How Christians Can Use Fantasy Stories
By Bill McGrath|Published Date:
January 10, 2008
(this article originally appeared on the Breakpoint.org website.)
With all the current attention regarding the anti-Christian message
of Philip Pullman’s fantasy trilogy, His Dark Materials and the
film based on the first book, The Golden Compass, I am concerned
that many Christian parents will become wary of all fantasy literature.
This would be unfortunate as fantasy, above all other genres of fiction,
has the greatest potential to cause us to look upward, to remind us that
we are not alone—to say to the reader, be it in a whisper or a shout,
“God is near.”
From The Iliad and The Odyssey, to Beowulf, to
tales of King Arthur and his knights, to Dante’s Divine Comedy,
to Milton’s Paradise Lost, to Grimm’s Fairy Tales,
and up to modern classics such as J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the
Rings, C.S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia, and J.K.
Rowling’s Harry Potter series, fantasy has been among the most
powerful and popular forms of fiction. When mankind wants to tell a
story that people will respond to, the tool he most often turns to is
fantasy.
While fantasy usually gets lumped onto the same section of the
bookstore as science fiction, they are really very different genres.
Science fiction tends to glorify man (or at least his intellect). The
mind of man may bring forth amazing things that are good or evil, but in
science fiction these things always spring from men or man-like
intellects. It is rare to see any hint of the spiritual or supernatural
in science fiction.
So what, then, is fantasy? Shakespeare gives a pretty good definition
in Hamlet, when the title character says, “There are more things in
heaven and earth . . . than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”
At their roots, we might say that science fiction speculates on the
possibilities within the natural world, while fantasy broadens its view
to include the supernatural. God need not exist in most science fiction
stories, while in most fantasy stories He must (even if He is never
directly seen). Every fantasy story that says justice will prevail in
the end, is really saying that the universe is ruled by a just God. All
of the best fantasy stories, be they about the ultimate war between good
and evil or the doings of the smallest of fantasy creatures, really say
the same thing and suggest to the reader (whether consciously or not)
the same ultimate conclusion: If the smallest of supernatural things
exists, even if it is the smallest of fairies, then perhaps the greatest
of supernatural things (God) exists.
Of course, not all that is supernatural is good (Is the angel in the
story wearing a halo or horns?), but I think what worries most
Christians about fantasy stories is the use of magic. Even here, there
are two distinct kinds of magic. The dangerous kind in any story is that
which comes closest to what real practitioners of witchcraft are aiming
at: magic as a learned skill that anyone can do and that involves what
we usually think of as magic in the real world, including astrology,
fortunetelling, and the invocation of spirits, be they of dead men or
demons or pagan gods. The magic used in the best fantasy stories is of a
different type. It is a power that only certain people have and it is
used in the story in much the same way as the superpowers of a comic
book superhero. You’ll see this later type of Fantasy magic used by
Tolkien’s Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings, by C.S. Lewis’
Merlin in That Hideous Strength, and by J.K. Rowling’s
Harry Potter. Kids don’t tend to take this kind of magic seriously,
and any of them old enough to read these stories for themselves would no
more believe they can fly like Harry Potter by climbing on Mom’s broom
than they would believe they can fly like Superman by tying on a towel
for a cape.
As an example, I offer an excerpt from
my own novel, Asulon. In it, a kindly priest named Simon explains
to a grizzled old warrior named Moor how he does all the amazing things
he has done. It depicts my views on how the elements of the fantasy
story can be used in a Christian context and why people so desire to
read about them.
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