Readers of Harry Potter, Beware, I, YAHUVEH AM the Potter,and you are the clay!
July, 23, 2007
I, YAHUVEH send MY Judgment to England in the flood it is part of MY wrath. People repent and turn away from this evil and anything to do with Harry Potter. Shield your eyes even from the commercials let not the unholy enter the Holy. Be not ignorant of satan's devices for those who read this book have or will become demon possessed and are being drawn deeper into the world of the occult. Your children are filled with evil spirits and a desire to obtain occult dark powers. The spirit of death and murder enters in the mind as the new book of Harry Potter has been released. This is what satan intended. Repent and warn of this evil. Churches why are you not warning of this evil? Prophets, why are you not warning before I send MY wrath on all those who claim they worship ME and yet take part in these abominations. Study and show thyself approved and see what the Holy Book says about those who practice witchcraft.
You who brag that this occult book outsells the Holy Bible and you who have sowed your seed and bought anything to do with Harry Potter, are under a curse of Deut. 28 and it will remain until you repent and turn away from this evil. I, YAHUVEH send MY Judgments to England. The flood is just part of MY rage I am pouring out. I am sending across various lands, fires ignite as a sign your land needs cleansing of sin. I am sending the earthquakes to shake you awake, I, YAHUVEH speak in storms, hurricanes, tornadoes, heat and droughts. Those who slumber and do evil in MY sight beware I, YAHUVEH am not easily mocked! 7/23/07
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HARRY POTTER OUTSELLING BIBLE, and if your a follower of YAHUSHUA and did not warn others, now is your chance to do so. Why do you think a book would sell this many copies?
It is all about the power of the occult and the author that uses it so it will be a best seller.
Final 'Potter' Book Breaks Sales Records
Jul 22, 12:25 PM EST
The Associated Press
NEW YORK -- The records are breaking, yet again. Borders Group Inc. announced Sunday that "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" sold 1.2 million copies worldwide in its first day, the biggest single-day number ever for the superstore chain. According to orders, the previous Potter, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," sold 850,000 copies on its first day of release in 2005.
Scholastic Inc., the book's U.S. publisher, was expected to announce sales figures later Sunday. British publisher Bloomsbury will release data Monday.
The seventh and final volume of J.K. Rowling's fantasy series was released Saturday with a first printing of 12 million in the U.S. alone. Pre-orders for Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble topped 1 million and stores everywhere reported manic activity upon the book's midnight release.
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SEVERE FLOODING IN SOME PARTS OF ENGLAND
Drinking water supplies have started to run out in some areas of England worst affected by the flooding.
Severn Trent Water says 150,000 homes are without water in Gloucestershire after a treatment works was flooded.
Power supplies to 500,000 people in Gloucestershire are also threatened and the RAF has been drafted in to protect a substation at risk of flooding.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has chaired a meeting of the government's emergency committee Cobra.
This involves several ministers and the Chief Constable of Gloucestershire Police, Tim Brain.
Mr Brown will visit flood-hit areas on Monday.
Earlier, Environment Agency chief executive Baroness Young told the BBC that about £1bn a year was needed to improve flood defences.
She said more investment was essential because climate change would lead to increased rainfall, but added: "It will take some time to get flood defences into place and it won't completely remove the risk of flooding."
Prophecy 43 Part 2,
"I AM" GOD THE POTTER YOU ARE MY CLAY! MY GIFTS ARE NOT FOR SALE!!
Boycott the schools that allow this (Harry Potter books) to be part of its curriculum! Get the teachers fired if they insist to teach your children witchcraft. Forbid them to feed your children anymore of this evil! The teachers will regret this. The schools that take part in this will regret this, for if they think they have problems now with the students, just wait until what the children view in the Harry Potter movie and books is used to experiment on the teachers and parents! Satan will give your children the occult powers to harm! Your own children shall become your worst enemies!
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"Does Harry Potter belong in schools?"
(Editorial Opinion, "The Atlanta Journal-Constitution", October 5, 1999)
A few Cobb County parents have done something to the plucky Harry Potter that his evil nemesis Lord Voldemort has never been able to do: Banish him.
A fifth-grade teacher at A.L. Burruss Elementary School had to stop reading the best-selling children's series to her students because some parents expressed concerns about its themes of magic and wizardry.
The books are "on hold," says Principal Jerry Locke, who plans to evaluate the three volumes to determine whether they're suitable for the classroom.
By British author J.K. Rowlings, the Harry Potter books are undeniably magical, captivating millions of young readers around the world and inveigling them away from their Game Boys and Nintendos. Dozens of Atlanta area children lined up at dawn last month to grab up copies of the third installment as it arrived in bookstores.
The parents objecting to Harry Potter probably haven't read the books.
Otherwise, they would realize that they speak to far more than magic and sorcery. The main message of the books is the redemptive power of love.
The Harry Potter books belong in the Burruss classroom and classrooms everywhere.
If parents object to magic, they object to childhood. Magic is what children live and breathe.
Magic transforms a swing set into a castle, wooden blocks into a city and a playmate into a cowboy.
If the magic leaves the classroom, so do "The Wizard of Oz," "Macbeth" and "Peter Pan," among others. Besides, the appeal of such films as "Toy Story" and "Star Wars" to children and adults alike suggests that we all could use a little magic in our lives.
"School lets hero off hook"
by Jim Galloway and Chris Burritt ("The Atlanta Journal-Constitution",
October 13, 1999)
A Marietta elementary school has given a green light to Harry Potter, student wizard.
Last month, Principal Jerry Locke of A.L. Burruss Elementary School asked a fifth-grade teacher to stop reading one of the Potter books to her class until he could review it.
Now he's read the book and thinks it's just fine, a Marietta school official said Tuesday.
In fact, Harry Potter books are now being read to two classes at Burruss. And as it turns out, a Harry Potter book has been in the school library since spring - the principal simply didn't know about it, said Kelly Henson, associate superintendent for the 7,228-student Marietta schools.
"There was no ban. There is no ban," Henson said.
The highly popular Harry Potter book series by British author J.K. Rowling outlines the education of a broomstick-riding student at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
Burruss' Locke declined to comment on the issue.
Speaking for him, Henson said the Marietta schools have not received any complaints about the Potter books. But, at a September meeting, Marietta elementary principals were cautioned that the book could provoke the concerns of parents who object| to the| literary themes of magic and witchcraft.
That warning, and the fact that Harry Potter made the cover of Time magazine, prompted Locke, the Burruss principal to scrutinize the book.
"When new material comes into the school, any good principal is going to review it," Henson said.
While a flap over Harry Potter may have ended in metro Atlanta, another has begun in South Carolina.
"The books have a serious tone of death, hate, lack of respect and sheer evil," said Elizabeth Mounce of Columbia, who asked that state's Board of Education to remove the books from school libraries. Protesters who identified themselves as "concerned Christian parents" told the board the books promote violence and interest in the occult.
The South Carolina protest is the fourth serious challenge to the book series in the past two weeks, according to the American Library Association's office for intellectual freedom in Chicago. The other challenges have come in New York, Michigan and Minnesota - the incident in Marietta isn't counted.
Three Potter books have been printed. New York-based Scholastic Inc. has published 5 million hardback copies of "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone," "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" and last month's release, "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban."
"The books are not about witchcraft," said Judy Corman, senior vice president for Scholastic. "It is about the power of the imagination.
Rowlings, the author of the Harry Potter series, will make two appearances next week in metro Atlanta.
" Muggles seek to muzzle Harry Potter in schools"
(Reuters, October 13, 1999)
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (Reuters) - From fictional wizard Harry Potter's perspective, Muggles among us are trying to keep the magic of Scottish author J.K. Rowling's best-selling books out of U.S. public schools, charging they glorify the occult and encourage rebellion.
In Potter-ese, Muggles -- regular humans unaware of the magic surrounding them -- have petitioned school boards from South Carolina to California to pull the wildly popular books off library shelves and out of classrooms.
``It boils down to the question of whether or not the books, in these parents' opinions, promote witchcraft and the occult,'' Greg Plagens, a public school spokesman in Columbia, South Carolina, scene of the latest protest, said Wednesday.
A group of parents Tuesday urged South Carolina's state and local school boards to ban the books, which chronicle the adventures of orphaned wizard Harry Potter and his tenure at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
The first book in the series, ``Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone,'' has spent 42 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller List, and remained on Sunday alongside ``Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets'' and the newly released ``Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban'' at the top of the list. Five million hard-bound copies of the book are in print, along with another 3.2 million paperback versions, said Judy Corman, spokeswoman with U.S. publisher Scholastic Press.
``There's something these parents are missing, which is it's a magical book. It takes its place along the best in classic literature for children, along with 'The Wizard of Oz,' 'Alice in Wonderland,' 'The Chronicles of Narnia,' and 'Lord of the Rings,''' she said. The Harry Potter books also have been heralded by teachers and school librarians across the country for renewing childrens' interest in reading.
``The children love the fantasy aspect of these books, and they have a lot of magic in them,'' said Margaret Graham, librarian at Myers Park Traditional Elementary in Charlotte, North Carolina.
``I think a lot of families are reading the books together, and that's really exciting for the children, too.'' That has not muted criticism from some parents concerned about how children will be drawn to Lord Voldemort, an evil wizard who killed Harry's parents and menaces him, or the tools of the occult sold in the books' Diagon Alley.
``The problem is that witchcraft and sorcery exists and is something neither children nor adults should play around with,'' an opponent of the books wrote to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. A Georgia elementary school teacher this week was allowed to resume reading the books to her students.
The readings were halted in September over concerns the books' focus on magic and witchcraft would provoke concerns among some parents. In an online poll being conducted Wednesday on the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Web site, 93 percent of the 3,578 people who responded said the books should not be banned in Georgia classrooms.
In Ventura County northwest of Los Angeles, two parents recently transferred their son to another elementary school after learning his teacher was reading the books in class. The parents noted that the word ``kill'' appeared five times on page 12 of one of the books.
``It is clearly a parent's right to say what his child should read and not read,'' Scholastic's Corman said. ``I believe in this society it is not a parent's right to say what another parent's child should read or not read.''