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stephenSTOSS1
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Reply 1: Fiction versus non-fiction: Part Two
Continued from Reply 1: Fiction versus non-fiction: Part OneJ.R.R. Tolkein self-describes his story, The Lord of the Rings , as a myth written in the style existing during the Hellenistic Greek period. Let’s compare genres: 1) His epic is a myth (like yours); 2) it contains fictional characters (like yours); 3) it contains fictional gardens (like yours); 4) it teaches its readers truth about “conscience, sin, free will, and suffering” (what a coincidence, it is so like yours that I used your exact words). Worth noting, Tolkein was a staunch Catholic who attempted to incorporate and teach the truths of the Catholic Church and the Bible through his mythic story.
By your definition, Tolkein’s story would be classified as non-fiction because it teaches morals and truth. It makes a point, as you like to phrase it. There isn’t a literary expert in the world, I believe, that would classify Tolkein as non-fiction. Nor would your interpretation of mythic language when applied to Genesis. All four of the Catholic definitions of myth, or mythic language, that I quoted in an earlier post would not agree with your definition of myth as applied to the ancient Hebrew Bible.
Fr. Dwight Longenecker wrote, “Because we say a story is myth does not mean that we think it is a fabrication, a fable, a fairy tale and a fiction . Because a story is myth does not necessarily mean it did not happen.” Dr Bernard Batto wrote, “In everyday usage today, myth carries a meaning of something untrue, a fable, a fiction, or an illusion.” Your understanding of myth qualifies as both fable and fiction. As I quoted earlier, Batto also wrote that a myth “Has paradigmatic [emphasis mine] significance for the society in which the story is operative.” Dr.Batto has his PhD in linguistics of the ancient Hebrew Bible. In linguistic science, paradigmatic means: Paradigmatic relations describe the identity of a linguistic unit in a given language. Example: The sun is shining to other nouns that could substitute for it, as star or light. Note that all three identify a true cosmic fact. Another example comes from modern science. According to Batto, the term Big Bang is mythical language that uses paradigmatic substitution. The mythical language involving paradigmatic substitution describes hermeneutics which are perfectly in line with official Church teaching on the proper interpretation of Genesis, i.e. that the historical narrative of Genesis communicates divinely inspired truths about actual primeval events.