldemort.
She demonstrates the power of leading with others, rather than
over them. “Hers is a leadership based in respect earned through years of
building positive relationships, providing support and encouragement and
consistently acting in a principled way” (Chris Crass).
As a muggle-born, an outsider, Hermione leverages that
experience when she defies intimidation by the house of Slytherin. Further, she
uses the knowledge gained as an outsider to motivate and bring others together
in a united front Hermione shows the best strategic thinking in the group and
routinely sees connection and draws accurate conclusions about what is going on
and needs to be done.-Hermione routinely manifested the best big-picture
thinking of what's going on, knows who can be counted on, and knows how to
bring people together
Hermione’s “feminist” leadership is a refreshing portrayal of the riches
of leadership with others. Rowling has crafted a powerful and integrated
picture of a richer kind of pastoral leadership that exceeds what we tend to
see as “male” or “female” and can thus service as inspiration for all those of
us who aspire t
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