But Harry Potter, wasn't written as Gods Word.
And there's plenty of evidence to suggest that the books of the New Testament weren't either.
In Harry Potter no one arose from the dead.
Debatable - get reach for the HP schism, between those who hold that Voldemort's bodily destruction means he was dead, and those who believe he was alive but reduced to a spectre...
We know full well who wrote the Harry Potter books. We have seen her and we know nothing of her books were about anything in this world.
You say that, but I've seen the train and the viaduct and one of the rail bridges and the Ford Anglia and the motorbike and sidecar...
That God is a creator with power the bible says he speaks and it is done.
And the Wheel of Time explains that wind of change blows, and it's not THE beginning, but it's A beginning, and that Shaitan is waiting... Lord of the Rings explains about Morgoth's rebellion against Elu Iluvatar... then there's the old tablet about Gilgamesh and his quest for immortality to spite the gods... and the tales of the Dodecatheon's liberation from Chronus... or how Shu separated Nut and Geb letting loose Osiris, Isis, Seth and Nephthys... Wotan... Quetzalcoatl... The list goes on, and on, and on, and on...
Harry Potter uses a power called Magic. God has his own power.
How does god's magic differ from Harry Potter's? Or Gandalfs? Or Rand al'Thor's? or Circe's? Or Sonea'? Or Raistlin's? or Odin's? Or Titania's? Or the Sithi's?
If it looks like a duck, sounds like a duck, tastes like a duck, and is a duck, you calling it 'anatidae' doesn't change the fact that it's magic - you just think that it's real magic and all the rest is pretend.
O.