summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/faith/religionless-hp.rst
blob: 2194503507f6eb7f693314e27788598ab8f020b4 (plain) (blame)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
Religionless universe of Harry Potter
#####################################

:date: 2019-03-30T20:33:21
:category: faith
:tags: review, HarryPotter, blogComment, fromReddit, HPreligion

(my comments on the thread “`Probably gonna catch some hate for 
this. Religion and Mythology and its place in fiction.`_” on 
Reddit by RhysThornbery; edited for this blog)

.. _`Probably gonna catch some hate for this. Religion and Mythology and its place in fiction.`:
 https://www.reddit.com/r/HPfanfiction/comments/b2b2qj/probably_gonna_catch_some_hate_for_this_religion/

The question is about the role of religion [#]_ in the HP 
universe, and it is very interesting one. I am a Christian and 
I was looking for some good religious fanfiction stories for 
myself.

It is kind of weird that in the country where majority of Muggles 
at least nominally belong to the Church of England (for you, 
Americans, not every state in the world has separation of the 
state and church) there is no mention of anything religious 
anywhere. Of course, the true reason is probably that Ms. Rowling 
wanted to have her book approachable and commercially acceptable 
all over the world (or she probably didn’t think about that at 
all), but sometimes it is really a bit ridiculous. All those 
Christmas, Easters, and no mentioning of school chapel (every 
large British educational institution has one, of course)? All 
those godfathers and godmothers and no baptisms (try to imagine 
Sirius Black present to the baptism of Harry in the church of
St. Jerome in the Godric’s Hollow; or even better, Lily in the
church praying for the God’s protection from Voldemort)? Nothing.

**(update 2020-07-15)** Ha! There actually `was the
christening`_.

This religion-lessness mostly continues in the fanfiction
universe. There are really few stories which take religion
seriously and even less which make a good job of it.

In completely random order (just as I found it in various 
bookmark lists):

1. Prayers_ by Master Spy advenger. This is sweet, not super 
   deep, but lovely retelling of missing parts of DH from the 
   Hermione’s point of view, who is practising Anglican and 
   carries with her “Prayers for Young Girls” as surprisingly 
   relevant guide through her struggles. Prayer in face of 
   Voldemort (or Bellatrix Lestrange) is here surprisingly 
   convincing (I was always afraid that such stories end up like 
   the Hogwarts, School of Worship, which is IMHO abomination).

2. `Trading My Sorrows`_ by ShadowBallad. Severus Snape’s cover 
   is blown and he is saved on the run from Death Eaters by 
   a wizarding priest who teaches him a lot about faith and 
   himself. Not bad, the heart of the author is certainly in the 
   right place, but it seems to me that he never figured out how 
   to finish the story and it somehow hangs in the middle. Also, 
   this story suffers horribly from lack of editing (and here 
   mainly cutting it down) and couple of occassions of rhetorical 
   diarrhea, which makes reading it rather difficult. Show, don’t 
   tell!

3. Solo_ by Crookshanks22. For change, Severus here is not Roman 
   Catholic but Jewish, but the main hero are OC person (Jake) 
   and Anthony Goldstein and their trials and tribulations with 
   trying to be faithful Jew in quite secular environment of 
   Hogwarts. Except, it is apparently not as secular as 
   Ms. Rowling talking from the Harry’s point of view lead us to 
   believe. There are Christians (Terry Boot, Cedric etc.), of 
   course Patils are Hindus, there are some Muslims IIRC, and all 
   of them are trying to navigate waters of Hogwarts as much as 
   they can. Sympathetic, but the author is apparently Jewish and 
   he is struggling with understanding of Christianity (that’s 
   the one I can judge) rather desperately.

4. Sanctuary_ by sheankelor. Severus Snape, brought up as a Roman 
   Catholic, when dying in the Shrieking Shack manages to pull 
   out antidote and transfer with his emergency Portkey to the 
   friendly Irish Roman-Catholic friar who cures him. Apparently, 
   he secretly practised his faith all those years including 
   confessions, and he is now trying to reconcile with his past. 
   Not bad, sometimes a bit too preachy and too much teaching the 
   Catholic liturgy for every occasion, but story makes sense. 
   One of the few fanfiction stories which noticed that the Good 
   Friday Agreement happened 22 days before the Battle of 
   Hogwarts.

5. `All Are His Children`_ by sheankelor. Foundation of Hogwarts 
   as viewed by Brother Brendan (from the film “Secret of Kells”) 
   who turns out to be Fat Friar eventually. Actually, not much 
   religious, but sweet nevertheless.

6. `The Friar's Calling`_ by Chthonia. A rare example of 
   a medieval story from the HP universe, and it is very good. 
   Brother Thomas turns out to be a wizard and he is sent by his
   prior, `Robert Grosseteste`_ (true historical figure, famous
   medieval philosopher) to Hogwarts. Although he is always
   suspicious whether his powers are not a bit demoniacal, he is
   forced by God (and the Sorting Hat) to live in the wizarding
   world as a humble friar. Lovely description of medieval
   wizarding world, which is precisely not developed enough to be
   persuasive (he participates in developing the Floo powder).
   Brother Thomas is of course later the Fat Friar (who cannot
   leave his students for whom he cares pastorally). Sir Cadogan
   is present as well as his friend and not completely crazy
   knight.

7. `Hermione Before the Beit Din`_ by facingthenorthwind 
   (spacegandalf). We all suspected it, but now it is clear, 
   Hermione is Jewish (actually, it seems to me as the only
   explanation why a super-bookish girl from country with
   mandatory religious education has no idea where “Where your
   treasure is, there will your heart be also.” or “The last
   enemy that shall be destroyed is death.” come from) and she is
   dealing with the punishment for Obliviating her parents.
   Jewish wizarding tribunal and all that jazz. Not bad but
   unfinished and sorely missing a conclusion.

**{updated 2020-06-28}**

8. `Thou Shalt Not Suffer`_ by TheWizardsHarry. A girl from very
   strongly evangelical family (which feels more American than
   British, but small suspension of disbelief here is probably
   useful, and I am certain that every nation can generate
   religious bigots, there are some even here in the agnostic
   Czechia) gets the Hogwarts Letter and she is immediately
   ostracised by her parents (she is a single child) and friends
   from the religious community, she lives in (which is all her
   friends). She finds her refuge with her very distant and
   herself ostracised aunt who lives away. There she finds out
   that magical world truly exists and that the aunt is a witch
   herself. With a lot of hesitation, she, in the end, agrees to
   enter Hogwarts for a year just to control her magic, where she
   struggles with adventures during Harry’s Second Year. However,
   more important is her parallel discovering what is the
   relationship between magic and those verses from the Bible.
   During the year she meets some other Christian wizards and
   witches (including one very cute Cedric Diggory) and she gets
   her hand on an old essay by some witch named Lilly Evans who
   wrote a rather thoughtful analysis of that verse. Adventure is
   nicely written, Christian point of view very authentic, only
   problem is that the story ends with her first year at Hogwarts
   and the promised sequel is nowhere to be found. Pity.

9. PUSH_ by tree_and_leaf (PUSH is apparently abbreviation common
   among evangelicals of some sort and it stands for “Pray Until
   Something Happens”). The basic plot conflict is similar to the
   previous one (only this is a post-war story, so for example
   Hermione and Ginny are as the Seventh Year girls), but the
   main heroine seems more depressive and strongly rejecting
   magic and less accessible to the argument in another
   direction. In relation to the title, she actually in one point
   prays a lot towards some resolution, and when something which
   really looks like God’s answer happens, she has trouble
   accepting it. Unfortunately, at this point when things were
   getting interesting, the story has been abandoned.

**{end of the insert}**

The crazy thing is that it seems to me this is really it. If 
anybody knows about any other good religious wizarding story (no 
mocking, no anti-religious) let me know.

.. [#] I am a Protestant, so for me “religion” means more “humans 
   activity towards deity” (sacrifices, liturgy, this sort of 
   thing) rather than just “existence of God” (and yes this
   understanding of the word is paradoxically for Protestants
   non-Biblical, James 1:27).
    
   This is not exclusive to the Harry Potter universe. It is even 
   more weird with J.R.R.Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings universe.
   Historically it is more certain than anything that Aragorn 
   would quite certainly sacrifice to some deity before the 
   Battle of the Pelennor Fields, etc., but Tolkien was rather 
   traditional Catholic so he probably didn't like the idea of 
   inventing a pagan religion. Here the definition of religion is 
   even more important. There is God in the Tolkien’s Arda 
   universe (BTW, beginning of Silmarilion is one of the most 
   beautiful description of rise of Evil I know about), but 
   nobody does anything about it. There are no prayers (almost, 
   at least no explicit ones), no sacrifices, no priests, etc.

.. _`was the christening`:
   https://web.archive.org/web/20110927060621/http://www.jkrowling.com/textonly/en/news_view.cfm?id=80


.. _Prayers:
   https://www.fanfiction.net/s/6494461/1/

.. _`Trading My Sorrows`:
   https://www.fanfiction.net/s/3077936

.. _`The Friar's Calling`:
   https://archiveofourown.org/works/7460772

.. _`Robert Grosseteste`:
   https://historyofphilosophy.net/grosseteste

.. _`All Are His Children`:
   https://archiveofourown.org/works/4426211

.. _`Hermione Before the Beit Din`:
   https://archiveofourown.org/series/636071

.. _Solo:
   https://www.fanfiction.net/s/3388041 

.. _Sanctuary:
   https://archiveofourown.org/works/7292632

.. _`Thou Shalt Not Suffer`:
   https://www.fanfiction.net/s/5176787

.. _PUSH:
   https://archiveofourown.org/works/55647