NorthOfNorth wrote on Apr 19
th, 2010 at 9:09pm:
Soren wrote on Apr 19
th, 2010 at 5:29pm:
CS Lewis was an atheist into his 30s. Tolkien and Lewis, both teaching at Oxford, talked a lot and finally Tolkien converted Lewis by appealing to his imagination.
Tolkein wasn't all that big on witch burning and Jew slaying. He de-Christianised his mission... His mission being - to restore to the British people, their Saxon mythological heritage, up to a glimpse of what it was before the Norman Invasion.
No god, no Jesus... just ancient Nordic myth.
"Building on this philosophy of myth, Tolkien explained to Lewis that the story of Christ was the true myth at the very heart of history and at the very root of reality. Whereas the pagan myths were manifestations of God expressing Himself through the minds of poets, using the images of their "mythopoeia" to reveal fragments of His eternal truth, the true myth of Christ was a manifestation of God expressing Himself through Himself, with Himself, and in Himself. God, in the Incarnation, had revealed Himself as the ultimate poet who was creating reality, the true poem or true myth, in His own image. Thus, in a divinely inspired paradox, myth was revealed as the ultimate realism.
Such a revelation changed Lewis' whole conception of Christianity, precipitating his conversion.
Lewis was one of the select group of friends, known collectively as the Inklings, who read the manuscript of Tolkien's timeless classic, The Lord of the Rings, as it was being written. This work, which has been voted the greatest book of the 20th century in a succession of polls, was described by its author as "a fundamentally religious and Catholic work; unconsciously so at first, but consciously in the revision."
Or this:
http://books.google.com.au/books?id=gvfl1RMKW-YC&pg=PA45&lpg=PA45&dq=a+story+sha...Tolkien's Mythopoeia
http://home.ccil.org/~cowan/mythopoeia.html