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View Poll Results: Gollum went into the Crack of Doom because | |||
he slipped | 26 | 44.83% | |
Eru willed it | 16 | 27.59% | |
he jumped on purpose | 7 | 12.07% | |
the quest needed to end this way to make sense | 9 | 15.52% | |
Voters: 58. You may not vote on this poll |
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10-17-2005, 10:42 AM | #2 |
Cryptic Aura
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How else would Tolkien be able to spend another six chapters concluding the story with the themes he wanted to highlight?
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10-17-2005, 11:30 AM | #3 |
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Gollum fell into the Fire because he slipped. He slipped because Eru willed it. Eru willed it because that's the way Tolkien wrote the story.
I went with A, but it's not the only applicable answer...
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10-17-2005, 12:37 PM | #4 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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According to "Letters", I don't have a copy with me right now, it
would have to be the last option. He stated, essentially, that that was the logic of Gollum's developed character.
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10-17-2005, 12:55 PM | #5 | |
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Option C is most certainly out of the question as it runs contrary to the stated "facts" and, as for option D, well I can imagine that an alternative scenario, which retained the essence of the story, would have been possible. Option A it is then.
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10-17-2005, 01:00 PM | #6 | |
Cryptic Aura
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10-17-2005, 01:08 PM | #7 | |
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10-17-2005, 01:10 PM | #8 | |
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10-17-2005, 01:22 PM | #9 |
A Mere Boggart
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I'm with SpM on this one too. Though I can see that option D, that it was the only 'right' way for the story to end, is also quite a decent choice. I do happen to think that having Gollum trip and fall with the Ring was quite perfect. Gollum could not have functioned without the Ring; as shown in his pursuit of Frodo, he had become virtaully single minded on getting it. What if he had not got the Ring but had seen Frodo chuck it in? I'm sure Gollum would have either jumped in after it or else murdered Frodo there and then in anger.
As I've said so many times before, I love Gollum, he's one of my favourite characters in any book, but he simply could not go on after the Ring was unmade. What's more, he gains a kind of redemption by acting as he did. He would never have jumped in with the Ring wilfully; he'd have put it on and the Nazgul would have been after him and all hell would have been let loose.
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10-17-2005, 01:25 PM | #10 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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Also I agree with previous posters: Gollum tripped and fell. Wether the crucial false step was provoked by some unknown power or not can be discussed, but it's a pure hypothetical question. Only Eru knows But it seems as if it was Gollum's fate to destroy the ring, as Frodo couldn't, not just luck or the chance. To much depended on this event.
This was one of the scenes that I reacted strongest against in the movies. Would Frodo be responsible for Gollums death? The wrestling-to-death idea feels so wrong here. But that belongs to an other thread.
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10-17-2005, 02:32 PM | #11 |
Illustrious Ulair
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The problem with A is that it is too 'coincidental'. It reduces the end of Sauron to a fluke. For an 'accident' to save the whole world from disaster seems beyond belief. There must have been a purpose behind it, or it kind of makes all the struggles up to that point 'pointless'.
The problem with B is that it makes Eru a murderer. The problem with C is that he didn't jump. The problem with D is that it doesn't actually make sense I go for option n.... |
10-17-2005, 02:59 PM | #12 | |
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Of course, there is the whole issue that there is no reason why Gollum's slip can't both be a completely natural slip AND a fulfillment of the Divine Will...
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10-17-2005, 03:08 PM | #13 | |
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10-17-2005, 04:00 PM | #14 | |
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The 'point' to me is that the whole quest was the true battle, the true heroism. it was the getting there that was the difficult part. That Frodo then could not destroy the Ring and that it was destroyed by accident is beside the point - and in any case, having the Ring destroyed in this way would avoid making a kind of uber-hero, the all-conquering-Ring-destroyer (or something along the lines of grand hyperbole usually found in fantasy). to have that would only replace the Dark Lord with his opposite, an unbearably perfect hero. If it was a fluke that Sauron ended this way then that is just perfect, as it proves that despite having as much power as anyone could hope for, a simple accident can quite literally bring it all crashing down. It could be a lesson in pride?
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10-17-2005, 04:51 PM | #15 | |
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For that matter, if the very fact that he made Men (and Hobbits) mortal- thus killing even the healthiest of them in the end, is murder, then we have a major killer here... But I would contend that IF Eru "fated" Gollum to trip, that does not mean that he killed him. As far as fate goes, if Gollum was fated to trip, then Frodo was fated to go to Valinor, Isildur was fated to lose the Ring and die, and Turin was fated to kill himself. I don't personally think that Eru "pushed" Gollum (ie. Murdered him), but I do sense His hand in it...
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10-17-2005, 07:01 PM | #16 | |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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I'll take choice "e":
The story had to end this way because otherwise (assuming Frodo had destroyed the Ring), they would have had to let Gollum take the ship West from the Havens as a Ringbearer. Joking aside, I agree with Lalwende when she says: Quote:
Sentences. Paragraphs. I'll try again later.
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10-18-2005, 02:50 AM | #17 | |
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10-18-2005, 06:31 AM | #18 | |
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Davem, to draw on your argument from the Feanor - Self-Important? thread, might it be that Eru willed that Gollum be the instrument of the Ring's destruction but that Gollum had free-will as to precisely how he would play his part? Once he chose not to destroy it willingly or to aid Frodo in doing so, then the "accident" was the only means of bringing about that which was fated to occur.
The problem, of course, is that this sets Gollum an impossible task, as not even Frodo could bring himself to destroy the Ring willingly. Another thought occurs to me. Was there perhaps a way in which Gollum could "accidentally" have destroyed the Ring without falling into the Crack of Doom himself? Bęthberry asked me: Quote:
Any thoughts?
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10-18-2005, 07:01 AM | #19 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Whats worse for Eru, being a murderer, or subjecting the poor soul of Gollum to hundreds of years of pain and suffering?
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10-18-2005, 07:37 AM | #20 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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hmmm. i don't quite get the whole "eru is a murderer" arguement. Sauron was created as a fair being, a maia, to server the Valar. He was corrupted by Morgoth, but in reality, he made the choice to forsake the Valar (and Eru's will). Then, he was pardoned by the Valar, when they had every right to throw him into the Void. (And i think this would have been in concordance with Eru's will, just as it was to have Morgoth thrown into the Void.) But he scorned the Valar's free pardon and sank back into his old rebellion. I think any of these things are worthy of the wrath and doom of eru.
And i don't think that Eru can be guilty of "subjecting the poor soul of Gollum to hundreds of years of pain and suffering". Gollum could do anything he wanted. He could have thrown it away, or he could have not murdered Deagol (which is why, according to Gandalf, the ring had such a malicious effect on him, as oppsed to Bilbo's more benine effects), he could have passed it on, or any number of things. The fact is, he wanted to keep the ring, and this caused him to forsake all the things he loved (family, sunlight, trees, fields, etc.) and hide under teh mountains, where he was transformed into what we know of as gollum. Now, obviously the ring was a huge tempteation, but it was not unconquorable. Gandalf had nothing to do with it, even when it was freely offered him. Same for Galadriel. So i think that the blame for gollum falls squarely on his shoulders. Especially when he could have stayed nicely in Mirkwood eating elvin food and sleeping in elvin comfort. Like sauron, he decided to return to rebellion and misdeeds. I don't think you can hold Eru responsible for the choices gollum made. I think the slipping into the Cracks of Doom were the direct results of passed actions on Gollom's part. (if he had only left deagol alone, if he had only stayed in mirkwood, etc.)
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10-18-2005, 08:04 AM | #21 |
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Eonwe good points. I brought that question up because of the Eru as murderer topic. It's the whole free will issue, and how/why evil is allowed to happen. It's all so subjective and relative. Its a very human debate especially concerning the ringbearers. But, for arguments sake, let's conjecture.
If one subscribes to the idea that it's all free will, then the only other strength to the argument is chaos. It was a dumb-luck random event that Deagol saw something shiny in the river. Bilbo's hand fell on to the ring by sheer coincidence. Bilbo being on the Quest of Erebor just a happenstance, etc. No example of free will there, right? Dont even bring up what the ring willed (lol). The insertion of magical or fantastic elements just muddies up the picture to me. In this case, IMHO, the only thing the ring brings to the story at this point is that it is an actual physical manifistation of Evil on earth. The "free" choices made at Mt Doom by Frodo and Gollum are exactly the same: we are fallen creatures all of us. I dont read a lot of preachy overtones in the works, but I do subscribe to the idea that Gollum's life and death, as was Sauron's, Aragorn's, Galadriel's, Morgoth's etc etc were all part of Eru's plan. They all intertwine and they all had a purpose to fufill. Eru nudged Gollum, as much as he whispered in Gandalf's ear that Bilbo needed to go on the Quest. I go for A and B |
10-18-2005, 08:42 AM | #22 | |
Maundering Mage
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I choose that Eru willed it because of one main factor. As I have stated elsewhere if there is anyone that had right to know the will of Eru it would be Manwe. Well Manwe wasn't in Middle-earth at the time but his servant was. That to me means that Gandalf, as Manwe's servant and obviously the most "righteous" of the Istari, would be the logical choice for the recipient of what Eru's will would be. I believe he knew a bit of the will of Eru when he said
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And I don't believe that this makes Eru a murder in the least. His will is divine and without fault. Therefore when he gives life it's also his to take away whenever he deems it fit.
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10-18-2005, 10:07 PM | #23 |
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There's certainly more to this poll than meets the Eye. (Haha. )
As Formendacil had very cleverly put it, options A, B, and D are valid, at least for me. A and B have been already explained and debated upon. In my opinion, D is not exactly nonsensical. Come to think of it, had Frodo in any way willingly thrown the Ring, that would make him a hero far more than Gandalf or Aragorn had been, or could ever be. Frodo then would have done something Isildur had not done, Saruman would have not done, and Gandalf admitted he could not have done. The concept of the Fellowship and their division (physically) would not make sense if in the end Frodo swept all victory into his hands. But if we're talking direct cause, it would be A of course. Last edited by Lhunardawen; 10-18-2005 at 10:19 PM. |
10-19-2005, 02:25 AM | #24 | |
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10-19-2005, 02:44 AM | #25 | |
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But seriously, to me when it is said that the hand of Eru was involved in the demise of Gollum and the Ring, it is the same as saying it was Fate which made it happen. And to say it was God or Fate or Eru which caused something to happen is a way of expressing that which we cannot explain. Really, the chance that Gollum tripped up, and the idea that Eru caused it to happen are two sides of the same coin. We can either say "wow, how lucky for Middle-earth that Gollum fell over his own feet" or we can say "whoa, it was Fate" or we can say "Eru caused this to happen". Really, saying that Eru had a hand in it, is just trying to fix a solid point in the chaos of chance; we can either accept chance or attribute it to higher powers.
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10-19-2005, 07:44 AM | #26 | |
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Interesting voting and comments so far – to be honest I thought that option B would be way out in front, and that option D would attract hardly any attention at all (although I would have bet a month’s salary that Bethberry was going to vote that way – old narratologists die hard… )
My vote, for what it’s worth, is option C, which looks as though I shall once again be in the extreme minority. I know that it may appear mad to say that Gollum jumped in to the fire on purpose, but hear me out. In “The Black Gate is Closed,” Frodo says to Gollum: Quote:
Now, I’m not arguing that when Gollum gets the Ring he remembers this conversation and concludes that Frodo’s order now automatically applies, and so he must throw himself into the fire. That would be too simple (although it is tempting to see the last shred of Gollum that may be Smeagol at work here – that bit of goodness awakened and nurtured by Frodo is so horrified by Gollum’s betrayal, and so terrified of being lost forever, that it sub- or unconsciously makes Gollum step too far…I don’t really buy this, but it’s an interesting idea at the very least). OK, so what is my argument then… Well, I suppose that I would say that this option (Gollum jumped in on purpose) contains within it all of the other options. First, yes it was an accidental slip insofar as Gollum did not think “I must go into the fire now with the Ring.” But, his fate is also part of The Plan, so Eru was there making sure that good triumphs over evil. But He was not in command of it all – as Gandalf points out time and again, there is no puppet master in the sky; all the events and actions of the story are the result of free will – so Gollum wasn’t pushed, but it wasn’t really just an accident. That's why I quoted that conversation from earlier, since it's prettly clearly laid out there, well in advance of the story's climax, that Frodo putting on the Ring will entail Gollum's destruction. So either this is the wildest coincidence ever (and there's no such thing as coincidence in a fictional tale under the control of an author) or there's some kind of cause and effect relation between Frodo claiming the Ring and Gollum dying. Finally, option C also includes option D insofar as by having the tale end this way (with Gollum going into the fire accidentally-on-purpose) Tolkien was able to leave the fabric of his story whole, without reducing it with gross over-simplification. As Bethberry has pointed out in the CbC thread, the journey up Mount Doom is a complex and subtle re-enactment of the soul’s journey – to have the conclusion of that quest clearly rendered as the result either of accident or design would be to remove the complexity of that moment and of the whole tale’s exploration of the relation between free will and fate, moral action and choice, guilt and culpability, forgiveness an fault. If Gollum had clearly jumped on his own, or if an angelic minister had come to throw him in – would this moment be even a bit as interesting and powerful as it is? I daresay that in the end, the whole enchantment of the story hangs upon this moment insofar as we know that Gollum went in “on purpose” but that, in the end, what that purpose may be is hard (if not impossible) for us to really understand.
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10-19-2005, 12:25 PM | #27 | ||
Cryptic Aura
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Quote:
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I suspect also that, narratologically, having Gollem simply die of old age once the Ring is destroyed would lack some of the climactic energy and shock which his fall into the Crack of Doom has. It might also fail to give an emotional satisfaction to those who like to see villians get their comeuppance. Of course, here the narratological imperative runs counter to the moral impulse.
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10-19-2005, 01:36 PM | #28 | |
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I think that leaves Frodo even more in need of forgiveness. |
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10-19-2005, 10:00 PM | #29 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
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I can't vote, because options 1, 2 and 4 all apply. Option 1 - obvious. He slipped. Duh.
Option 2 - Well, of course, it was Eru's will that he slip. Bilbo was meant to find the Ring -- by who? Eru obviously. And, the Gandalf quote about Gollum having some part to play before the end has already been cited. Option 4 - This is THE only way the Ring could have been destroyed, and is also the only way the climax can wrap up perfectly; both of those are IMHO. Tolkien says that Gollum COULD have, in another situation, voluntarily cast himself and the Ring into the Crack. I disagree (the author IS after all sometimes wrong in his Letters), putting forth the premise that the will of the Ring prevails over all others, especially at Mount Doom. And it is perfectly fitting that, after all that Frodo and Sam and Gandalf and Aragorn and all the rest do, in the end the destruction of the Ring is beyond their power. One slip from the one least likely (in theory) to destroy it -- and Middle-earth is saved. Finally, though I realize it is not the topic, I would like to say that I see no difference between Eru and God, any more than I see a difference between Aslan and Jesus. Sure, He's in a different world, with different situations to deal with, but where's the real difference? We can infer from The Silmarillion that Eru is all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-good. We know from the Athrabeth that Tolkien was apparently so concerned with the connection between M-E and our own world (at one point) that he detailed Eru's Incarnation. Eru is God. There is no doubt in my mind that Tolkien would agree. His God (and mine) transcends worlds, and reaches even into the ones that we humans create. "God is the Lord, of angels, and of men -- and of elves." Sorry, I know that's off-topic, but it is related to the topic, since Eru's authority has been called into question. And it still can be, since you may not (and some obviously do not) agree with me. Perhaps a separate thread should be begun on this topic???
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10-20-2005, 02:12 AM | #30 | |
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Also, is that the only one to one correspondence you see in the book? Do you see Frodo, or Aragorn as Christ? I think Eru=God is at the most extreme end of allegorical interpretation of the Legendarium. Tolkien's mind (anymore than any created being's) could not encompass the fullness & complexity of God - he would have to be greater than God in order to do that. He could only possibly know as much of God as God chose to reveal to him & 'you can't get a quart into a pint pot', as my old gaffer used to say |
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10-20-2005, 11:20 AM | #31 | |
Dead Serious
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Once I am done, I have a picture of God caring for a repentant sinner. It is not an allegory, nor is it a true story or a representation of one. It is, for all intents and purposes, a story. So, I ask you then, is the God in my picture different than the God in Heaven? Yes, I agree that he is insofar as he is a painted object in my painting and the creator of all things in Heaven. However, within the confines of the painting, within the image, is there any reason to say that it is NOT as much God to the painted man as God Himself is to me? What you seem to be saying, Master Davem, is that it is not possible for Man to write about God. I would put forward that this is a false premise. Man has been writing about God for thousands of years. He's the main character in the Bible. And if God can be written about in a non-fiction work, even though none of the writers or the others characters can really, or did really, understand Him, then why is it so impossible for him to be written into a fictional work as well? You base your premise that one CANNOT say that Eru is God because no one can know God completely. Well, as far as that goes, you can't know me completely. You can't know Mister Underhill completely. You can't even know Lalwende completely. It is a fact of human nature that we can NEVER know someone completely, entirely, totally. Does that stop us from writing about them? No. Look at the abundance of biographies and, more pertinent to the discussion, historical novels, many of which were written by people who weren't even born at the time they occured. But they include real people, and they are, within the book, intended to be everything to the other characters (real or fictional) what they were to the people of their own time and period. If it is possible then to write a fictional novel about fictional characters that incorporates real people into a story, with those real people being everything to the fictional characters that they were to their own contemporaries, then why is it so impossible to wriate a fictional epic about fictional characters that incorporates God into a story, with God being everything to that fictional world that he is to ours?
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10-20-2005, 01:14 PM | #32 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I put Gollum's slipping to be the work of the ring. A horrible side-effect is the ring got itself destroyed. I come to this conclusion because of the promise made by Gollum to Frodo by the ring.
"It will hold you. But it is more treacherous than you are. It may twist your words. Beware!" Frodo to Gollum. Since Gollum broke his promise to serve Frodo, the ring punished Gollum.
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10-20-2005, 01:20 PM | #33 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I surmise, therefore I am
Both Form's and Davem's points have validity. I am guilty as anyone in illustrating a point that is really, at best, a conjecture, or a conjecture to the author's intention of the subject. Knowing what I think the author had originally invisioned as far as the Legendarium goes, I am translating a certain "theology" (of my own imagination) into LOTR. Fact is, there is (as, of course, totally intended by the author) no mention of Eru in LOTR. There is mention of Varda/Elbereth, which connects the whole deific structure that the Ainulindalë, Valaquenta, and the Akallabęth references (I think the Akallabęth most important to this subject - as it is the direct source of the accounts of Elendil and co., Of the Rings of Power, plus - the kicker IMO to the subject - the relase of Vala gaurdianship of Ea, and its breaking).
Where some might read magic, or good story-boarding, I read the nuance of the Divine influence in ME. Not elf divine or Manwe divine, but Divine. Very discretely and subtely inserted into the story by the author. The Valar can no longer ride in and save the day at this point, or any point after the breaking, even though it's always been one of their own that's caused all the evil. So, I read LOTR as it's written, a novel. It's part of the whole (legendarium), but it's more than history of events written by a scribe. It's translated from it, and been fairy taled. It's closed circuit, as it were. More than a hobbit's tale - it is a study of the human condition, life and death and the divine. Any direct parallels to our God are up to the reader to decide. But, there is only One..,, |
10-20-2005, 01:54 PM | #34 | |
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I suppose a Christian would say that the Bible is not a case of men writing about God, but of God telling Men about Himself. As to whether its actually possible to write about God, according to many mystics it simply isn't (cf The Cloud of Unknowing & Dioysius the Areopagite). Even if Tolkien meant Eru=God, we are still free to question whether he was right in his portrayal, so we can question his depiction of the Deity - just as we could question whether your painting of God is a fitting depiction - I may think its completely wrong (a Muslim or Jew, for instance, would find it blasphemous, as their faith rejects all graven images). So Eru, as an idea of Tolkien's, is open to question. Would God behave like Eru? I think that would require some pretty heavy proof. |
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10-20-2005, 01:55 PM | #35 |
Gibbering Gibbet
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Ok, that's it, I am now officially renaming this poll:
How many Downers can dance on the point of an Eru? |
10-20-2005, 01:58 PM | #36 | |
Illustrious Ulair
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10-20-2005, 04:33 PM | #37 | |
Dead Serious
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So Eru is not a perfect image of God. That is granted. No one knows God perfectly, so no one can make a perfect image of Him. However, if Eru is intended to be God within the Legendarium, with all the powers and attributes of God, an assumption that seems likely, then any queries concerning Eru's workings withing the Legendarium should logically be answerable by looking at God. If Eru+Arda = Image of God+Earth, then the actions of Eru should equally the actions of God as they would most likely occur in the same circumstances. Of course, the image of God varies from religion to religion, from sect to sect. Tolkien was, however, a very orthodox, and well-read, Catholic. As the creator of Eru, if Eru=Image of God, then Eru ought to have all the attributes of the God of Catholicism.
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I prefer history, true or feigned.
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10-20-2005, 05:13 PM | #38 |
Wight
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On a lighter note...
I like to think of Eru as Tolkien himself... He created beings from his own conscious and created a 'world' or universe... Maybe Eru is really just an artist creating things for no reason other than it feels good for him to do so? I think that maybe if he is viewed as some kind of Deity things become a little too complicated...We start to ask all these questions, like is he responsible for this? And did he have a hand in this? Why did he will this to happen? And then we start to think of all the moral implications, is he a murderer? And such like. If we call him and artist it's much easier to say that everything is his creation and it is as if he is the author writing a novel, so everything happened that way just because it seemed good to him for it to do so.
I think that Gollum slipped. Obviously if Eru is the author of the Middle-Earth novel than he also willed it, but primarily in my opinion, Gollum slipped and that's all there is to it.
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Ú cilith ‘war. Ú men ‘war. Boe min mebi. Boe min bango. |
10-21-2005, 03:00 AM | #39 | |
Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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Well, they should. I suppose we can either compare Eru with God (specifically the Catholic conception of God) & ask if He lives up to that comparison - if its a good comparison or not - or we can treat Eru as a character in His own right & ask what kind of 'God' He is & analyse His motives & behaviour. Is Eru morally Good - ie does He do things that we consider to be 'Good' things - protect the weak, feed the hungry, heal the sick, guide His children in the ways of 'righteousness', etc, or is He 'merely' (as Celebuial suggests) an 'artist'? The danger of thinking Eru=God is that we project our beliefs about God onto Eru (God is Good, Eru is God therefore Eru is Good) without stopping to ask ourselves if Eru's behaviour is Good. In short, I think Eru=God is 'assuming that which is to be proved'. |
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10-21-2005, 04:12 AM | #40 |
Pile O'Bones
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: London
Posts: 23
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I could only vote for number 1 in the poll, as it is the only one that is indisputable. However, as others have pointed out, it's probably a mixture of 1, 2 and 4.
As for the Eru=God idea, it's not something I've ever thought about much, but my take on it is that Eru is less like the benevolent Christian God that we all know and love (!), but slightly more like the chaotic Gods of Greek and Roman legend - specifically Zeus/Jupiter. So, while I know it's probably a bit lazy (and possibly sacrilegious by Mr Marley's exacting standards ), but Eru=God (but not our God) works for me as a general rule. |
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