JK Rowling reveals Christian basis for 'Harry Potter' Tuesday, 7th August 2007. 4:52pm
By: George Conger.
CHRISTIAN motifs play a central role in the Harry Potter stories,
author JK Rowling told an American television audience on July 29.
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Participating
in a question-and-answer session on the NBC news magazine show
Dateline, Rowling was asked by a child in the studio audience what the
significance of her calling Harry Potter the “chosen one” might be.
“Well, there -- there clearly is a religious — undertone,” to the stories, Rowling said.
She added that it had “always been difficult to talk about that because
until we reached Book Seven, views of what happens after death and so
on” an explicit discussion of the books’ Christian motifs “would give
away a lot of what was coming.”
Rowling stated “my belief and my struggling with religious belief, and so on, I think is quite apparent in this book.”
Asked by the television presenter what her struggle was, Rowling responded “Well my struggle really is to keep believing.”
Rowling has been asked many times about her faith and the religious
themes in her work, but has been reticent in her response. She said
that she is a Christian.
“Every time I've been asked if I believe in God, I've said yes, because
I do, but no one ever really has gone any more deeply into it than
that, and I have to say that does suit me, because if I talk too freely
about that I think the intelligent reader, whether 10 or 60, will be
able to guess what's coming in the books,” she told the Vancouver Sun
on Oct 26, 2000.
However, in the final book of the seven-part saga, Rowling introduces
the first explicit reference to Christian faith. In the Deathly
Hallows, Harry Potter visits the grave of his parents on Christmas Eve
in a church graveyard and reads the inscription on the headstone: "The
last enemy that shall be destroyed is death."
Rowling does not identify the passage for her readers: 1 Cor 15:26,
where Paul discusses the significance of the resurrection of Jesus.
Taken as a whole, the Harry Potter saga revolves round the distinctly
Christian theme of substitutionary sacrifice of one's life, offered out
of love.
In the first book of the series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's
Stone, the infant Harry survives death because his mother, Lily,
sacrifices her life for his -- developing the theme of the transcendent
power of life freely given in sacrifice.
The final book concludes with Harry choosing death, so that others
might have life and includes a last battle resulting in death and
resurrection, spiritual power carried by blood, and the losing of one’s
life in order to gain life.
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