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A Charmed Life: The Spirituality of Potterworld

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Item Description...

Overview
A minister looks at the novels of J.K. Rowling to explore the positive message of Harry Potter and his magical world, explaining how the books offer insights into human character, relationships, priorities, values, and spirituality.

Publishers Description
In this enlightening look at J.K. Rowling's phenomenal bestsellers, a Christian minister illuminates the powerful, positive message Harry Potter and his magical world bring to readers of all ages.

Potter fever has swept the world and shows no signs of abating. the books and the recent movie have attracted millions of followers and fans, all of them eagerly awaiting the next installments. Along with the widespread enjoyment and appreciation of Harry Potter and his friendships, however, criticism of the series has also emerged. The opposition has focused on two issues; the darkness of the novels and their apparent endorsement of witchcraft and the occult. In A Charmed Life, Francis Bridger, a theologian and pastor, argues that far from promoting the dark arts, the Potter books are firmly based in Christian values, and offer valuable insights into our characters, our relationships, our priorities, and our spirituality.

Taking readers on an entertaining tour of Potterworld, Bridger shows that each adventure presents new ways of expressing and exploring key spiritual issues, from the meaning of justice, to the need to confront fears, to the debilitating effects of evil. As Harry and his friends deal with one another, face their enemies, cope with their variously dysfunctional families, and experience the common problems o fgrowing up, Bridger domonstrates, it is their intrinsic human goodness, love, and friendship--not wizardry or magic--that allows them to triumph over evil.
FRANCIS BRIDGER is Principal of Trinity College, Bristol, England, and Visiting Professor of Pasoral Care at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California. His previous books include Counselling in Context, and the award-winning Children Finding Faith.
1

Plans Are Made

"IRENE AND I are finally getting to go to Bryson City," Mandie informed Joe as they walked to school one April morning. "Miss Abigail sent our mother a note last night asking us to go with her next weekend." Mandie smiled at Joe as she walked quickly to keep up with him.

"My mother also received a note from her," Joe replied with a big grin.

"Are you going?" Mandie asked.

"I'm not sure if I want to go," Joe said.

"Not sure?" Mandie asked. "Why aren't you sure you want to go?" She couldn't believe anyone would turn down an invitation to go to Bryson City. The courthouse was there, along with shops full of interesting things she had always heard about but never seen. The community where they lived, Charley Gap, only had one general store.

Joe looked down at her and said, "I've been there before with my father while he was making calls, and I didn't think it was a very interesting place."

"Joe Woodard!" Mandie exclaimed, stopping in the road to stomp her foot. "How can you say that? I've always heard there are lots of interesting places in Bryson City."

"There are a lot of stuffy old city people over there," Joe answered. He paused to look down at her.

"But we will be staying with some friends of Miss Abigail," Mandie replied.

"Yes, and those friends are stuffy old city people," Joe told her. "Come on, Mandie. We're going to be late for school." He started to walk on.

Mandie quickly followed. "How do you know they're stuffy?" she demanded.

"My mother knew the name of the people in the note who Miss Abigail said we would be staying with. Mother also said they were very well-off people who live in a great mansion. I just wouldn't be comfortable," Joe explained. "Besides, what would we do there?"

Mandie grinned and said, "Maybe we'll run into a mystery!"

"Oh, Mandie, you and your mysteries!" Joe exclaimed.

"All right then, if you don't go and I find a mystery, I won't even tell you about it when I get back," Mandie said.

Joe ignored that remark and asked, "Is Irene going?"

Mandie frowned and said, "Of course she's going. She's been wanting to go there for a long time too."

"Then Irene can help you solve any old mystery you run into over there," Joe replied with a big grin.

"You know as well as I do that Irene is not interested in solving mysteries. She just doesn't have the patience," Mandie said. She looked ahead and saw Faith at the crossroads. "Come on, Faith's waiting for us."

After they caught up with Faith, Mandie asked, "Did you know Miss Abigail invited Irene and me to go with y'all to Bryson City next weekend?" And glancing at Joe, she added, "She asked Joe, too, but he's not interested."

"Yes, she told me she was inviting all of you," Faith replied as they continued walking toward the schoolhouse. She looked at Joe and asked, "Why don't you want to go with us?"

Joe cleared his throat and replied, "I told Mandie I'm not sure if I'm going."

Faith and her grandmother, Mrs. Chapman, were temporarily staying with Miss Abigail while the local men repaired the old, ramshackle house, which Mrs. Chapman had inherited from a distant cousin.

"Faith, I know you are from a city in Missouri and are probably used to being around shops, but you are still interested in going, aren't you?" Mandie asked.

"Of course," Faith replied. "I've never been to Bryson City. I like to visit places I've never seen."

"Do you know anything about Miss Abigail's friends we'll be staying with?" Mandie asked.

"Nothing, except their name is Pettigru, they are about Miss Abigail's age, and they don't have any children," Faith replied.

As they came to the lane leading to the schoolhouse, Joe suddenly rushed forward, saying, "I don't see anyone outside. I hope we're not late."

The girls quickly followed. When Joe opened the front door, they saw no one there except the schoolmaster, Mr. Tallant, who was busy at his desk.

"Good morning," Mandie said as she took her books from Joe and went to her desk.

Mr. Tallant looked up from his paperwork and smiled. "Good morning," he said. "Y'all are here bright and early."

"Early?" Joe muttered under his breath as he went to his seat.

Faith looked at Mandie and Joe and said, "I came out on the road early so I'd be sure to catch y'all, so we really are early."

At that moment the door opened and Mandie looked back to see Esther rush into the schoolroom.

"Oh, it's so nice of Miss Abigail to invite all of us to go to Bryson City with her, isn't it?" Esther said to Faith while glancing at Mandie and Joe.

Mandie silently thought, Oh, goodness! Esther is going too? Oh, no! She looked at Joe and he grinned at her. He had probably immediately made the decision that he was definitely not going now. Everyone knew Esther was hard to get along with because she always wanted everything her way.

"Yes," Faith said to Esther. "Did your mother give you permission to go?"

"Of course," Esther replied. "And she has heard of Miss Abigail's friends over there. They are supposed to be very wealthy."

That comment caused Mandie to think again. She was not comfortable around wealthy people, but Esther's parents were well-off and Esther was used to associating with that class of people. That was one reason Esther was so bossy with the other pupils in Mr. Tallant's school.

The door opened and closed again, and Mandie glanced back to see her sister, Irene, enter the room with Tommy Lester. Irene said to Faith, "Those friends of Miss Abigail's must have an awfully big house. She invited Tommy to go too."

Faith replied, "Yes, she said they have a three-story house." Then, looking at Tommy, she added, "I'm glad you can go, Tommy."

Tommy, always shy with everyone but Irene, smiled at her and said, "My mother has already sent Miss Abigail our thanks for asking me."

Mandie was curious about who else had been invited. No one mentioned the trip to Bryson City again, and as soon as Mandie, Joe, and Faith sat down outside at recess to eat lunch, Mandie tried to find out.

"Were others invited too?" Mandie asked Faith as she took a biscuit with ham from her lunch pail.

"Not that I know of," Faith replied, digging into her own lunch. "Just you, Joe, Esther, Irene, Tommy, and my grandmother, only my grandmother said she wasn't interested in going."

"How are we going to get there?" Mandie asked.

"Oh, Mr. Tallant is going. He will drive Miss Abigail's wagon for her," Faith explained. "I'm sure we'll all fit into one wagon."

Turning to Joe, Mandie asked, "Does your father know these people? Has he ever doctored them?"

Joe shook his head. "No, he's heard their name but he said they haven't been in Bryson City very long, about two years, and they haven't needed a doctor. Their house is on a hill, hidden behind a grove of trees so you can't see it very well from the road."

Mandie smiled. "That sounds like a place that could have mysteries attached to it."

"If there's one there, I'm sure you'll find it," Faith said.

"Since Mr. Tallant is going and Miss Abigail is planning to leave on Friday morning, I suppose school will be closed on Friday," Joe said.

"Yes, since the whole school can't go to Bryson City, I heard Miss Abigail say that Mr. Tallant would close the school Friday," Faith explained.

"And if you don't go with us, what will you do on Friday?" Mandie asked Joe.

"Oh, I can think of lots of things to do," Joe answered, closing his pail.

"Like what?" Mandie asked.

Joe stood up. "I could help your father work on the fence he's putting around his property, or I could go hunting, or--" He paused as the bell rang to end lunchtime.

Mandie rose and shook her head. "My parents are going to visit friends in Franklin on Friday since Irene and I won't be home," she told him.

"I can always find something to do," Joe said, walking toward the door.

"You might as well come with us, Joe, or you'll probably be left with nothing to do," Faith told him.

"I just said I could always find something to do," Joe said sharply, rushing into the schoolroom and to his desk.

As Mandie walked down the aisle to her desk, she whispered to Faith, "I wonder why he is so set against going to Bryson City with us?"

"Maybe he'll change his mind," Faith whispered back as she too went to her seat.

Mandie thought about Joe during class that afternoon. She decided there must be some reason he was not interested in going to Bryson City with the rest of them. But what could it be? He was always ready to go anywhere when the opportunity arose, so why not this time?

At the end of the day, Mr. Tallant tapped a ruler on his desk. "Attention, please," he said. "School will be closed this coming Friday for a holiday, and I will not give you any homework for the weekend, so plan to enjoy the time off."

A rousing "Thank you!" burst from the pupils as everyone stood to leave for the day.

Rushing out the door, Mandie looked up to see a dark sky. Thunder rumbled in the distance. She paused on the porch with Joe and Faith.

"Oh, it's going to storm and we're going to get wet," Mandie lamented.

"Maybe we can outrun it," Joe said, pushing through the crowd. "Come on, let's run!"

He ran out into the lane and on to the road with the girls quickly following. They didn't stop running until Faith turned off at the crossroads and headed home.

Then, hurrying down the road, Mandie told Joe between gasps for air, "Go on home. You don't have to go all the way with me. You may get wet."

"No, I'll carry your books home for you," he replied, rushing on.

They made it to the road by Mandie's house, and then the bottom seemed to fall out of the sky.

"Come on, let's get inside!" Mandie yelled as she continued toward her house.

Joe followed, and together they stomped their wet feet on the back porch before going into the kitchen.

Mandie was surprised to see Irene already sitting by the stove. "I didn't see you go ahead of us," Mandie said as she shook her skirts and went to stand by the warmth of the iron cookstove to dry.

Joe joined Mandie and added, "You were behind us when we left school."

"Yes, but I ran all the way and y'all didn't," Irene said with a big grin. "I made it to the door before the downpour started."

Mandie looked around the kitchen and asked, "Where's Mama?" Her cat, Windy, jumped out of the woodbox to rub around her ankles.

"I don't know. She's not here," Irene replied.

"I didn't see Daddy outside either," Mandie said. "But he may be in the barn."

"No, I noticed the wagon was gone, so Mama and Daddy must be gone somewhere together," Irene said.

Mandie looked into the pots at the back of the stove. "Well, looks like she has already cooked supper," she said, replacing the lids. "Black-eyed peas with ham."

"And corn bread in the warmer," Irene added.

"They probably went out somewhere and got caught in the rain," Joe remarked as he looked around the room. "Soon as it stops, I need to get on home."

The rain kept coming down harder and harder on the tin roof. Joe walked around the kitchen, pausing to look out the window now and then.

"Let's sit down and have a cup of coffee. The percolator is full," Mandie said, lifting the coffeepot from the stove to shake it.

"Yes, and I'll get the cups," Irene volunteered as she rose and went to the cabinet.

By the time the three had poured coffee and sat at the table, the rain was still going strong.

"I need to get home," Joe repeated, looking out the window across the room.

"But your mother knows it's raining. She'll know you've stopped somewhere to get out of it," Mandie told him.

"Why are you in such a hurry to get home?" Irene asked.

Joe looked at her and frowned as he said, "Because I always get home from school on time unless I've told my mother that I'll be late."

"Do you really think your mother would expect you to go out in this downpour just to get home on time?" Irene asked.

Joe frowned and sipped his coffee without answering.

The rain continued as the thunder came nearer, and the three sat there at the kitchen table, watching through the window.

"When my parents are able to get here, my father will take you home, I'm sure," Mandie reassured Joe.

"I wouldn't want to ask him to go back out in this storm just to take me home," Joe said, and with a loud sigh, he added, "I'll just have to wait till it stops."

Trying to take everyone's mind off the storm, Mandie asked Joe, "You still don't want to go to Bryson City with us?"

Joe looked at her. "At this minute I'd say no, I'm not going."

"You mean you could still change your mind?" Mandie asked.

A sudden clap of thunder rattled the house and the three looked at each other in fear. The storm was getting worse. Then a sharp spike of lightning flashed outside the kitchen window.

Mandie wished her parents were home. Where could they be? Why had they gone out after her mother had cooked supper? Had there been some kind of emergency?

Mandie looked at her sister and then at Joe. They both looked worried too.

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Item Specifications...

Pages   176
Dimensions:   Length: 0.75" Width: 5.5" Height: 8"
Weight:   0.35 lbs.
Binding  Softcover
Release Date   Sep 17, 2002
Publisher   Image
ISBN  0385506651  
EAN  9780385506656  


Availability  100 units.
Availability accurate as of May 25, 2012 05:48.
Usually ships within one to two business days from La Vergne, TN.
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About this Author/Artist
<b>FRANCIS BRIDGER</b> is Principal of Trinity College, Bristol, England, and Visiting Professor of Pasoral Care at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California. His previous books include <i>Counselling in Context</i>, and the award-winning<i> Children Finding Faith.</i>


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Reviews - What do our customers think?
Thoughtful and honest  Mar 1, 2007
First of all, let me say that I was, no pun intended, thoroughly charmed by Mr. Bridger himself. From the whimsical image of him proudly reading the books with the brightly colored covers (as opposed to the more sober "grown-up" covers) to his quite reasonable desire to read the books himself before having a knee-jerk reaction to them, from his playful use of language to his sense of taking things seriously enough to know that you shouldn't take some things too seriously, he reminded me strongly of another likeable, wise-grandfatherly figure.

The book itself is a gem. At one point, Bridger tracks the moral development of the main characters through the ethics of childhood (when "good" and "bad" is primarily determined by obedience to authority figures) and into the morality of adults (which demands independent thought, decision-making, and a certain amount of self-responsibility.) It's an interesting idea in itself, but made even more so when linked to theological theories dating back to St. Paul. ("When I was a child," anyone?) In doing so, he gently chides those who disparage the books for "rewarding disobedience", explaining that for adults, disobeying an unethical rule is sometimes the correct moral decision.

In addressing the main objections raised by concerned parents and certain parts of the Christian community, Bridger is respectful of their fears but firm in his explanation of why he does not feel they are warranted. At the same time, he doesn't praise the books uncritically - there are shortcomings, but it is his view that there's more mileage to be gotten from discussing them, and what they say about the society they reflect, than from condemning them and ignoring all the good in the books.

Overall, the book is very insightful. His discussion of "magic," what the word means and has meant in the books and throughout history, was fascinating. He deals deftly with many of the moral ambiguities raised in the books, and points out deeper meanings than I had thought to look for before. As philosophy, as theology, and as literary commentary, the book is brilliant.

A note: the book only deals with the first four Potter books. I doubt if the author is planning to write a second commentary on the last three after the seventh book comes out this summer, but I'd be excited to read it if he were!
 
Understanding Potter as literature makes a difference  Apr 14, 2003
Because simple words on paper have in the past led to just about every major manmade disaster since words were put on paper, as people actually respond to the inherent philosophy or message that is part of every text, intended or not, it is always worthwhile to spend some time analyzing those works which have become popular.

This book by Francis Bridger is one of the best of the bunch of books seeking to look more deeply at the world of Harry Potter. Instead of arguing the specifics of the magic or apparent 'occult' Bridger takes a different path showing how Rowling skillfully weaves a tale in the fine tradition of British literature, using themes, images, allusions, etc. throughout her books which can be found in a great deal of writings written by those who call the British Isles home.

We in America, however, love practicality, have a hard time getting literary methods, and get confused, or angry, when our sensibilities are apparently attacked by terminology. Rowling, rather than endorsing any sort of scandalous occultism, is instead writing a tale of great heroism, discovery, and even spirituality which uses 'magical' themes to point to deeper truths, truths which are inherent in a Christian understanding of the world. Before we Christians attack the use of the word magic in these great texts, we must first attend to these texts as literature, and must learn how to understand how to read all of Potter's tales, present and future, in the context of a great tradition of fantasy writings.

Yes, these books are rousing tales but any book which creates the kind of sensation as these must also be speaking deeply to our present society. Bridger explains these deeper truths and messages in their appropriate context, and makes re-reading Potter that much more enjoyable and worthwhile. Plus, he is a very engaging author himself, whose nonfiction prose is almost as engaging as Rowling's.

This is a very fair, erudite, interesting study of what is arguably the most influential literature of this generation. Being spiritual does not mean we can turn off our minds, blindly accepting what various gurus tell us to believe. Nor is christophobia a reason to deny the importance of studying great literature, at all the levels which makes great literature great.

If you are interested at all in the Potter phenomenon this is the one book, besides Rowling's, you should get. No, this book may not interest everyone, and those who rate this present book low without reading it themselves are guilty of the same ignorant prattle which afflicts many of those in the Christian world. We all can and should think, and should discuss intelligently cultural issues before us. Bridger aids immensely and succinctly in this particular discussion.

 
Taking the road less taken  Apr 11, 2003
Up till 'Charmed', books about HP have been (1) diatribes against the books due to the dark magic therein, (2) defenses against type 1, and (3) analyses of HP as literature. In types 1 and 2, the various authors usually tell the reader what his or her conclusion should be.

This book takes a different approach, one of positive analysis with thoughtful conclusions -- but not forcing those conclusions down the reader's throat. It is extremely well written -- and is as readable and enjoyable as the HP books themselves.

'A Charmed Life' is divided into 5 long chapters, plus a shorter 6th with conclusions, and the long chapters are helpfully broken by mid-chapter headings. These chapters give an indepth look at some of Rowling's favorite issues, such as:
(1) actions have consequences,
(2) beware of the deceitfulness of appearances [a major lesson in LOTR],
(3) the target audience [first, JKR herself; second, those that like an exciting mystery], and I might add parenthetically, when Jo Rowling is interviewed, she constantly insists that her books are written for older teens and adults.
(4) the world view -- what you see is not all there is, [helpful to the Christian]
(5) the complicatedness of the moral world -- when things aren't exactly black and white,
and (6) periodic comparisons with 'The Chronicles of Narnia', LOTR, and Lewis Carroll's works.

Bridger looks at the issues of faith, fact, and truth, as portrayed by Jo Rowling, and finds much that is compatable to the way Christians are to think and believe.

'Charmed' is a helpful book to those who want to think carefully about these things.
To those who like their conclusions given to them, it is not so helpful.

 
Insightful  Jan 3, 2003
This book is extremely well written. It's insights can appeal to non-Christaians as well as Christians - particualrly the chapters on morality and metaphysics. He sites CS Lewis, Martin Luther King, Jr., Interviews with JK Rowling, the Odyssey, the Bible, etc. and has a way of capturing complicated philosophical ideas in just a few words.

This book is more of a moral philosophy book on Harry Potter than a Christian philosophy book. For those looking for proof that Harry Potter is as Christian as the Narnia books, this book may not suffice 100% and the author does not pretend that it should. Bridger rather opens the reader's minds to ideas surrounding the books and their place within a Christian/moral/spiritual understanding of reality.

If you don't want to dig deeper into the meaning behind Rowling's masterpieces, this is clearly not the book for you. Harry Potter can be enjoyed on many different levels. For some people, digging deeper "ruins" the excitement and the effect of Rowling's creativity. For me and many others, digging deeper adds an even more magical (and truthful) dimension to Harry Potter.

Bridger assumes that the reader has read all four books and freely discusses the endings and surprises. Don't read this until you've read the first four Potter books.

 
How utterly Muggle!  Nov 23, 2002
Not to mention tiresome. Who the heck cares if there is a "positively Christian" way to read these wonderful books or not? They are entertainment, not theology or even serious spirituality. And just what would "positively Christian" mean anyway with 500+ official sects and many varieties of interpretation within even them. Why must Christians, or Moslems or whatever group of people need to make such a work of entertainment their own or pass their blessings upon it?...

The notion that magic is vestigial in these works is simply ridiculous. Of course if there is any magic then vestigial aspects of Dark Ages Christianity will strive to determine whether it is "of the Devil" or compatible with some generalized notion of Christian doctrine. YAWN.

 

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