Point-of-View
Vague faith in Middle Earth
By TERRY MATTINGLY
Baptist Press
Published December 18, 2003
Faced with the end of his world, even the cheery hobbit Pippin
lost hope.
"I didnt think it would end this way," he
tells Gandalf, as they watch the forces of evil advance in Peter
Jacksons epic "The Return of the King."
"End? No, the journey doesnt end here,"
replies the wizard, who has already had one near-death experience
and been reborn. "Theres another path, one that we all
must take. The grey rain-curtain of this world rolls back and it
will change to silver glass and then you see it."
Confused, Pippin asks: "See what?"
With a wry smile, Gandalf replies: "White shores and
beyond them, a far green country under a swift sunrise."
This speech is based on some of J.R.R. Tolkiens most
beautiful language at the end of "The Lord of the Rings"
and poetically expresses his belief in a life to come.
Yet there are other ways to interpret this scene and the whole
500,000-word trilogy, noted the actor inside those wizards
robes. As an openly gay atheist, Sir Ian McKellen said he had no
problem putting his own spin on Tolkiens visions. The key,
he said, is that this is a work of cultural myth, not Christian
allegory.
"The interesting thing about Hobbiton to me is that it
doesnt have a church," said McKellen, during a blitz
of interviews hours before the premiere of "The Return of
the King" in Los Angeles. "Its appealing to me
that people like these stories and yet there isnt an
archbishop and there isnt a pope telling you what to
believe.
"Despite being a Catholic, I dont think he was
trying to write a Catholic parable, so I dont think we were
meant to draw conclusions about faith from it. But I am sure that
other people disagree."
Yes, they certainly do and the global success of these movies$3
billion at the box office is a safe guessonly raises the
stakes in such debates.
Many Christians quickly quote Tolkiens claim that his
trilogy was a "fundamentally religious and Catholic work."
Others criticize its lack of clear, evangelistic Christian
content and distrust his love of magic and myths. Meanwhile, some
readers prefer to embrace its elves, wizards and back-to-nature
themes.
Almost everyone involved in the movies believes "The Lord
of the Rings" contains "spiritual" or even "sacred"
themes. But they struggle to define these words.
Facing a circle of reporters from religious publications,
members of Jacksons team emphasized that they strove to
avoid personal agendas that might betray Tolkien. Yet they also
stressed they did not believe Tolkien had a dogmatic agenda.
The central "tenet that is underlying the story is his
Catholicism, which is at the heart of the book," said Fran
Walsh, a producer, screenwriter and mother of two children with
Jackson. "In the end, if there is anything to be taken from
the film its that its about faith." The story is
also about death and the knowledge that its heroes "will
endure in some form" after their passage to another land,
she said.
So this is a story about "faith," "hope,"
"courage," "decency," "sacrifice,"
and even eternal life. Its about the triumph of "simple
goodness." But it is not, as screenwriter Philippa Boyens
put it, about moral absolutes that proclaim, "This is good
and this is evil! And this is what you must do! "Yet
the final outcome the destruction of the one ring of power
depends on key characters making agonizing choices between
good and evil.
The tormented Gollum chooses poorly and reaps what he has sown.
The noble Frodo chooses poorly as well, yet is saved by his
earlier acts of compassion toward Gollum.
"It was Frodos destiny to accept this ring,"
said Elijah Wood, who plays Frodo. "But its Frodos
mercy that actually destroys the ring. The ring is not destroyed
by any persons will. I mean, it is the will of Frodo that
gets it to where it needs to go. But it is indeed his mercy for
Gollum that allows Gollum to meet them at the Crack of Doom and
to stop Frodo."
The whole thing, said Wood, is "a bit of a puzzle piece."
The movies director was asked if the word "providence"
might apply.
"Yes," said Jackson.
Terry Mattingly (www.tmatt.net) teaches at Palm Beach
Atlantic University and is senior fellow for journalism at the
Council for Christian Colleges & Universities. He writes this
weekly column for the Scripps Howard News Service.