There are two halves to today’s Gospel, but
with a subtle interconnection.For the Fourteenth
Sunday in Ordinary Time in Year A, Jesus first offers a prayer to the Father
where He reveals the Father/Son relationship and then invites those listening
into the heart of that relationship.
I think it would be helpful to read the
entire chapter eleven of Matthew’s Gospel to understand the context of today’s
passage.Jesus has been preaching across
the Galilean cities, and in some which He names He is rejected.And so He thanks the Father for having
revealed to children what the “wise” rejected.What was revealed?That there is
a relationship between Father and Son.In a sense, Jesus is exposing Himself as the child with the innocent
heart.
Then Jesus turns to us and invites us as
children to share His Passion.His Passion?He says to share His yoke, and isn’t it
supposed to be easy?Just last week we
heard from the previous chapter in Matthew, that “whoever does not take up his
cross and follow after me is not worthy of me.”Can Jesus have changed His mind from one chapter to the next as to
whether one needs to suffer with Him or one needs have their burden lifted?These are not mutually exclusive.
Today’s Gospel:
At that time Jesus exclaimed:
"I give praise to you, Father,
Lord of heaven and earth,
for although you have hidden these
things
from the wise and the learned
you have revealed them to little
ones.
Yes, Father, such has been your
gracious will.
All things have been handed over to
me by my Father.
No one knows the Son except the
Father,
and no one knows the Father except
the Son
and anyone to whom the Son wishes to
reveal him."
"Come to me, all you who labor
and are burdened,
and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn from
me,
for I am meek and humble of heart;
and you will find rest for
yourselves.
For my yoke is easy, and my burden
light."
~Mt: 11:25-30
For the exegetical explanation, I’m going to turn to Raymond Ruan.I don’t know who Raymond Ruan is.His YouTube channel says he’s from Singapore
and he has been publishing these exegetical videos since 2011.The voice does not sound it belongs to a man,
so I think he has a reader.But I don’t
know.I have watched some of his videos and
found them very good.This one is
excellent, and so I embed it.
Raymond Ruan:
We dive a little
deeper into what's happening when Jesus prays to the father. We have two panels
here. Panel one shows the high Christology. When Jesus says that all things
have been handed over to me by my father, he is showing us his exclusive eternal
relationship with God the father. He is the pre-existent son.Moving to our next slide, we dive a little
deeper into what's happening when Jesus prays to the father. We have two panels
here. Panel one shows the high Christology. When Jesus says that all things
have been handed over to me by my father, he is showing us his exclusive eternal
relationship with God the father. He is the pre-existent son.On this slide, we see how beautifully the
whole Bible ties together. What we call the symphony of scripture. We have three
images here. First, the meek king from Zechariah 9 who rides on a beast of
burden to banish the warrior. Jesus fulfills this by ruling with breathtaking
gentleness instead of military power.The
blueprint of discipleship. Here we have the greatest image of Jesus washing his
disciples feet. His words are profound, but his life is the greatest lesson he
offers. He teaches us how to bear the weight of human existence through radical
love.
In Jewish tradition,
a rabbi would invite disciples to take up the yoke of his teaching. Jesus
invites us to tether ourselves to his divine wisdom. But there is also the yoke
of Calvary.Jesus says we must deny
ourselves and take up our cross daily. We can't embrace his teaching while
rejecting his suffering.So here is the
paradox. How can a yoke that includes the agonizing weight of the cross be
considered easy?Grace meets demand. The
mechanics of the shared yoke. Here are the answers to the question by showing
us the mechanics of the shared yoke. Look at the human reality. A radical
demand plus human frailty equals crushing despair. Without grace, carrying our
daily cross is impossible.But look at
the reality of grace.Jesus doesn't just
assign us a burden and walk away. He steps into the harness beside us. As the
reflection from Epriest notes, when two people are yoked together, they are
united in all they do. They are never alone. Christ always takes the heavy side
of the beam. The cross remains real, but because grace bears the weight, the
burden becomes wonderfully light.
We will all experience suffering.But yoked with Jesus, the suffering becomes lighter.When we enter the Sacred Heart of Jesus we receive
His rest.
For the pastoral homily, I’m going to turn to the Order of Preachers in
India, specifically, Fr. Pratik Pereira O.P.
Fr. Pratik:
Dear brothers and
sisters, in today's gospel passage, we are invited into a deeply personal
moment in the ministry of Jesus. To understand the weight of his words, we have
to look at what was happening around him. Jesus had just finished preaching in
the cities of Galilee where many had rejected his message. In response, Jesus turns
to prayer. He praises the father for revealing the mysteries of the kingdom of
God not to the wise but to children. Jesus is not dismissing intelligence here.
Rather, he's teaching a profound theological truth. God is not a puzzle to be
solved by human cleverness. God is a person to be known through love, humility,
and a childlike trust. Jesus states clearly that no one knows the father except
the son and no one knows the son except the father. This means that we cannot
climb our way up to God through our own human efforts or sheer willpower. True
knowledge of God is always a gift freely given to us by Jesus.The relationship between the father and the
son is one of perfect intimate love. And Jesus invites us directly into that inner
life of God.
The image of a yoke
is also deeply practical. A yoke was a wooden frame placed over the necks of a
pair of oxen so they could pull a heavy load together. Crucially, a yoke is
never meant for a single animal. It is designed for two. When Jesus says, "Shoulder
my yoke," he's not asking us to carry a new set of heavy rules on our own.
He's inviting us to harness ourselves to him. He's saying, "Let me walk
right beside you. Let me pull the
heaviest part of the weight." The rest that
Jesus promises is not a life free of responsibilities, trials, or duties.
Instead, it is a rest for our souls born from a security of knowing that we are
never walking alone and that our worth is not [music] tied to how perfectly we
perform.
Jesus then reveals
his own character describing himself as gentle and humble in heart. This is the
only place in the entire gospel where Jesus explicitly describes his own inner
heart. He does not demand compliance through fear or intimidation. He draws us
close through gentleness. His humility is the antidote to our pride and anxiety
because he is gentle. We do not have to hide our weaknesses, our failures or
our exhaustion from him. We can bring our messy burdened lives directly to him
confident that he will meet a savior that each one of us will meet a savior who
welcomes us with open arms rather than judgment.
He is gentle, so we must be gentle.He is humble of heart, so we must be humble of heart.He is childlike, so we must be childlike.Lessons we need to internalize.
Sunday Meditation: “I
give praise to you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, for although you have
hidden these things from the wise and the learned you have revealed them to
little ones.”
Finally I have not posted on the 250th anniversary of our
July 4th Declaration of Independence.It’s a remarkable milestone in our history. I
think a worthy hymn for this occasion is “My Country Tis of Thee.”
My country, 'tis of
Thee,
Sweet Land of Liberty
Of thee I sing;
Land where my fathers
died,
Land of the pilgrims'
pride,
From every mountain
side
Let Freedom ring.
My native country,
thee,
Land of the noble
free,
Thy name I love;
I love thy rocks and
rills,
Thy woods and templed
hills;
My heart with rapture
thrills,
Like that above.
Let music swell the
breeze,
And ring from all the
trees
Sweet freedom's song;
Let mortal tongues
awake;
Let all that breathe
partake;
Let rocks their
silence break,
The sound prolong.
Our fathers' God to
Thee,
Author of liberty,
To Thee we sing.
Long may our land be
bright,
With freedom's holy
light,
Protect us by Thy
might,
Great God our King.
That prayer at the end, “Protect us by Thy might,/Great God our King,”is worth praying at every patriotic event.
This is the third post of
a series of posts on J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.This series focuses on the first volume
of the trilogy, The Fellowship of the Ring.
Years have gone by since
Bilbo vanished from the Shire.In these
years, Frodo kept up a tradition of celebrating Bilbo’s birthday.He has not married but has kept close to a number
of friends, most especially Sam Gamgee, Peregrin Took (called Pippin), and
Meriadoc Brandybuck (called Merry).For
seventeen years Frodo lived at Bag End and was quite settled there.It was as Frodo approached his fiftieth year
that the strange itinerants increased through the Shire.It was in this year that Gandalf after a long
absence—he had come a few times for a short while before—showed up finally at
Bag End.
Gandalf explained to
Frodo what he had learned about the ring.It was way more powerful than he imagined.Many rings were made by the elves long ago,
some with little power and some with much, and these with much are the Great
Rings.A mortal who keeps one of the
Great Rings does not die but continues on withering away until he becomes
invisible.Gandalf asks to look at the
ring and Frodo reluctantly hands it over.Gandalf throws it into the fire and when he pulls it out words in the
Elvin language appear inscribed of this ring being the one that rules the other
rings.
Gandalf tells the history
of the ring.He tells about Sauron, the
Dark Lord, who has returned to Mordor and is aware that the ring is in the
Shire.He tells of the other rings in
the poem from the novel’s epigram and how “The Enemy” is out to get the one
ring that controls them all, the ring that Frodo possesses.He tells of how the ring was originally lost
and how a hobbit named Déagol found it and his friend Sméagol killed him over
it and took it.Sméagol kept the ring
hidden in the Misty Mountains and in time became Gollum.Later Bilbo came into possession of it as we
know.Gandalf got most of his story from
Gollum himself.
Gandalf tells Frodo how
he and his friend Aragorn tracked Gollum down and found out how after Gollum losing
the ring he went in search of Bilbo.He
also told them how Gollum had made his way to Mordor and told the Enemy of how
he lost the ring to Bilbo.That is why
the dark forces have been coming to the Shire and now threaten the Shire.This is why Frodo must leave the Shire, to
protect the Shire, and not have the ring taken by the enemy.
Frodo agrees he has to
leave, and just after Gandalf suggests he take a companion with him, Sam Gangee
is caught eavesdropping and has heard most of the conversation.He quickly volunteers to be Frodo’s
companion, mostly because he wants to see elves.
###
Chapter 3: Three is
Company
Frodo, pushed by Gandalf to
depart, becomes hesitant.He has grown
comfortable living in the Shire.Plus he
does not have an excuse to just take off without any reason.He comes up with the idea to leave on Bilbo’s
birthday and by then he will have sold Bag End and his unnecessary possessions
and bought a house way east in Buckleberry.So with the excuse of leaving the Shire and heading to Buckleberry, he will
secretly go on from there to hide the ring in Rivendell, the land of the elves.
Bag End is sold to the
Sackville-Bagginses, who finally obtain the place they always wanted and glory
in the purchase.Merry and a few of the
other hobbit friends go ahead to move the furniture and Frodo’s possessions
while Frodo, Sam, and Pippin stay behind to settle the matters and prepare for
the longer journey.They have a final
meal at Bag End, a wonderful feast with some of Frodo’s prize wines, and at
dusk they head out under cover of the night.
Along the way they
distantly see some dark riders who they sense are searching for them, so they
decide to hide in the woods.They decide
to progress not on the road but parallel to the road through brush and woods.At some point they hear elven singing and
come across a group of elves.The leader
is named Gildor Inglorion.Surprisingly
Gildor happens to know Frodo’s name.They have a wonderful meal together, prepared with the food the elves
brought along.They speak of the Black
Riders, of the Enemy and of the increasing sightings of servants of the
Enemy.Gildor advises Frodo to make
haste and flee the Shire.It is
extremely dangerous.With that they all go
to sleep.
###
Patrick Comment:
Tolkien builds a world of security by putting the
reader at ease. Yet there's always something lurking in the shadows. Gildor
brings in the mystical on his journey West.
What struck me is the gap between Bilbo's departure
and Frodo's. In the movies, it doesn't imply much time at all. In the books,
it's measured in years. Frodo waited a long time for Gandalf to return.
These chapters construct the start of journey
outwards.
###
When I did the summary of
the first section (Prologue and Chapter 1), I didn’t realize that the ring
would be so fully explained immediately after in Chapter 2.So between the two sections, I think we know
a lot about the ring.There is not much
further to say at this point.
So let me use my
commentary to highlight a couple of other observations that struck me in these
two chapters.
I found this
fascinating.From Gandalf’s discussion
with Frodo when Gandalf tells him about the ring, Gandalf mentions Saruman the
White:
‘Who is he?’
asked Frodo. ‘I have never heard of him before.’
‘Maybe not,’ answered Gandalf. ‘Hobbits are, or were,
no concern of his. Yet he is great among the Wise. He is the chief of my order
and the head of the Council. His knowledge is deep, but his pride has grown
with it, and he takes ill any meddling. The lore of the Elven-rings, great and
small, is his province. He has long studied it, seeking the lost secrets of
their making; but when the Rings were debated in the Council, all that he would
reveal to us of his ring-lore told against my fears. So my doubt slept – but
uneasily. Still I watched and I waited.
“He is the chief of my
order.”What order?Do they have orders in the novel?Is that analogous to a religious order?It makes me think of the Dominicans or the
Jesuits.So what is the charism of the
order of “the Wise”?
###
Another interesting
passage is when Gandalf fills Frodo in on the history of the ring.
‘Ah!’ said Gandalf. ‘That is a very long story. The
beginnings lie back in the Black Years, which only the lore-masters now
remember. If I were to tell you all that tale, we should still be sitting here
when Spring had passed into Winter.
‘But last night I told you of Sauron the Great, the
Dark Lord. The rumours that you have heard are true: he has indeed arisen again
and left his hold in Mirkwood and returned to his ancient fastness in the Dark
Tower of Mordor. That name even you hobbits have heard of, like a shadow on the
borders of old stories. Always after a defeat and a respite, the Shadow takes
another shape and grows again.’
‘I wish it need not have happened in my time,’ said
Frodo.
‘So do I,’ said Gandalf, ‘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. And already, Frodo, our time is
beginning to look black.
The Enemy is fast becoming very strong. His plans are
far from ripe, I think, but they are ripening. We shall be hard put to it. We
should be very hard put to it, even if it were not for this dreadful chance.
‘The Enemy still lacks one thing to give him strength and knowledge to beat
down all resistance, break the last defences, and cover all the lands in a
second darkness. He lacks the One Ring.
So here we are introduced
to Sauron the Great, otherwise known as the Dark Lord.Is he analogous to Satan, otherwise known as
Lucifer?If it is, it’s an interesting
play on light and dark.Lucifer actually
means “light-bearer.” John Milton refers him as the “Prince of Darkness.”The name Sauron could be a linguistic twist
to Satan.There are a couple of
interesting statements in the Wikipedia entry for “Sauron.”
First: “Tolkien stated in
his Letters that although he did not think "Absolute Evil" could
exist as it would be "Zero", "in my story Sauron represents as
near an approach to the wholly evil will as is possible." He explained
that, like "all tyrants", Sauron had started out with good intentions
but was corrupted by power, and that he "went further than human tyrants
in pride and the lust for domination", being in origin an immortal
(angelic) spirit.”
Second: “The classicist
J. K. Newman comments that "Sauron's Greek name" makes him "the
Lizard", from Ancient Greek σαῦρος (sauros) 'lizard or reptile'.”
I think we can conclude
that Sauron is analogous to Satan.Also
the reference to “the Enemy” caught my attention.Isn’t that our reference to Satan or the
forces of Satan?I don’t know if the
term is universal for all Christians, but I have heard referring to Satan in
Catholic lingo.There are a couple Bible
verses that refer to Satan as “the enemy,” (Lk 10:19, and 1 Tm 5:14) but hard
to tell when you consider it’s a translation.Have you heard the reference to Satan as “the enemy”?
Also there is a lot of
light and dark imagery throughout these early chapters.I’m not going to cite them here, but I’m sure
you’ve seen them.Perhaps at some point
we can elaborate on it.
###
Did the passage where
Gandalf describes Sméagol’s murder of Déagol strike people as an allusion to
Cain and Able?
But Sméagol had been watching him from behind a tree,
and as Déagol gloated over the ring, Sméagol came softly up behind.
‘“Give us that, Déagol, my love,” said Sméagol, over
his friend’s shoulder.
‘“Why?” said Déagol.
‘“Because it’s my birthday, my love, and I wants it,”
said Sméagol.
‘“I don’t care,” said Déagol. “I have given you a
present already, more than I could afford. I found this, and I’m going to keep
it.”
‘“Oh, are you indeed, my love,” said Sméagol; and he
caught Déagol by the throat and strangled him, because the gold looked so
bright and beautiful. Then he put the ring on his finger.
And later Gandalf
elaborates further.
‘The murder of Déagol haunted Gollum, and he had made
up a defence, repeating it to his “Precious” over and over again, as he gnawed
bones in the dark, until he almost believed it. It was his birthday. Déagol
ought to have given the ring to him. It had obviously turned up just so as to
be a present. It was his birthday-present, and so on, and on.
It’s almost as if Gollum
is fated to wander the earth like Cain as a result of the murder.It’s also rather ironic how Sméagol twice
refers to Déagol as “his love” just before he kills him.
###
And speaking of murder,
Tolkien brings up the use of the death penalty for this act.When Frodo hears that Gollum is out trying to
find the ring, he expresses fear.
‘But this is terrible!’ cried Frodo. ‘Far worse than
the worst that I imagined from your hints and warnings. O Gandalf, best of
friends, what am I to do? For now I am really afraid. What am I to do? What a
pity that Bilbo did not stab that vile creature, when he had a chance!’
‘Pity? It was Pity that stayed his hand. Pity, and
Mercy: not to strike without need. And he has been well rewarded, Frodo. Be
sure that he took so little hurt from the evil, and escaped in the end, because
he began his ownership of the Ring so. With Pity.’
‘I am sorry,’ said Frodo. ‘But I am frightened; and I
do not feel any pity for Gollum.’
‘You have not seen him,’ Gandalf broke in.
‘No, and I don’t want to,’ said Frodo. ‘I can’t
understand you. Do you mean to say that you, and the Elves, have let him live
on after all those horrible deeds? Now at any rate he is as bad as an Orc, and
just an enemy. He deserves death.’
‘Deserves it! I daresay he does. Many that live
deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do
not be too eager to deal out death in judgement. For even the very wise cannot
see all ends. I have not much hope that Gollum can be cured before he dies, but
there is a chance of it. And he is bound up with the fate of the Ring. My heart
tells me that he has some part to play yet, for good or ill, before the end;
and when that comes, the pity of Bilbo may rule the fate of many – yours not
least. In any case we did not kill him: he is very old and very wretched. The
Wood-elves have him in prison, but they treat him with such kindness as they
can find in their wise hearts.’
There seems to be a
tension here between advocacy of the death penalty and prohibition.Overall it seems to me that Gandalf is
speaking for the author here.Do people
agree with that?I don’t know at what
point the Catholic Church began to criticize the use of the death penalty (Pope
Paul VI in the 1970s?) but if Gandalf is articulating Tolkien’s position then
Tolkien was ahead of his time on this issue writing in the 1940s.But this is a fascinating moment which I will
look for further development as a theme as we read on.
###
Michelle Comment:
I have frequently heard
Satan referred to as the Enemy. I wonder if that is something we as Catholics
do. Kerstin, did you hear that term outside of Catholicism?
The Cain & Able
theory fits, doesn't it?
My Reply to Michelle:
What are your thoughts on the death penalty passage,
Michelle? Do you think Gandalf is speaking for Tolkien or do you think this is
just meant as a distinction between Gandalf and Frodo?
Michelle Reply:
I didn't read this passage that way. I thought it was
a good way to show Gandalf's personality as a wise and just judge when he
corrected Frodo. But maybe it is Tolkein shining through since Gandalf, (and
his words), are his creation.
Frances Comment:
This material has so many
levels of meaning. Several years ago I read an article in the WSJ discussing
books about geopolitics. Lord of the Rings was on the list! The author of the
piece explained his thinking this way: ‘’LOTR is a thinly disguised Roman a
clef of WWII. Put Hitler in the role of evil Sauron, let Mussolini be the
wizard Saruman and create a heroic alliance to oppose them. The Hobbits, a
peaceful people, carry much of the story. But the rest of the cast are the
geopolitical masters of the tale. And what a tale it is — an immense force of
evil seeking control of a devastating technology; a shopworn and fractious
alliance formed in resistance; a harrowing series of battles across plains,
mountains and rivers; and lessons in diplomacy, economic strangulation, courtly
betrayal and mind control. . . ‘’
“’The Lord of the Rings
is also a cautionary tale about the dangers of the world, as we hear from
ancient elven lord Elrond: ‘Let him vow to walk in the dark, who has not seen
the nightfall.’ The hobbits try their best to remain naive and innocent. At one
point Frodo says, ‘It is useless to meet revenge with revenge: it will heal
nothing.’ Maybe so. But the geopolitical lesson of The Lord of the Rings is to
fight with all your heart and soul against evil — and build what alliances you
can along the way.”
I wish I could name the
author of this article, but it was quite an extensive piece of which mention of
LOTR was a small part at the end. When clipping it out to save, I lost the
author’s name.
Kelly Reply:
I don't read Gandalf's speech about having pity on
Smeagol as being about the death penalty. It has always struck me more as being
patterned after, 'Judge not lest ye be judged,' or 'which one of you will cast
the first stone?' A lesson about how fallen humanity can't really know
another's heart.
My Reply to Kelly:
Yeah, Kelly, Gandalf is not speaking from pity. He
does say Gollum deserves it: "Deserves it! I daresay he does." It's
Bilbo who had pity for him. Gandalf does explain why Gollum should not receive
the death penalty, and it's right in line with Catholic teaching: "Then do
not be too eager to deal out death in judgement. For even the very wise cannot
see all ends. I have not much hope that Gollum can be cured before he dies, but
there is a chance of it." The Catholic Church teaches that we should not
take life out of God's hands because (1) we don't know God's ends and what
purpose every life will have ("even the very wise cannot see all
ends") and (2) every person should be allowed to have God's time to repent
("there is a chance that Gollum can be cured before he dies.").
I don't want to make too much of this but it is odd
that such a theme be placed here. Is this Tolkien drawing a theme or is he just
opining on an issue or both? As to every life having a purpose, I do seem to
vaguely remember that Gollum in the end is critical to the destruction of the
ring. I think his life does wind up having purpose.
Michelle Reply to Kelly:
It does seem that way, too!
Kerstin Reply to Me:
In the passage there is also an implication of the
sacredness of life. Once life is taken it cannot be brought back. Gandalf also
hints to the fact that each life has purpose. For even the very wise cannot see
all ends. [...] And he is bound up with the fate of the Ring. My heart
tells me that he has some part to play yet, for good or ill, before the end
Gollum is bound up with the fate of the Ring.
Here we have the binding again, a forever binding that cannot be undone. And
with this binding the Ring has turned Sméagol into wretched Gollum. In contrast
to a wedding ring, where the wearer does so freely and with consent, here the
evil instrument ensnares without consent. The lure and trickery of the object
is the precious metal that once desired takes possession.
###
Another detail of note in
these two chapters is that we first encounter elves.What are we to make of them?How does Gildor know Frodo’s name, that he
possesses the ring and is on a quest?It’s rather strange and I expect it to be answered at some point.
In this first encounter
the hobbits hear the elves singing.So
we know the elves are the forgers of the rings, their own language, and they
have a love of song and beautiful voices.In fact, though the hobbits don’t know the elven language, through song
somehow the meaning of the lyrics is passed across.Here is the song they sing.
Snow-white! Snow-white! O Lady clear!
O Queen
beyond the Western Seas!
O Light to us that wander here
Amid the
world of woven trees!
Gilthoniel! O Elbereth!
Clear are thy
eyes and bright thy breath!
Snow-white! Snow-white! We sing to thee
In a far land
beyond the Sea.
O stars that in the Sunless Year
With shining
hand by her were sown,
In windy fields now bright and clear
We see your
silver blossom blown!
O Elbereth! Gilthoniel!
We still
remember, we who dwell
In this far land beneath the trees,
Thy starlight
on the Western Seas.
When I mentioned in the
introduction that I was fascinated by Tolkien’s ability to create folklore,
here is a prime example.Folk songs are
a component of folklore, and not only does Tolkien create a folklore for the
hobbits, he creates one for the elves, and I imagine for other types of
humanoids.I haven’t compared them
closely, but elven song seems different than the hobbit songs, and terms of
rhythm and diction.Perhaps I will
compare them closely at some point, but just from experiencing them it seems
the hobbit songs are much earthier while the elves seem to be more of a high
culture.Who is this Queen they are
addressing?She sounds analogous to the
Blessed Virgin Queen, does it not?And
how could the Queen's breath be "bright"?(See the second line of the second stanza.)Can breath be luminous?Hopefully this will be clarified at some
point.
###
There is one more detail
I want to discuss from this section before I move on to the next.Let’s look at this passage, when Gandalf and
Frodo are discussing taking the ring away from the Shire.
‘As for where I am going,’ said Frodo, ‘it would be
difficult to give that away, for I have no clear idea myself, yet.’
‘Don’t be absurd!’ said Gandalf. ‘I am not warning you
against leaving an address at the post-office! But you are leaving the Shire –
and that should not be known, until you are far away. And you must go, or at
least set out, either North, South, West or East – and the direction should
certainly not be known.’
‘I have been so taken up with the thoughts of leaving
Bag End, and of saying farewell, that I have never even considered the
direction,’ said Frodo. ‘For where am I to go? And by what shall I steer? What
is to be my quest? Bilbo went to find a treasure, there and back again; but I
go to lose one, and not return, as far as I can see.’
‘But you cannot see very far,’ said Gandalf. ‘Neither
can I. It may be your task to find the Cracks of Doom; but that quest may be
for others: I do not know. At any rate you are not ready for that long road
yet.’
‘No indeed!’ said Frodo. ‘But in the meantime what
course am I to take?’
‘Towards danger; but not too rashly, nor too
straight,’ answered the wizard. ‘If you want my advice, make for Rivendell.
That journey should not prove too perilous, though the Road is less easy than
it was, and it will grow worse as the year fails.’
‘Rivendell!’ said Frodo. ‘Very good: I will go east,
and I will make for Rivendell. I will take Sam to visit the Elves; he will be
delighted.’ He spoke lightly; but his heart was moved suddenly with a desire to
see the house of Elrond Halfelven, and breathe the air of that deep valley
where many of the Fair Folk still dwelt in peace.
“What is to be my quest?”
Frodo asks.And while at the moment the
quest is modest—to take the ring away from the Shire—it will grow as we will
see later on.The theme of quest is
central to the novel for several reasons.First it provides the narrative structure to the novel; the novel is
about the working out of the quest.Second it alludes to literature built around quests, such as the Knights
of the Round Table on a quest to find the Holy Grail.Third it provides for the psychological
development and growth of the questing hero; the obstacles and struggles along
the way shape the hero.And four, the
reader and the reader’s life is joined in some way with the questing hero.There is a sense that we all in our lives are
on a quest to find ourselves, to find God, and to serve a greater cause for the
benefit of our family and neighbors.We
begin to see ourselves in Frodo.
This is the nature of
quest literature, and I’m sure Tolkien is keenly aware of this.What is interesting is that right around the
time Tolkien is writing LotR, Joseph
Campbell is writing his study on the very subject, published in The Hero with a Thousand Faces.I don’t know if people are aware of Joseph
Campbell, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Campbell
he spent his academic career as a theorist on mythology and literature, and
toward the end of his life entered the popular culture with a series of
discussions of his theories on Public Broadcasting System (PBS).I remember finding it fascinating, and it sparked
my interest in mythology and folklore.Campbell
claimed that ultimately all stories derive from a single myth he calls the monomyth, and that is of a questing
hero.I believe the early movies of the
series of Star Wars—Luke the questing
hero out to find his father—was based on the theories of Joseph Campbell.
You can find on the
internet analyses of LotR based on
Campbell’s theories—here is a very good one, “The Lord of the Rings and Joseph
Campbell’s Functions of Mythology” by Seth Tomko —but what is interesting to me is how I can’t find either of the two commenting
on the other.Perhaps they did and I
couldn’t find it, but I did give it a good search on the internet.I would think they knew of each other.I would think that Tolkien being an academic
himself would have come across the academic work of a mythologist, and Campbell
must have certainly heard of the Lord of
the Rings, a novel that fits his monomyth theories perfectly.
Now to be sure, there is
much Tolkien would not have liked about Campbell’s theories.Campbell derives much from Freudian and
Jungian psychoanalytic theories, which in my opinion, and perhaps would be in
Tolkien’s as well, is a bunch of academic twaddle, that is, sounds good from a
PhD perspective but ultimately fails to meet reality in some way.Perhaps I’m being harsh here, but I don’t put
much stock in psychoanalytic theories.Also Tolkien might object to Campbell in that he seems to imply all
religions are essentially alike, a religious relativism.Now one could argue that all myths point to
the one true myth, that is Christianity, an idea that I know C.S. Lewis has
articulated.But Campbell seems to leave
it open ended as to what is truth, pointing to something universal and leaving
it at that.Campbell was born Catholic
but gravitated toward some vague (at least to me) sense of spirituality.
I do wonder why each have
not commented on the other, even if a rejection of the other.Still, flipping through the various sections
of The Hero with a Thousand Faces,
Campbell breaks down the elements of the quest in various parts: “The Call to
Adventure,” “The Crossing of the First Threshold,” “The Belly of the Whale,”
“The Road of Trials,” “Atonement with the Father,” “Apotheosis,” “The Return,”
“The Transformation of the Hero,” and so on.I tried to pick titles that might be more relevant to LotR.But you can see how many of these elements fit the novel.
So when Frodo asks to
where should he go, Gandalf replies, “Towards danger.”This is the same as Dante as he enters hell
in the Divine Comedy.This is the same as
Galahad as he overcomes temptations and evil in combat toward finding the Holy
Grail.This is the same of our very
lives as we quest toward our ultimate end.
###
Frances Comment:
Manny, I think your description of quest literature is
the explanation for any similarities between Tolkien and Campbell’s works. In
the book The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories, author Christopher Booker
points out that ‘’listening to and reading stories helps make us whole.’’
Overcoming the Monster, Voyage and Return, the Quest are among timeless story
lines Booker explores. Tolkien in his way was aware of them, Campbell, too.
Other than the literary works that each produced, I don’t think there was any
link between the two men. Each wrote independently, conscious of the great
themes of timeless literature. I think of Leo Tolstoy’s famous comment, “All
great literature is one of two stories: someone goes on a journey or a stranger
comes to town.’’ Those words can be used to describe LOTR, too.
Michelle Reply to Frances:
Frances, your knowledge is awesome!
My Reply to Frances:
Nothing I disagree with, Frances. I just find it odd
they never commented on each other. Perhaps they have but I couldn't find it.
They must have known of each other's work.
Frances Reply to Me:
They may have known of each other; I don’t know how we
can be certain. Certainly, with today’s technology, with the internet, they
would know of each other. But we’re talking about 1949 (Hero With a Thousand
Faces) and the nineteen forties and earlier up to 1954 when LOTR was published.
Personally, I think they were coming at the hero’s journey from different
perspectives. Campbell was examining the myth of the hero’s journey as it
appeared throughout history, throughout literature, throughout religion to
explain it as a great archetype.
Tolkien was writing to demonstrate that the truth of
Christianity is “at the very root of reality,” and fairy stories and myths
“reveal slivers of it, some more, some less.” (Joseph Pearce in quotes)
So, for example, let’s look at the figure of Odysseus,
a key figure in Homer’s epic poems The Iliad and The Odyssey. Campbell would be
studying him to illustrate and establish the characteristics of myth. Tolkien,
however, would be studying him to reveal that the Christian story is the great
reality that underlies all higher fairy-stories and myths. He speaks eloquently
of this in his great essay “On Fairy Stories.”
I may be mistaken, though. If any one else in our
group has a different viewpoint, please share it
Nicole Comment:
I just never understood when Pippin was invited to
come along. Am I missing something?
Kerstin Reply to Nicole:
There are a lot of details to keep track of :-)
‘You do not understand!’ said Pippin. ‘You must go –
and therefore we must, too. Merry and I are coming with you. Sam is an
excellent fellow, and would jump down a dragon’s throat to save you, if he did
not trip over his own feet; but you will need more than one companion in your
dangerous adventure.’
Merry and Pippin are two of Frodo's oldest friends and
they are helping him move from Bag End to Buckland and into his new place in
Crickhollow. Frodo is under the impression these two will remain in the Shire
and he and Sam will go on. Now Merry and Pippin had long ago figured out all of
this had to do with the ring. They knew him too well. So they decided on their
own to accompany him on the adventure.
Ellie Comment:
Thank you all for these contributions!! I am falling a
little bit behind, and most of these things literally just go over my head, so
it's really nice to dig deeper into the themes and especially connect it with
our and Tolkien's faith.
What I latched on the most in these chapters was the
heavy talk about the One Ring; in my opinion, the Ring is the personification
of sin — it's wielded by "the Enemy", it has immense power, but what
struck me most was the fact that it makes one slowly disappear and vanish from
view. From my experience, I think that's what sin does to what we truly are,
our core characteristics. Sin makes us alienated from ourselves, but mainly
from God. It's a distrust of God's grace and love and it feels like it has a mind
of its own, just like the Ring does.
Kerstin Reply to Ellie:
Not to worry! Schedules in this book club are only
guidelines :-) We all follow at a pace we can manage.
Tolkien packs so many details in his tale it is hard
to take it all in, especially when reading it the first time. I am astounded
how much I have forgotten since the last time I read it.
Ellie, that's a great insight into the ring. I
especially like how we get diminished by sin just like the ring makes people
who wear it invisible.