Last week I pointed out that LifeSiteNews.Com has been waging an anti-Harry Potter campaign based on a thank you note written several years ago by Cardinal Ratzinger or an assistant of his. LifeSite presented the story under the headline "Pope Benedict Opposes Harry Potter Novels"–which was problematic for REASONS THAT I EXPLAINED (ALSO HERE).
In one of the posts, I wrote:
Some of the people seeing the LifeSite-inspired headlines on this
subject will be non-Catholic fans of Harry Potter, and in their
estimation the Catholic Church will have the Church’s credibility
lowered one more notch.Thanks, LifeSite.
"It is written, ‘The name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you’" (Romans 2:24).
Now, some might be dubious of this, but it’s no joke. On this matter, let me point to what the Pontificator has written:
I know this news is going to make life a lot harder for the papists in
the Pontificator household. The lone Episcopalian holdout in our home
is the Pontificator’s Greatest Progeny (PGP). She also just happens to
be one of the world’s great experts on Harry Potter. No doubt
Ratzinger’s recently published two-year old, non-authoritative,
private, and perhaps uncritical comments will be noted in her diary as
one more reason why she should not convert to Rome. Friends, I think a novena and all that other good Catholic prayer stuff may be in order
here [SOURCE].
Amen.
And I hope LifeSite meditates on the scandal that will be caused by their opportunistic manufacture of this "story"–just "coincidentally" timed with the release of the latest Harry Potter novel.
Now, before I forget, let me issue THE BIG RED DISCLAIMER: I am not
a fan of the Harry Potter novels. In order to be able to comment
apologetically on the Harry Potter phenomenon, I read the first novel
and watched the first two movies. I was not at all impressed with them
as literature, and I recognize that they can have a harmful spiritual
effect on some readers, especially among the young. I also recognize
that they are not an apologia for paganism and that a reader who is
secure in his faith will not be magically turned into a neo-pagan by
reading them.

