Harry Potter's great.
I call BS on the LOTR (second) one. The entire poem was about Aragorn.
"Not all those who wander are lost". In the year 2951 of the Third Age Elrond Peredhil shares with a 20 year old Aragorn II Elessar the knowledge of his bloodline and heritage as Chieftain of the Dúnedain. It is in this year that Lord of the Rings Appendix B The Tale of Years states "Aragorn goes out into the Wild." However, it is not until meeting Gandalf in 2956 that Aragorn II Elessar is inspired to begin his "... great journeys and errantries ..." to Rohan, Gondor, Mordor and beyond. Because of the guidance of Elrond Peredhil and Gandalf, Aragorn II Elessar's 'wandering' is not without purpose, rather it is to familiarize him with the geo-political situation of Middle-earth and to enable him to garner the knowledge and skills he will need to be an effective King.
Spoiler alert:
The last one can't happen. Harry is only the Chosen One because Voldemort CHOSE him. When Voldemort heard the prophecy from Snape, it could have meant Neville or Harry. He chose Harry because of their similarities (Muggle-born mother), therefore marking them as equals and giving Harry the power to destroy him 16 years later. If Voldemort had never killed Lily and James, Harry would not be the Chosen One. He'd totally still get into trouble with Ron and Hermione, though, so that part's accurate.
I'm just going to put this out there that nowhere in the Bible does it explicitly state that dogs go to Hell. It is generally understood that only humans have souls, and the argument the teacher is using is that since dogs have no soul, they end up in Hell. That is false since humans can end up in Hell too according to the Bible. It is unknown what exactly happens. What it does say is that we will be happy in Heaven. Dogs bring happiness. So according to one theory, dogs can end up in Heaven as part of the happiness deal.
If I may correct you a bit...
We are all God's creation. Undeniably (using religious context). The Bible says so. Anyone who argues is an dicknugget. Humans are the only beings of the Creation that can choose to go against God's will, therefore we're the only ones who are capable of going to (or being in the state of) Hell. Because nothing else has a soul (and therefore cannot choose to go against God), they automatically get entrance to God's realm when they die. I'm not sure if I'm being clear or redundant; lemme know and I'll clarify whatever I said.
I call BS on the LOTR (second) one. The entire poem was about Aragorn.
"Not all those who wander are lost". In the year 2951 of the Third Age Elrond Peredhil shares with a 20 year old Aragorn II Elessar the knowledge of his bloodline and heritage as Chieftain of the Dúnedain. It is in this year that Lord of the Rings Appendix B The Tale of Years states "Aragorn goes out into the Wild." However, it is not until meeting Gandalf in 2956 that Aragorn II Elessar is inspired to begin his "... great journeys and errantries ..." to Rohan, Gondor, Mordor and beyond. Because of the guidance of Elrond Peredhil and Gandalf, Aragorn II Elessar's 'wandering' is not without purpose, rather it is to familiarize him with the geo-political situation of Middle-earth and to enable him to garner the knowledge and skills he will need to be an effective King.
I'll post my source
The last one can't happen. Harry is only the Chosen One because Voldemort CHOSE him. When Voldemort heard the prophecy from Snape, it could have meant Neville or Harry. He chose Harry because of their similarities (Muggle-born mother), therefore marking them as equals and giving Harry the power to destroy him 16 years later. If Voldemort had never killed Lily and James, Harry would not be the Chosen One. He'd totally still get into trouble with Ron and Hermione, though, so that part's accurate.
We are all God's creation. Undeniably (using religious context). The Bible says so. Anyone who argues is an dicknugget. Humans are the only beings of the Creation that can choose to go against God's will, therefore we're the only ones who are capable of going to (or being in the state of) Hell. Because nothing else has a soul (and therefore cannot choose to go against God), they automatically get entrance to God's realm when they die. I'm not sure if I'm being clear or redundant; lemme know and I'll clarify whatever I said.