But everyone was waiting for the magic moment: midnight. Potter 
                  publisher Scholastic Press had forced booksellers to sign affidavits 
                  agreeing not to sell the book until Saturday, July 8; hence, 
                  the Friday night parties. At the stroke of twelve, store employees 
                  raced to the storeroom, wheeled out boxes of books, and ripped 
                  them open. As the first hefty, green and gold copies of J. K. 
                  Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire appeared, 
                  the children gasped with delight—and their sleepy parents 
                  reached for their plastic. 
                Including me. My own two Potterheads—14-year-old T. J. 
                  and 12-year-old Travis—insisted on buying individual copies 
                  of Goblet so neither had to wait for the other to finish 
                  it. As we drove home that night, they asked me to flip on our 
                  minivan’s dome light so they could start reading immediately. 
                  They’d been given special permission to read all night, 
                  if they wished. 
                They almost made it. Peeking in on T. J. at 4 a.m., I found 
                  he’d finally drifted off to sleep—The Goblet 
                  of Fire open on his chest. 
                Clearly, with a record-breaking 4.8 million first editions 
                  of the latest Potter tome printed in America and England, kids 
                  are wild about Harry. But some Christian parents wonder if he’s 
                  a suitable role model for their kids. 
                The four Potter books (of a total of seven in the works) trace 
                  the adventures of an 11-year-old orphan boy who discovers that 
                  he’s a wizard, endowed with magical powers. He begins 
                  attending the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, where 
                  he takes classes in magic and learns how to play Quidditch, 
                  an aerial game involving balls and broomsticks. 
                The books are great fun—but should Christian parents 
                  worry about their use of magic? After all, the Bible strongly 
                  condemns involvement with witchcraft.
                It may relieve parents to know that the magic in these books 
                  is purely mechanical, as opposed to occultic. Harry and his 
                  classmate are born with the ability to perform magic—much 
                  as real life kids are born with musical or mathematical ability. 
                  Students at Hogwarts learn to cast spells, read crystal balls, 
                  and transform hedgehogs into pincushions—but they don’t 
                  attempt to contact the supernatural world. 
                But isn’t it wrong to expose kids to any kind 
                  of magic and witchcraft? 
                Wheaton College professor Alan Jacobs has a wonderful response 
                  to this concern. In the journal First Things, Jacobs 
                  notes that it’s only recently that magic and science were 
                  viewed as occupying different realms.
                "For much of their existence," Jacobs writes, "both 
                  magic and experimental science were viewed as a means of controlling 
                  and directing our natural environment." It took several centuries 
                  of dedicated scientific experiment "before it was clear to anyone 
                  that the ‘scientific’ physician could do more to 
                  cure illness than the old woman of the village with her herbs 
                  and potions and muttered charms." Magic was gradually viewed 
                  as a false discipline. 
                This history helps us understand the role of magic in the Potter 
                  books. The author "begins by positing a history in which magic 
                  is not a false discipline," Jacobs writes. Instead, magic, 
                  like science, is "a means of controlling the physical world." 
                  In this world, Jacobs writes, "magic works as reliably, in the 
                  hands of a trained wizard, as the technology that makes airplanes 
                  fly and refrigerators chill the air."
                No less a Christian than C. S. Lewis makes the distinction 
                  between mechanical and supernatural magic in his Narnia series 
                  for children. In The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, Father 
                  Christmas gives magical gifts to the Pevensie children. To Susan, 
                  he gives a horn, guaranteed to summon help during times of great 
                  need. To Lucy, he gives a vial containing an elixir that will 
                  heal even the deadliest injury. The magic of horn and elixir 
                  works without the need for the children to call upon supernatural 
                  beings. They are perfect examples of mechanical magic.
                Like J. K. Rowling, Lewis has created a world in which magic 
                  works, and in these fictional worlds it is not magic per 
                  se that is morally troublesome.
                In Prince Caspian, by contrast, Lewis describes a less 
                  innocent form of magical power. A dwarf named Nikabrik 
                  desires to bring back the long-dead White Witch to help the 
                  Narnians defeat their human enemies. When Prince Caspian realizes 
                  what he is proposing, he’s outraged. "So that is your 
                  plan, Nikabrik! Black sorcery and the calling up of an accursed 
                  spirit. And I see who your companions are—a Hag and a 
                  Wer-Wolf!" The prince and his animal allies instantly kill the 
                  three (Just, one might add, as the Old Testament commands). 
                
                In a sense, whether or not mechanical magic "works" in the 
                  Potter books is beside the point. At Harry’s Hogwarts 
                  School, one educational goal overrides all others: To help students 
                  develop the character and the moral discernment to use a particular 
                  technology—in this case, magic—for the common good. 
                
                In that sense, the Potter books teach children a great lesson: 
                  They, too, must develop moral discernment about real-life technologies—such 
                  as the Internet—along with the character to exploit them 
                  in ways pleasing to God. 
                If the Potter books can teach kids to harness technology for 
                  good instead of evil, then I say more power—scientifically 
                  speaking, of course—to Harry Potter and his wizard friends. 
                
                
               
               A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.