Chapter 96 spoilers (it’s out; please read): The graveyard made me remember how canon implied that Voldemort was a descendant of the Peverelles as well, and how there was Peverelle tombstone there… I had a “Oh crap… no, this is the end of this arc; EY wouldn’t have Voldemort show up there to use Peverelle bones in this chapter… right? I mean, there was supposed to be padding before the next arc...”
I couldn’t help but wonder what Harry would think if he found out that inscription was also in the Bible (I forget which book; one of the apissles?)
This is quite true (the action that Paul’s writings seem to call for are “turn to Christ; be nice to each other; don’t be afraid if people try to torture and murder you for joining our cult, because our founder resurrected and promised he’d bring us back if we die before he’s done with his work in Heaven”. While Paul comes across as way more antideathist than modern Christians, it is abundantly clear he meant it differently from the Peverelles. (Did canon give a time period for the Peverelles? I got the impression they predate the founders of Hogwarts, but I don’t recall anything more specific. Presumably, they would have been familiar with Christian memes in any case, so somewhere down the line, verses that would fit their mission without setting off Muggle heracy detectors became the family’s choice for epitaphs.)
Did canon give a time period for the Peverells [sp]?
The HP Wikia makes them 13th century, citing a gravestone from the film (although I cannot read the dates in the film still on their site). Since they cite the film instead of the book, the book probably doesn’t say (although it might have just said something less precise than the full dates that Wikia gives).
Hogwarts was founded about 1000 years before the events of the series, so apparently a few centuries before the Peverells.
Chapter 96 spoilers (it’s out; please read): The graveyard made me remember how canon implied that Voldemort was a descendant of the Peverelles as well, and how there was Peverelle tombstone there… I had a “Oh crap… no, this is the end of this arc; EY wouldn’t have Voldemort show up there to use Peverelle bones in this chapter… right? I mean, there was supposed to be padding before the next arc...”
I couldn’t help but wonder what Harry would think if he found out that inscription was also in the Bible (I forget which book; one of the apissles?)
(ETA: 1corenthians15:26.)
That part of 1 Corinthians is a prophecy, not a call to action.
This is quite true (the action that Paul’s writings seem to call for are “turn to Christ; be nice to each other; don’t be afraid if people try to torture and murder you for joining our cult, because our founder resurrected and promised he’d bring us back if we die before he’s done with his work in Heaven”. While Paul comes across as way more antideathist than modern Christians, it is abundantly clear he meant it differently from the Peverelles. (Did canon give a time period for the Peverelles? I got the impression they predate the founders of Hogwarts, but I don’t recall anything more specific. Presumably, they would have been familiar with Christian memes in any case, so somewhere down the line, verses that would fit their mission without setting off Muggle heracy detectors became the family’s choice for epitaphs.)
The HP Wikia makes them 13th century, citing a gravestone from the film (although I cannot read the dates in the film still on their site). Since they cite the film instead of the book, the book probably doesn’t say (although it might have just said something less precise than the full dates that Wikia gives).
Hogwarts was founded about 1000 years before the events of the series, so apparently a few centuries before the Peverells.