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12-29-2002, 03:27 PM | #2 |
Haunting Spirit
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Interesting, though I don't think he purpously put christ-like figures in his books, since he disliked allegory (sp?)
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12-29-2002, 04:29 PM | #3 | ||||
Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Bree
Posts: 390
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I wrote the following in the thread entitled Inherent Evil, but it fits equally well here in regards to the mentioned article:
Redemption, according to the Catholic paradigm, that Tolkien knew, is absent from Middle-Earth. There is no Christ figure, so no matter how noble, no matter how virtuous any of these characters are, they never achieve that “happy ending.” The best that any character achieved was a certain amount of satisfaction that they did the right thing, they could achieve some virtue by “natural law,” but the life of grace escapes them. Even at Aragorn’s death there was regret (personified by Arwen’s long, lonely suffering); Aragorn, like all the other heroes fails to find that peaceful death. The end of human beings, what happens to them after death, is unknown, not even by the wisest elves or the Valar. The Núnenóreans fell because they feared death and were jealous of the elves. Death for humans was much more of a risk, because they didn’t have the Halls of Mandos. Tolkien envisioned Middle-Earth as a real, kind of pre-pre-historic time, the real work of salvation, which belonged to humans only, was way, way into the future. Tolkien’s mythology was a set up for the future, which he envisioned as being our present. That is why his writings are so devoid of incarnational theology, sacrament, etc… Its that these would have been anachronistic to his world. Unlike in CS Lewis’ Narnia, Middle-Earth wasn’t a parallel world, it was our world, so there could be no Aslan in Middle-Earth. Quote:
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