In the second chapter of Tolkien’s Quenta Silmarillion, the cycle that makes up the bulk of The Silmarillion as printed, he describes how the Vala Aulë created the Dwarves. Aulë, he writes, was impatient awaiting the coming of the true Children of Ilúvatar, the Elves and the Men, and decided that he wanted to create his own speaking things to be his protégés. Working in secret, he made them hardy and in the image of the others, working in secret lest the other Valar be wary of his insubordination to Ilúvatar in doing so.
Catching him in the act of endowing them with speech, the defining characteristic of a higher being, Ilúvatar comes to Aulë and tells him that he is aware of his insubordination. Repentant, Aulë readies to strike down the Dwarves to show his loyalty, but Ilúvatar stays his hand from sacrificing his children, saying that his renewed loyalty is confirmed.
This narrative has a striking resemblance to another, more famous story of near-sacrifice: the Binding of Isaac. In Genesis, God asks Abraham to sacrifice his favorite son Isaac as a test of his faith, and, at the last minute before Abraham delivers the fatal blow, God stops him saying that his faith has been affirmed. God instead provides a ram to sacrifice in a normal way, saying that he will never expect human sacrifice and that the whole affair was a test which Abraham passed.
Both of these sacrifice narratives center on an adherent to God/Ilúvatar whose loyalty is strong but whose absolute commitment is in doubt; they are prepared to sacrifice their chief joy, their children, to appease Him; and they are instead asked to sacrifice something lesser in the knowledge of their true commitment. For Abraham, this last thing is a ram; for Aulë, it is that the Dwarves must sleep until the coming of the Elves, the divinely-ordained Firstborn. It is difficult to think that Tolkien, a devout Catholic, could not have been aware of the striking similarities between the two narratives.
This parallel is curious, however. Aulë and Abraham, as a human being, are subcreators of the kind with which Tolkien is concerned throughout his work, but Aulë is far from the only Vala that is one. They are all, together, responsible for shaping and filling out Arna in harmony with Ilúvatar’s song that first envisaged it. And it is not just that Aulë subcreated life, either: his own wife, Yavanna, created plants and, moreover, sentient animals, but she receives no such test from God/Ilúvatar. (While the Valaquenta only associates her with plant life, presumably animals are her “kelvar” that “can flee or defend themselves” that she mentions in the Quenta Silmarillion (The Silmarillion 27, 45).) Aulë feels compelled to tell Ilúvatar that he created the Dwarves in childish imitation rather than in mockery, but it is unclear in what way that distinction should make him more like Abraham than any of the Valar.
Perhaps it is worth looking at the particular way in which Abraham-as-subcreator is relevant to his relationship with God: as progenitor and patriarch of the Israelites (and the Ishmaelites!). So, too, is Aulë the progenitor of the Dwarves. Even if he was more consciously involved in his subcreation than Abraham would have been as a father, it is in that role that Ilúvatar casts him. They are his children and he is their father (The Silmarillion 45). And, it is worth noting, both of them were prepared to sacrifice the very children that made them subcreators to demonstrate their loyalty to God/Ilúvatar’s plan that did not seem to involve their subcreations.
Still, how is this different from Yavanna’s living animals that could perceive and interact consciously with the Earth? Was she not also their progenitor? The difference appears to be that the “speaking peoples,” which Ilúvatar did not appear to Aulë until he confirmed that the Dwarves were to be, were themselves capable of subcreation independent of their creator (The Silmarillion 44). While Ilúvatar reminds Aulë that he would have been incapable of making the Dwarves independent himself, that is clearly his design and is ultimately granted. Such free will, however, gives them the capacity to stray from what higher or prior powers might want of them. Indeed, Yavanna is deeply concerned that the Dwarves will wreak havoc on her designs in pursuit of their own creations, but Manwë reminds her that this is not substantively different from what the Elves and Men will do as well.
The parallel, then, appears to be this: the subcreators of those who themselves wield the capacity to subcreate must be in alignment with God’s will. St. Augustine writes in The City of God that evil cannot create anew but merely corrupt, and Tolkien seems to be more or less in alignment with this belief throughout his work. Melkor seems as though he should have some power of subcreation, but in exacting his evil, he is far more concerned with ruining the creations of his fellow Valar and corrupting servants from among the Maiar (Balrogs), Elves (Orcs), and Men that already existed prior to his involvement. As T.A. Shippey observes in The Road to Middle-Earth, Tolkien also seems to want the fundamental character of his actors to remain more or less static, with their traits in some way inborn. This is, as Shippey remarks, in tension with the (Augustinian) idea of corruption, but not entirely so if not read too strongly. If only good can create, how can one create something meaningfully better than oneself? Free will, perhaps, but the influence (even if not overriding determination) of nature makes the goodness of their progenitor nonetheless seem like a matter of great importance. If Abraham or Aulë were not sufficiently good, how could their descendants be expected to be so?
Indeed, Tolkien places much emphasis on the parentage and origins of the various characters in the Quenta Silmarillion as defining their behavior. The fact that Fëanor does not share a mother with his siblings is presented as a key fact in determining their inability to get along, and his background also seems to inform his refusal to grant the Valar a Silmaril even when it could save the trees Telperion and Laurelin and his decision to slay the Teleri.
It may also be worth considering how this idea figures into Tolkien’s idea of himself as a subcreator of a mythic world, in the subcreation of which he expected others might participate. Tolkien is clear that he is not overly concerned with making his world perfectly aligned with proper theology—it is, as he insists, ultimately literary and not historical—but he is nonetheless scrupulous in endowing it with as solid a groundwork as he can make for it, both in its harmony with Catholic cosmology and as an apparent historical artefact. Not all who have come after him to Middle-Earth have been so diligent, but their creations are elevated by his original efforts.
—JZ
