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Unlurking here. This is my favorite topic! Squee!!! So much fun! Okay, well, I might be the only one here but I love Harry Potter. I'm not going to defend Rowling here, because that's not what it's for, but I am going to pull a bit from her, as well as from Lewis, and, of course, Tolkien. I am perfectly fine with magic in literature, because, at least for me, when I read about not practicing magic, I read it as demonic magic. In the Bible we never read about anyone practicing magic for good, because in the Bible all that practice magic get what power they have from the devil. But, in a different world, unless you're writing perfectly strict to every law in the Bible, I think it's ok. I, at least, tend to pull from the "tone" of the Bible, as I believe Lewis and Tolkien did. There is a lot in their work that doesn't follow the Bible directly, such as the river gods in Narnia, and I'm okay with that. You are writing your own world, and you are really writing your own God. As much as people like to say Aslan, Iluvatar, and Yahweh are exactly the same and basically interchangable, they're not. They all have elements of eachother, but neither Tolkien or Lewis wrote allegory, they simply wrote and many of their views slipped into their writing, which is what I, at least, like to do with whatever I write. As much as we all hope to write a God as close to the True God as possible, it's impossible. We do not know the entire God, so how can we translate Him into a different world? But what I think matters is, again, the tone and above all the worldview. The God in your world doesn't have to be exactly the God in our world, but he does need to regain the basics, love, forgiveness, omnipotency. I know alot of people just stay away from magic, and I totally respect that. But I also feel magic in literature can be lovely when done well, and shouldn't been automatically tabooed and labled wrong simply for being magic. Now, kinds of magic. My favorite types of magic come from Tolkien's world. The magic is so prevalent yet so subtle, and most really are powers mainly coming from the type of creature that is using it, such as the hobbits who have the everyday magic of being able to walk quietly or the elves whose magic is basically used with maintaining their homes and upkeeping what parts of the world are still good. Then there is the evil magic of Sauron, Morgoth, etc. that still is acually streaming from Iluvatar, who created all. It's the classic dark lord, and I don't think it really needs to be discussed. No one really ever has a problem with magic being presented as evil. Then we have Gandalf. I love this guy. People seem to have a problem with him a lot though, because he's a wizard. Yet his magic isn't an infallible thing, he's not invincible and he's not indestructible. He's not a god. And that is my next point. Why does God not want us practicing witchcraft? It is my belief that He doesn't want us putting ourselves equal with Him. If you were able to move things around at will with just a few words, don't you think you'd feel a little bit special? You might start thinking you don't need God, that you have your own power. And that is why I believe He does not want us practicing magic, not because magic in itself is bad, but because humans tend to be weak, and "above all desire power." Totally LotR. Men got magic, were overcome by it, became wraiths, over to the dark side, the end. Yet the elves, wise, and the Hobbits, humble, are able to have what magic they possess without thinking they're amazing. And this, above all, it what I think matters. Why. Why is magic bad, why does your character/race have magic, and above all what do they do with it? "It is our choices...that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." In this world, magic is bad. We are humans, we are weak. Even Gandalf felt that to possess great power would turn him bad. Yet in a fictional world, where the characters do not by the magic become stronger than whatever God you may have and use the magic in a controlled way in their own spheres, I think it's okay. Magic should not be used to make a character invincible and it should not be without any sort of "string" attached. Yet is magic in itself a taboo? I say no. I really hope I didn't offend anyone. Please feel free to tell me where and how I went wrong, as I'm sure I did somewhere. I don't even think that made any sense.
_________________ It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.
Last edited by InTheLion'sPaws on July 23rd, 2010, 10:27 pm, edited 8 times in total.
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