The life, death, and resurrection of Harry Potter / John Killinger.
Material type:
TextPublication details: Macon, Ga. : Mercer University Press, c2009.Edition: 1st edDescription: 164 p. ; 23 cmISBN: - 9780881461626 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- 0881461628 (pbk. : alk. paper)
- PR 6068 .O93 Z7375 2009
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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Storms Research Center Main Collection | PR6068 .O93 Z7375 2009 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98639298 |
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| PR 6068 .O93 Z678 2004 Looking for God in Harry Potter / | PR 6068 .O93 Z69 2004 Harry Potter and philosophy : if Aristotle ran Hogwarts / | PR 6068 .O93 Z737 2003 God, the devil, and Harry Potter : a Christian minister's defense of the beloved novels / | PR6068 .O93 Z7375 2009 The life, death, and resurrection of Harry Potter / | PR6068 .O93 Z78 2008 The Gospel according to Harry Potter : the spiritual journey of the world's greatest seeker / | PR 6068 .O93 .Z8275 2015 Playing Harry Potter : essays and interviews on fandom and performance / | PR 6068 .O93 Z833 2009 Harry Potter & imagination : the way between two worlds / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
A world divided -- Harry and his disciples -- Voldemort and the nature of evil -- Harry Potter as sacrificial lamb -- Our Dumbledore who art in heaven -- Resurrection and the life everlasting -- Happy ever aftering.
"Examining all the Harry Potter novels, John Killinger points out the consistent way in which author J. K. Rowling follows the story of Christ in the Gospels with Harry as a Christ-figure. Rowling managed to keep this idea a secret to the end of the series, but was in fact following the Christian narrative from the beginning, which readers will recall involved Harry's being delivered amid extraordinary signs and wonders, following the death of his parents, to the home of his maternal aunt. Raised among ordinary mortals (or Muggles, as Rowling calls them), Harry doesn't discover the extent of his true powers until he attends Hogwarts School, where he is taken under the wing of headmaster Dumbledore, who is a sort of supernatural father to Harry and has an extraordinary scarlet and gold phoenix (representing the Holy Spirit) who periodically rescues Harry." "The Potter stories appealed to young people all over the world with descriptions of witches and witchcraft, which outraged Christian moralists, who claimed that Harry was a poor example because he often behaved like a real schoolboy, cutting classes, telling little lies, and sometimes acting deceptively. Little did they realize that Rowling was actually following the outline of their own sacred story, a fact made clear in the final volume, where on Christmas Eve a stone statue in Harry's home town turns into a tableau of Harry and his parents (the Holy Family)."--BOOK JACKET.
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