While Christian Imagery and its ethic are omni-present throughout both Tolkien's work and methodology, there remains a great deal to be said regarding his relationship with pagan work and practice. Shippey’s inroads in this regard are clear, and when engaged with C.S Louis’ understanding of religion as being intertwined and contained within the context of the world around it, Tolkien's project and belief become clarified. Furthermore, in the essence of his mothmaking, Tolkien also reveals a philosophy of language and history beneath his mythos, and an understanding of the development of faith through a concrete and linguistically based understanding of pre-christian and pagan traditions. Furthermore, Lewis’ lack of faith in external objectivity as opposed to his embrace of lived experience provides a base upon which Tolkien might build faith worship and mythos. For both Lewis and Tolkien, worship is an action rather than simply a belief or an experience of the intellectual kind. Look no further than Tolkien's own understanding of the act of subcreation. Essentially, Tolkien's entanglement with the pre-christian mythos stems from his understanding of norse myth and the process of naming. In particular, I wrote a blog post several weeks ago detailing how Tolkien's process of naming and use of language, as well as subcreation itself interact with his concept of worship as a force of good rather than of evil, as this word, as was pointed out in a previous post under this section, is a word often left to antagonists relationship to Sauron. In addition, we have to understand what differentiates Tolkien’s understanding of both language and faith distinctly. If we treat subcreation as Tolkien’s expression of divinity, we can understand further actions, as well as the process of creation within his context as either sufficiently faithful and expressive of creation. For Tolkien, engagement with the context around words and the world is the essence of subcreation, to find stories and spirit within the essence of the world and its ideas in order to join the music and experience the light through the metaphor of the Silmarillion.
In exploring the notion of worship in tolkien as a practice executed through Language, legacy and subcreation we can not only explore Tolkien's notions of divinity, but also the work that can be done with Lord of the Rings that acts as “noble and faithful worship” of the series and work which does not fall under this category. The clearest two examples to contrast in this regard are the Peter Jackson Lord of The Rings films as opposed to the Amazon Rings of Power series. While at the beginning of such a sentence the reader might already decide which of the two was a faithful interpretation and which failed, but the exact details of this process can only be elucidated when the implications of Tolkien’s process are taken to their conclusions. In beginning with the characters names, Tolkien’s starting point for the origins of mythology becomes language, a cultural heartbeat which he felt through the mythos and literature of England both in his contemporary and through his study of History and in particular Beowulf and its associated mythology. Beowulf becomes an interesting case due to the fact that despite being an “Anglo-Saxon” story it describes nordic peoples far from home. For Tolkien, this interconnected mythos is equally as important as “high literature”. For Tolkien such a story provides a format for sub-creation. Within its language, its meter, and the essence of this piece, Beowulf and other works of myth provide loose ends upon which to construct, implications through which to engage in the music and share the light of their sacred trees. Returning to the two cases of subcreation with which we are confronted, while neither exist as perfect efforts, the Film adaptions by Peter Jackson are inherently more successfully because of the process in which they were made. They attempted in essence to capture the spirit entangled in the words of Tolkien, with the aim of bringing its joy and features into a breathing world in a new medium, respecting the essence of each story, rather than attempting to package and sell “never before seen” elements of it. Despite its failures in the understanding of evil, and even at times the cycles of History Tolkien attempted to document, they retain its essential features, and explore the world on the basis of its own limitations. Amazon, however, perceived the series as a group of elements to which audiences were attracted(interest in orcs, interest, in elves, etc) rather than a holistic body of languages and relationships which in their singular essence create a spirit. This approach evidently failed.
The space between linguistic relationships (in terms of one word relating to another word, or groups of words) and the transcendent singular human experience of them in relation to the world, the gap that Tolkien fills through repetition and verbal experience, is the same space that amazon ignored. For Tolkien, worship and subcreation exist in the revelling of this moment, and thus such an act must come from intimate experience with and reverence for such an area. Here arrives the inclusion of pre-christian Mythos within Tolkien’s work.
The liturgy as well as all notions of Christian faith did not emerge into a vacuum, particularly not within England. Instead, as is argued by Dr. Rachel Fulton Brown, it emerged through the psalms, upon pre-existing traditions of riddles, jokes and singing within mead halls and gathering places. In such an environment, Tolkien’s mythological understanding and methodology would not retain its luster, as well as its legitimacy if it was not respectful of the presence of pre-christian tradition in its relationship with the mythos of England. For Tolkien if language and faith are a transcendent experience, of course it would be sensible to place that experience within the context that it was born. Furthermore, such an understanding would yield itself compatible with reverence to pre-christian tradition rather than ignorance to it, or abstracting these practices under the vague blanket of “Paganism”.
-PR