
J.R.R. Tolkien's Sanctifying Myth
BRADLEY BIRZERIn his writings and in his life, J.R.R. Tolkien believed that true myth allows us to see things as they were meant to be, prior to the Fall.
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J.R.R.
Tolkien (1892-1973)
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So says
Bradley Birzer, assistant professor of history at Hillsdale College and author
of J.R.R. Tolkien's Sanctifying Myth: Understanding Middle-earth (ISI
Books). Birzer shared with ZENIT his views on how Tolkien grounded the myth
of The Lord of the Rings in Christian reality.
Q:
How does Tolkien's Catholicism impregnate his worldview and his fiction?
Birzer: Tolkien wrote in an oft-quoted
letter to a close friend in 1953 that The Lord of the Rings is of course
a fundamentally religious and Catholic work; unconsciously so at first, but consciously
in the revision. And Tolkien was a devout and practicing Catholic throughout most
of his life. According to his son Michael, Roman Catholicism "pervaded all his
thinking, beliefs and everything else."
Indeed, Tolkien was very public
about his faith. He once told an audience of Oxford dons, when it was rather unpopular
to be open about one's religious beliefs, that as much as he loved his academic
specialty, philology, it was unnecessary for salvation. Tolkien, though, was much
more cautious in his expression of his faith than was his closest friend, C.S.
Lewis.
Tolkien believed that the true Christian should be an artist,
not a propagandist. In other words, Tolkien rather strongly argued in his academic
as well as mythological works that one should use what T.S. Eliot called the "moral
imagination." He should seek the higher, timeless truths, but put them in a new
light.
The artist becomes a "sub-creator," made in the image of God,
the Creator. But, the human idea of sub-creation is to glorify Creation, never
to mock or pervert it.
Tolkien rejected the idea of art for art's sake,
or innovation for innovation's sake. There was a truth, and the artist was especially
gifted to tap into that truth. To abuse the gift of artistry for one's own glorification
is to turn enchantment to power and domination.
Q:
What are some of the main religious symbols in Tolkien's Middle-earth
legendarium?
Birzer: In "The Lord
of the Rings," several religious symbols exist.
My personal favorite
is the Elvish Lembas, translated as the "way bread" or "life bread." Even one
piece of the bread can sustain a person for a day. Tolkien wrote that it "fed
the will," and certainly without it, neither Frodo nor Sam would have made the
journey across Mordor and up Mount Doom.
For Tolkien, nothing represented
a greater gift from God than the actual Body and Blood of Christ. "I put before
you the one great thing to love on earth: the Blessed Sacrament," Tolkien wrote
to his son Michael. "There you will find romance, glory, honor, fidelity and the
true way of all your loves upon earth."
Tolkien once experienced a holy
vision while praying before the Blessed Sacrament. "I perceived or thought of
the Light of God and in it suspended one small mote (or millions of motes to only
one of which was my small mind directed), glittering white because of the individual
ray from the Light which both held."
Tolkien also witnessed his guardian
angel in the vision, not as a go-between but as the personalization of "God's
very attention."
There are other Catholic symbols as well. Frodo, Gandalf
and Aragorn each represent the different offices of Christ: respectively priest,
prophet and king. Each of these characters places himself in harm's way for the
greater good; each is willing to lay down his life for his brother.
When
Gandalf faces the Balrog, he not only accepts death, but he names his master,
the Secret Fire. According to what Tolkien told a friend, the Secret Fire was
the Holy Spirit.
There are also several Marian figures throughout The
Lord of the Rings. The most important, I think, is Elbereth, a Vala, or archangel,
to whom Sam prays as he thrusts Sting, the Elvish sword, into Shelob.
As
Tolkien admitted, the Mother of Christ provided him with all of his understanding
of "beauty in majesty and simplicity."
Q: How
does Tolkien provide a social and ethical worldview through myth?
Birzer:
Because Tolkien touches on timeless truths, it is impossible for his
mythology not to provide a social and ethical worldview. Myth, Tolkien believed,
touched each person at a very deep level.
One can, therefore, easily
abuse myth, using it incorrectly, as, for example, Richard Wagner or Adolf Hitler
did. True myth, though, drew its inspiration from the incarnation, death and resurrection
of Christ. Tolkien wrote in his academic essay, "On Fairy-Stories," that to reject
the Christ story is to lead to either sadness or wrath.
Q:
In your book, you write that Tolkien's mythical world is essentially
truer than the one we think we see around us every day. Briefly, can you explain
your argument?
Birzer: Only since
the so-called Enlightenment have intellectuals en masse turned to studying primarily
the material world at the expense of the spiritual world.
But man is
the "metaxy," the "in between." He is flesh and spirit. To ignore one at the expense
of the other is to verge very quickly into heresy; the results of such false materialism
are all around us: the gulags, the holocaust camps and the killing fields are
their unholy monuments.
God did not enter man at the conception of Jesus
God became flesh. The soul and the flesh became one. Tolkien and the Inklings,
following the Catholic and Romantic traditions behind them, rejected the scientistic
worldview.
Myth, Tolkien believed, allowed us to see things as they were
meant to be, prior to the Fall. When we look at another human person, we should
imagine him as he will be in heaven, as a fully sanctified being.
The
Eucharist, for example, is a true myth. We could never explain transubstantiation
in modern, materialist terms, but we believe and know it to be the real, actual
body and blood of Christ. Again, it is the spirit becoming one with the material.
Q: In your research for the book,
what evidence did you find of Tolkien's social and political views?
Birzer:
Tolkien rarely talked about politics in terms of parties. It seems
rather clear, though, that Tolkien would have felt most comfortable with traditionalist
English conservatism along the lines of Edmund Burke.
He despised ideologues
of any stripe: communists, Nazis and fascists. He also held a strong bitterness
against liberals and liberalism of any kind. He was certainly a man of his generation,
and his views fit in very well with other traditionalist Roman Catholics in England.
English Roman Catholics tended to distrust liberals and liberalism not
only as anti-clerical but also as conformist and statist. Tolkien once described
himself as a philosophical anarchist. But he believed that true anarchy would
ultimately result in a natural monarchy.
Q:
Why have you placed Tolkien within the Christian humanist tradition
represented by Thomas More and T.S. Eliot, Dante and C.S. Lewis?
Birzer:
Christian humanism argues for a continuity of traditions: the Greek
into the Roman, the Jewish into the Christian, and the synthesis of all in the
Middle Ages. A true Christian humanist would not only understand Scripture and
Tradition, but he would also understand the "greats" of Western civilization:
Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, etc.
Christian humanism has often arisen as
a strong force during some of the most tumultuous times of the Church: during
the Renaissance and Reformation as well as during the 20th century rise of the
ideologies of the Right and Left. Tolkien felt no kinship with the 20th century
and its terror regimes, mass genocides and overwhelming, conformist technologies
and industries.
Tolkien, an Augustinian Christian humanist, believed
in the sanctity and individuality of all life. Each person, as best expressed
in Gandalf's conversation with Frodo regarding Gollum, is born into a certain
time and a certain place. He is born for a reason.
As Aristotle wrote,
"Nature makes nothing in vain." Everything has a purpose. St. Thomas finished
Aristotle's thought: "Grace perfects nature."
Within Creation, therefore,
each person has a role, a set amount of time, and a number of gifts. He can chose
to fight for God and the common good, he can use his gifts for avarice, or he
can ignore them altogether.
Tolkien's Middle-earth mythology, powerfully
Christian humanist, argues that we live as a part of continuity and that every
being and time and event is vitally important to the whole, to Creation itself.
When Frodo complains of living in an evil, burdensome time, Gandalf replies:
"'So do I ... and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them
to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us."
ZE03082921ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
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"J.R.R. Tolkien's Sanctifying Myth." (August 29, 2003).
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