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08-21-2021, 07:32 AM | #1 |
Newly Deceased
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What was Tolkien's view of the Eastern Orthodoxy and Cathodoxy in general?
I'm not sure whats the appropriate forum to post this in. So mods please move it to where you feel is proper. I'm just posting it here for now because I can't find subforum specifically devoted to Tolkien himself and am desperate to find answers for this question. So move it to where you think its best to be in mods!
I already know Tolkien despised Anglicanism for being a shadow of its formerly Cathodox style denomination. But I am curious how he viewed Eastern Orthodoxy and the other Cathodox churches (Coptic, Ethiopian Tewahedo, Armenian Apostolic, Nestorian, Syriac, and practically any post-Nicene church that survives today and completely founded on the Council of Nicene in principles). I know Tolkien would have probably be a member SSPX or some other hardcore traditionalist Catholic church in today's world as its obvious by his contempt of vernacular language and fanatical insistence on only using Latin for Roman Rites. But than again he was liberal in his time including condemning anti-Semitism and as opposed to most Catholics at the time who tended to be insular (especially in Britain), he did not mind mingling with Protestants. However as I mentioned earlier he was so insistent on Catholicism whenever religious matters came he openly commented he's a devout Roman Catholic and would often boast how Catholicism is the original Christianity, etc and his writings imply he's willing to face torture and execution for his faith. So I am curious of his views on other Cathodoxy, in particular Eastern Orthodoxy which has a big grudge against the Vatican and historically suffered persecution from Catholics while simultaneously targeting Catholics for persecution and even mass murder in Orthodox majority countries prior to the Protestant Reformation; the Reformation simply added Protestant Christians to their list of targets by Eastern Orthodox churches. Did he view Eastern Orthodoxy and other Cathodox denominations as a shadow of lost tradition much like Anglicans? Or did he have a warmer opinion on other early post Nicene Churches much like he did on Jews? Does he consider the 1054 schism a grave tragic error much like he does with the Protestant Reformation? |
08-21-2021, 02:56 PM | #2 | |
Overshadowed Eagle
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My first inclination is to think that he probably didn't have much of an opinion. Orthodox Christianity doesn't have much of a presence in England, so (unlike Anglicans or Methodists) it's not something he would have had to face on a day-to-day basis.
That said... letter 306 was written by Tolkien to his son Michael, and touches on some relevant points. It was written in 1967, which places it solidly after Vatican II - ie, the 'changes' and suchlike that he mentions are probably exactly the sort of thing you meant when saying "Tolkien would have probably be a member SSPX or some other hardcore traditionalist Catholic church in today's world". Excerpting freely here (ellipses like . . . . are from the source; like [...] are my additions): Quote:
Looking at the changes, he saw three strands there:
Of course, Catholicism and the CofE have a long history - it's worth remembering that we still burn a Catholic in effigy on the closest thing we have in England to a National Day (I mean... in theory; I've never actually seen a Guy Fawkes in the wild), and Tolkien himself talks in the letter about how "Roman Catholics still suffer from disabilities not even applicable to Jews" in England. (Not sure what he's specifically thinking of, though an obvious one is that no Catholic could inherit the throne of Great Britain.) So I feel like his antipathy to the Church of England was specifically to that church, not to non-Catholic denominations in general. But that's speculation! I don't actually know anything. I'd be fascinated to hear if anyone does. hS (PS: Random Latin Mass fact of the day... all the kerfluffle over the change becomes wildly amusing when you realise that Mass was originally said in Latin in the Roman Empire... when Latin was the language of the people hearing it! Far from being a mystery, it was done that way so the faithful could understand it... ^_^)
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08-22-2021, 02:02 PM | #3 | |
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08-27-2021, 09:18 AM | #4 |
Loremaster of Annúminas
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As early as the late 5th or early 6th century, a Gallic bishop remonstrated with his priests to give the sermon, if not the liturgy, in "the common Latin of the people," meaning proto-French.
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08-27-2021, 09:23 AM | #5 |
Loremaster of Annúminas
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I would say though that Tolkien would have little problem with Orthodoxy, historical political conflicts with Rome notwithstanding. The Catholic position on the Eastern Church was always merely "schismatic," i.e. not obedient to the Pope, rather than the "heretical" label that was applied to all Protestants until modern times. Orthodox Christians then and now are permitted Communion in Catholic churches, unlike Protestants.
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The entire plot of The Lord of the Rings could be said to turn on what Sauron didn’t know, and when he didn’t know it. |
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