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Canât Miss Haigh just accept the wonder of these stories? Has she read them? As for Pope Benedict, he may be receiving his information from his associates. Maybe he hasnât actually sat down and read them either. Paula Haigh may have a lot of credentials and knowledge about non-fiction, but she sure doesnât know a good story when she sees one, or, perhaps, reads one? If she wants overtly Catholic/Christian elements, she might want to write her own story, which probably wouldnât work as a fantasy. Her ideas are fantasical!Fairyland is Hell
Magic is demon power continued.
The point is though, if Tolkienâs, Lewisâs or Rowlingâs fantasy tales are Christian, then they should be manifestly Christian, and if they are manifestly Christian then there would be no debate about it. Indeed, we might well ask what do these commentators mean by âChristianâ? Lauding that the triumph of good over evil or claiming the love and friendship shown between characters in these books makes them âChristianâ is patently ridiculous. In the first place such are simply natural virtues and can be found in anyone, even atheists. Secondly, it cannot be denied that these fantasy tales deliberately exclude every precept of Christianity such as the Trinity as Creator, Christ as Saviour, His Church as universal, His Sacraments as necessary, etc., etc. Moreover, these âglimmers of Christianityâ offered, fade away into absurdity when compared with arguments against the orthodoxy and dangers of such fantasy literature based on doctrines derived from traditional theology and disciplines. Accordingly, on foot of this principle alone, to counteract the weakness in the apologistsâ thinking, we decided to publish this critique written by veteran American author Paula Haigh, a scholar of theology, philosophy and the empirical sciences related to cosmology and evolution.
The point 4Horsemen, of this thread (The Lord of the Rings is the second most Catholic book next to the Bible) is the claim that these fantasy tales are Christian, promote Christianity and I suppose even convert some to Christianity, not whether they are âgood storiesâ. That is the only reason I bothered to reply to the thread. Seeing however, that nobody is even interested in asking why these FANTASY stories are harmful to Christianity, I will take my leave again.Canât Miss Haigh just accept the wonder of these stories? Has she read them? As for Pope Benedict, he may be receiving his information from his associates. Maybe he hasnât actually sat down and read them either. Paula Haigh may have a lot of credentials and knowledge about non-fiction, but she sure doesnât know a good story when she sees one, or, perhaps, reads one? If she wants overtly Catholic/Christian elements, she might want to write her own story, which probably wouldnât work as a fantasy. Her ideas are fantasical!
Well, cassini, I wouldnât go so far as to say that LOTR is the âsecond most Catholic book next to the Bible,â but my point is that there are Catholic-Christian elements running throughout the storyline as the video supported, not just that they are entertaining. Iâ'm not familiar with any of the Catholic fiction you suggested, so I donât have any opinion on it except that, maybe, these books should be introduced in our Catholic schools.The point 4Horsemen, of this thread (The Lord of the Rings is the second most Catholic book next to the Bible) is the claim that these fantasy tales are Christian, promote Christianity and I suppose even convert some to Christianity, not whether they are âgood storiesâ. That is the only reason I bothered to reply to the thread. Seeing however, that nobody is even interested in asking why these FANTASY stories are harmful to Christianity, I will take my leave again.
As for Paula Haighâs knowledge about âgood fiction talesâ, let her speak for herself:
I was fortunate enough to have been brought up when a truly Catholic fiction was being produced in the works of Caryl Houselander, Robert Hugh Benson, Enid Dinnis, Fr. Owen Francis Dudley, Fr. Francis Finn, Michael Kent, S.M.C. and many others. Dudley, especially, presented the world of the 20th century as the milieu of his characters and one could not wish for a better example of truly Catholic fiction representing all of Reality. Outstanding examples are Shadow on the Earth and Pageant of Life. My favorite novel of all time is Enid Dinnisâ The Anchorhold â universal values of the religious vocation and supernatural charity.
But in Lewis and Tolkien we have something entirely different. Tolkien has constructed a new mythology for his Creation story. It has much more to do with Gnosticism, Modernism and false 19th century theories of geological catastrophism and evolutionism than with any similarity to or analogy with the divinely revealed creation story in Genesis. Both Lewis and Tolkien follow the majority secular view (as did Christopher Dawson) that mythology represents some kind of progressive approach upwards towards the full revelation of God in Christianity. They see myth as a kind of preparation for Revelation and for the Incarnation. But the Truth is just the opposite â if you follow Catholic sources. God gave divine Revelation and the Prophecies to Adam and to Moses. From this Primordial Revelation and Tradition, men, aided and inspired by Lucifer, degraded and corrupted the Original Revelation. The mythologies are the result.
The Real
Middle Earth PP. 181- 212, including the origin of english poetry.