Argonath on the River. Artwork by Veke (Vedrana Bosnjak) at stock.xchng
That there should be similarities between the presuppositions of of The
Lord of the Rings and Tolkien's Catholic faith is to be expected given
Tolkien's views on Christianity and myth. Regarding the gospel story Tolkien
wrote, "The gospels contain a fairy-story, or a story of a larger
kind which embraces all the essences of fairy-stories."(3) Since all myths are subordinate to the overarching "myth," it
would be surprising if parallels were not found between greater and lesser.
This is certainly true where the author consciously recognizes his archetype.
If he has at all grasped its form and meaning, if the archetype has at
all succeeded in working its way to his heart, then it must also work
its way to his pen.
The essence of the gospel and of fairy-tales is, in Tolkien's own word,
euchatastrophe--the surprising, hopeful turn in all man's despair and
sorrow. Joy is the result, a brief glimpse springing out of the inherent
evangelium of the genre.(4)This
is the dominant note of, and even the apology for, fairy-tales.
Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy is set in a pre-Christian
world. Hence it cannot adopt an explicit Christianity. Nonetheless it
can, and does, shadow Christianity just as the Old Testament pre-shadowed
the New, although admittedly Tolkien's is a post-view set as a pre-view.
The Christian types to be found in The Lord of the Rings which
we will examine are of two sorts: shared world view and shared symbols.
The first category embraces such distinctly philosophical issues as good
and evil, historical perspective, freewill and predestination, grace,
mercy, providence, judgment and redemption. The development of these themes
in The Lord of the Rings is Christian or at least Hebraic.
Shared imagery is no less important to the tenor of the whole work. An
example of shared imagery is the antithesis of dark and light so evident
in both John the Apostle and Tolkien. Observe the close connection between
Haldir's statement, "But whereas the light perceives the very heart
of darkness, its own secret has not been discovered,"(5)and
John's "The light shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not
understood it."(6)
Focusing on the shared world view, we see that Tolkien's work embodies
a definitely Judeo-Christian view of good and evil. Even is seen as perverted
or fallen good. Perhaps the best expression of this characteristically
Judeo-Christian viewpoint comes when Elrond, the high elf, says, "Nothing
is evil in the beginning. Even Sauron was not so."(7)Evil
is also seen as self-destructive--a theme which cannot be divorced from
scripture.(8)Evil
is self-blinded, too. That which it does in malice, that which seems to
be its greatest victory, proves to be its own undoing. No clearer illustration
of this truth is possible than Christ's resurrection which proved to be
the surprising undoing of Satan's greatest triumph. The fiend underwent
a devastating and unlooked for humiliation in achieving this victory.(9)It
is akin to Sauron's defeat at the moment he was gloating in the stupidity
of the march of Aragorn and his meagre six thousand to the gates of Mordor.
Another aspect of evil developed in Tolkien is the insatiable hunger
to possess, to rule, to dominate. The Bible captures the same idea with
pictures of locusts, of the sword, of wild beasts, of striving kings,
and of Satan going about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he might devour.
"Devouring" is an apt symbolization of insatiable lust. It closely
parallels the Trilogy's symbol "hunger." In contradistinction
to evil beings, good creatures are filled and satisfied over and again.
They even partake of foods which are magically sustaining--miruvor and
lembas. These two elements also serve to remind us of the water and bread
of life.
C. S. Lewis conceived of devils as mirthless. Since "humor involves
a sense of proportion and power of seeing yourself from the outside...we
must picture Hell as a state where everyone is perpetually concerned about
his own dignity and advancement, where everyone has a grievance, and where
everyone lives the deadly serious passions of envy, self-importance, and
resentment..."(10)
Tolkien's view of evil beings has much in common with this of Lewis.
Laughter is the domain of good; cruel mockery and joyless mirth is attributable
to evil. The latter is always devoid of refreshment. One wonders how Tolkien
viewed the widespread acceptance of put-downs and cruel repartee as popular
forms of entertainment.
One last example will suffice to show the close similarity Tolkien's Ring sustains to the Christian dilineation of good and evil. This
is desolation. With the fall came the curse, with evil barreness: foul
wilderness, grimy desert, salton marsh. The Lord of the Rings presses
home this point again and again: Isengard's smokes and fumes, Mordor's
ash, wanton slashing by orcs, brown lands, and the vicious hewing down
of the shire's trees. One catches a theme from Hosea in this: the birds
and fish languish because of Israel's sin.(11)Fruitfulness
for Tolkien, as for the Christian, is the joy of the good. Even the fact
that The Lord of the Rings places rational creatures as masters
of nature is significant. It is not a viewpoint one would necessarily
find in (for example) a Hindu myth.
We turn now to The Lord of the Ring's view of history. Willis
B. Glover remarks, "Tolkien's novel is a history not only in that
its form is a narrative based on documents (eg.: The Red Book) that indicates
a continuity with our own time, but also in that it presents events through
which a future is being created by the actions of rational creatures."
Glover considers Tolkien's sense of history as more Biblical than is usual
in the modern novel, because The Ring ever suggests the existence
of an "unnamed authority" to whom the actors are responsible
and who works in history in ways inscrutable to finite creatures.(12)History
transcends nature, is open ended, unrepetitive, and a creative interaction
of God and men in nature. All modern history comes from one work: The
City of God by Augustine of Hippo, which in turn found its beginning,
middle, and end in Biblical creation the ages of man, and the final apocalypse.
Tolkien's history is of this kind, rather than pagan cyclicism.
Because of history's open-endedness and the input of God and man, both
free will and predestination intertwine. Out of respect for freedom, Gandalf,
Elrond, and other good leaders consistently refuse to coerce those over
whom they exercise authority (except in punishment, as with Saruman when
his wand is broken) insisting instead upon the liberty each has to make
choices, and directing a measure of rational persuasion wherever it seems
essential. (In this way, Gandalf persuades Theoden, King of the Mark).
Yet, because of his high position in Hobbit esteem, or indeed in the esteem
of all free peoples, a word from Gandalf bears almost the force of a command.
This insistance on free-will seems almost to contradict the story's underlying
assumption of providential predestination. Frodo is told, for instance,
that he is free to take or leave the great ring and yet Elrond--in almost
the same breath--assures him that to take it is his fate.(13)Thus
Tolkien maintains both elements and presents choice as a crucial event.
Where evil abounds, there must grace the more abound. Grace is not a
fully developed theme in this pre-Christian world; but it is present.
Much has been said in the literature of the providence which finally destroys
the great ring through the greed of Gollum when Hobbit frailty was unable
to do so. Undoubtedly this is a key aspect of the story, especially when
we recall the numbr of merciful acts on the part of goodfolk which allowed
Gollum to survive to become the destroyer of the ring. Important as this
development is, I think the repentance offered the fallen is no less worthy
of attention.
Of all those to whom repentance was offered, only Boromir accepted it.
It has always been a disappointment to me that no one else repented. Especially
disappointing was the eventual loss of Gollum. At one time he stood very
near redemption, but Sam's suspicion pushed him back, and he soon after
attempted his most vile deed, the attempted murder of Frodo by Shelob.
Not one person with whom serious persuasion was used--Saruman, Gollum,
Wormtongue--was able to change course.
There are whole classes of fallen which appear unreedemable. These are
the orcs, trolls, balrogs, etc. In many ways their graceless existence
seems akin to that of devils or demons. In other ways, this is not so;
they remind the reader of those groups of people whom Israel was told
to annihilate as if none were capable of salvation, because their wickedness
was full.
In Tolkien's Middle Earth, each person receives his just deserts. Justice,
while tempered with mercy, is inexorable in the end. For his betrayal
of Frodo, Boromir dies of orc arrows. In remembrance of his repentance,
however, he dies honorably; but it is death all the same, and flows as
a direct consequence of his treachery; it was he who scattered the fellowship
of the ring and made them vulnerable to attack.
Sauron, after bringing desolation to much of the world, is fated to gnaw
himself through endless ages. Gnawing one's tongue is a symbol also used
in the Bible of eternal doom. Even Frodo is penalized for his final failure
at the brink of the chasm. He has a wound which will always give him pain.
The same could be said also of Bilbo. Frodo's penalty may even include
self-exile from Middle Earth.(14)Examples
could be multiplied, but the list would be too long. One facet of Justice
emerging from The Lord of the Rings is the incapacity of repentance
to forestall just dessert.
For all that, hope is a dominant note of the trilogy: hope despite darkness,
fear, or pessimism. Hope is possible only in a Christian world. It makes
no sense to a non-believer; hence the despair of modern man in this post-Christian
age. In any given situation neither characters in books nor their counterparts
in the more complex real world know in what their choices will result.
So limited is our vision and theirs, that circumstances and evil seem
omnipotent. Without hope, such times would overwhelm the anxious heart.
Such hope is found in the certitude of God, the Unseen Mover.
The Christian element I find among the most appealing is individual worth
and responsibility. Even the smallest hobbit has great potential; indeed,
only in Sauron's lands are the merits of individuality ignored. There,
everyone has a number and not everyone a name. More explicitly Christian
is the notion of the small thing, the weak and simple, overthrowing the
wise and powerful.
Of all the elements remaining to be discussed, the most neglected among
reviewers are the virtues of patience and perseverance. These two qualities,
along with fidelity and humility, win the war for the free peoples. It
is just the absence of these same characteristics which overthrows Sauron,
despite his long years of patient brooding.
Having mentioned fidelity, perhaps I should note the stress Tolkien places
on this virtue, for while he illustrates the others often enough, he indoctrinates
us with this one. There are numerous examples and remarks decrying the
hideous practice of oath-breaking, the need of oath-keeping, the sobriety
with which oaths are to be sworn. This is biblical and in stark contrast
to (say) the oathbreaking of Guthrum with Alfred the Great after swearing
on his sacred bracelet. Whatever deadly price must be paid, an oath once
made is sacred. We do not always remember what a nasty pincers the Israelites
put themselves in when they made their treaty with Gibeon--war against
the united forces of Southern Palestine. Yet, they fulfilled their pledge
and it brought them their greatest victory.
Such is the message of Tolkien. When Faramir advises Frodo to break oath
with Gollum, we think it wrong. This message is not to be disregarded,
but one fears it too often was in the history of the church from which
Tolkien draws his springs of virtue. And every war in history has been
fought over the shards of a broken treaty.
One further Christian element I do not wish to neglect. This is resurrection.
Every hero in the story goes toward his death and, against all hope, returns.
Gandalf is the clearest picture, for we actually believe him dead for
several chapters when he falls in Moria. Gimli, Aragorn, Legolas, and
Pippin ride to Mordor's deadly gates while Sam and Frodo trudge helplessly
to Mount Doom. With Eowyn and Faramir, Merry lies at the brink of death
in the Houses of Healing. Yet each is finally plucked from death to stand
greater than before and to fill a higher role, just as Christ after death
ascended.
Other Messianic overtones in The Lord of the Rings may not be
so obvious. Frodo patiently bears a "cross." Aragorn has titles
remniscent of Christ, a bride to gain, and a kingdom to enter. The return
of the heroes has eschatalogical overtones remniscent of Pauline or Johannine
theology.
As we noted in the opening paragraph of this essay, Tolkien employs biblical
symbols. Light and bride have already been mentioned. Others which come
to mind are healing leaves, deep-rooted trees, pure water, precious jewels,
ashes, redness as the color of sin, and secret sources of life. The sleeplessness
of evil, so terrible in The Ring, is clearly the antithesis of
blessedness. God grants to his beloved ones sleep.(15)
So far I have dealt with The Lord of the Rings as a Christian
book, but it is only fair to turn briefly to a few elements which might
seem both doubtful and out of place in such a definition. The greatest
lack is Christ. Despite Messianic overtones, he has no place in the trilogy.
Neither is there any atonement for sins or communion with the spirit world.
Worship is most nearly approximated, suggests Sandra L. Meisel, in the
free-folks' delight in beauty and nature.(16)
As we have noted, there is also a real lack of forgiveness of sin. To
evade corruption, a being is furthermore cast entirely upon the resources
of his nature and his friends. He has no help from the Holy Spirit. Thus
it is obvious that I have used the term "Christian" most loosely.
Tolkien makes no really Christian demand of his readers. At the same time
it is fair to add that a Christian reader will not find the book opposed
to his faith. It is at the very least decent reading--and if one looks
at its literary qualities, much more than that.
Those qualities of the book which are most likely to come under heavy
fire for being unchristian are warfare, magic, and sexism. Sexism I will
not examine.
Warfare is an aspect of Tolkien which pacifist critics might deplore
as unchristian. Against this the defense will have to argue that war is
not always wrong. As long as the entire cosmos is a vast battleground
between forces of good and evil, there must be a wars in the physical
as well as the spiritual arena. In a moment of profound observation, Chesterton
noted that there are some cultures and systems so utterly anti-thetical
to one's own, that one can desire nothing but their annihilation.(17)At
any rate, warfare with unremitting slaughter was characteristic of the
pre-Christian era.
Magic, the second element needing defence, seems at first sight less
defensible. Has it not always been anathema in the Judeo-Christian tradition?
There are distinct differences, however, between the magic in Tolkien,
and magic, even white magic, as we know it. The magic of the pure is first
of all latent power. Either you have it or you do not. It is never an
attempt to seize power from outside oneself: that is sorcery. Spells never,
absolutely never, are applied to people. Only objects receive them. Gandalf
comes closest to using his magic against persons. He fights with his wand.
Magic in The Ring is benevolent when good, and is uplifting. In
a sense it symbolizes the supernatural or spiritual aspect of things which
otherwise is lacking.
Tolkien's good magic does not show the invidious disregard for God and
man which earthly magic must. When we turn to black magic, we see that
those who use the machinery of magic (such as the palantirs and rings),
are injured or destroyed by that machinery. Never once--and this is to
Tolkien's credit--are we allowed to see black magic close up, its rites
and sorcery. Angmar is called a sorcerer; his sorcery is never shown,
but like all sorcerers fell under the power of the Black Lord.
Those who peer into powers not meant for them, especially shadow powers,
are snared by the shadow. Tolkien clearly illustrates this in Saruman's
case. Elrond pounds the message home, saying, "It is perilous to
study too deeply the arts of the enemy, for good or for ill."(18)
All the same, the resurgence of interest in myths, the occult, and fantasy
which Tolkien and C. S. Lewis (among others) engendered in the evangelical
community is to be deplored. There seems to be a serious erosion of the
uniqueness of Christian teaching.
This caveat aside, Tolkien's work is a monument of genius against which
all other fantasies can aptly be compared. In general, The Lord of
the Rings has an enduring quality lacking to much other fantasy, because
it is built on permanent principles. Right and wrong do not change; Tolkien's
absolutes are built on Christianity. the moral principles of tolkien justify
his work. Despite casteism, sexism, sterotypes, and (sometimes) bad poetry,
it remains a clear, beautiful, and moving appeal to our noblest impulses.
Could Tolkien have bettered the moral tone of the work? Probably not.
More Christ would have endangered the work with sacrilege. More platitudes
would have made it a bore. No, J. R. R. Tolkien has blended his multifarious
elements with unparalleled wit, scholarship, and charm. The Lord of
the Rings stands as a unique testimony to the power of a Christian
pen.
- J. R. R. Tolkien. "On Fairy Stories,"
in Essays Presented to Charles Williams, edited by C. S. Lewis.
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1973) p.83.[back]
- Idem, The Lord of the Rings, Volume
I (New York: Ballantine Books, 1969) xi. [back]
- Idem, "Fairy-Stories," p. 83.
[back]
- Ibid., p. 81.[back]
- Lord of the Rings (hereafter LOTR)
Volume I, page 456 (hereafter I-456).[back]
- John 1:5. All Biblical quotations are
from the New International Version. [back]
- LOTR I-351. [back]
- Psalm 7:15; Proverbs 1:10-19; Galatians
6:7,8. [back]
- I Corinthians 2:8 and Colossains 3:15.
[back]
- Lewis, C. S. The Screwtape Letters. (New York: Macmillan paperbacks, 1970) p. ix. [back]
- Hosea 4. [back]
- Glover, Willis B. "The Christian
Character of Tolkien's Invented World," Criticism 13 (Winter
1971): pp 39-53.[back]
- I-354,55. [back]
- Miller, David M. "The Moral Universe
of J. R. R. Tolkien," The Tolkien Papers, ten papers prepared
for the Tolkien festival at Mankato State College (1966) pp. 51-61. [back]
- Psalm 127:2. [back]
- Miesel, Sandra L. "Some Religious
Aspects of The Lord of the Rings." Riverside Quarterly III
(August 1968) pp. 209-213. [back]
- Chesterton, Gilbert Keith. The Everlasting
Man. (New York, Garden City: Apollo Editions) pp. 158-77.[back]
- I-347. [back]
Additonal References
- Auden, W. H. "Good and Evil in The Lord of the Rings." Critical
Quarterly 10 (Spring/Summer 1968) pp 138-42.
- ------------ "A World Imaginary but Real." Encounter 3 (November, 1954) pp. 59-62.
- Callahan, Patrick J. "Animism and Magic in Tolkien's The Lord of
the Rings." Riverside Quarterly, Volume 14 No. 4 (March 1971)
pp. 240-250.
- Kocher, Paul Harold. Master of Middle Earth; the Fiction of J. R.
R. Tolkien. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1972.
- Meisel, Sandra L. "Some Motifs and Sources for The Lord of the
Rings." Riverside Quarterly 3 (March 1968) pp. 125-8.
- Pfotenhauer, Paul. "Christian Themes in Tolkien." Cresset 32 (January 1969) pp. 13-15.
- Sale, Roger. "England's Parnassus: C. S. Lewis, Charles Williams,
and J. R. R. Tolkien." Hudson Review 17 (Summer, 1964) pp.
203-225.
>
- Stimpson, Catherine R. J. R. R. Tolkien. Columbia Essays on Modern
Authors #41. New York:Columbia University Press, 1969.
- Urang, Gunnar. Shadows of Heaven: Religion and Fantasy in the Writings
of C. S. Lewis, Charles Williams and J. R. R. Tolkien. Philadelphia:
Pilgrim Press, 1971.