Eru Ilvatar

Eru (the One), also called Ilvatar (the Father of All), is the name in the legendarium of J.R.R. Tolkien for the supreme God, the creator of the angels (Ainur) and the universe (E). He is the single omnipotent creator, but has delegated most direct action within E to the Ainur, including the shaping of the Earth (Arda) itself. Eru is an important part of the stories of The Silmarillion but is not mentioned by name in Tolkien's most famous works, The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (He is alluded to as "the One" in the part of LotR's Appendix A that speaks of the downfall of Nmenor).

Eru as Creator God

Elves and Men were created by Eru directly, without delegation to the Ainur, and they are therefore called "Children of Ilvatar" (Eruhini). The Dwarves were "adopted" by Eru in the sense that they were created by Aul but given sapience by Eru. Animals and plants were probably fashioned by Ainur after themes set out by Eru in the Music of the Ainur, although this is questionable in cases where animals exhibit sapience, as in the case of Huan, or the Eagles in the Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.

Tolkien on Eru

Tolkien understood Eru not as a "fictional deity" but as a name in a fictional language for the actual monotheistic God, although in a mythological or fictional context. In a draft of a letter of 1954 to Peter Hastings, manager of the Newman Bookshop (a Catholic bookshop in Oxford), Tolkien defended non-orthodox aspects as rightly within the scope of his mythology, as an exploration of the infinite "potential variety" of God (Letters, No. 153). Regarding the possibility of reincarnation of Elves, Hastings had written:
God has not used that device in any of the creations of which we have knowledge, and it seems to me to be stepping beyond the position of a sub-creator to produce it as an actual working thing, because a sub-creator, when dealing with the relations between creator and created, should use those channels which he knows the creator to have used already
Tolkien's reply contains an explanation of his view of the relation of (divine) Creation to (human) sub-creation:
We differ entirely about the nature of the relation of sub-creation to Creation. I should have said that liberation "from the channels the creator is known to have used already" is the fundamental function of "sub-creation", a tribute to the infinity of His potential variety ... I am not a metaphysician; but I should have thought it a curious metaphysic — there is not one but many, indeed potentially innumerable ones — that declared the channels known (in such a finite corner as we have any inkling of) to have been used, are the only possible ones, or efficacious, or possibly acceptable to and by Him!
Hastings had also criticised the description of Tom Bombadil by Goldberry: "He is", saying that this seemed to imply that Bombadil was God. Tolkien replied to this:
As for Tom Bombadil, I really do think you are being too serious, besides missing the point. ... You rather remind me of a Protestant relation who to me objected to the (modern) Catholic habit of calling priests Father, because the name father belonged only to the First Person.

Inspiration and development

The title the Father of All is thought by some to be borrowed from the god Odin in Norse mythology, though the New Testament also refers to God as the one God and Father of all. Tolkien, as a Catholic and a scholar of northern European mythology, was probably influenced by both sources. As Tolkien was highly educated in Finnish mythology, it would be no surprise if the name of Ilvatar were derived from Ilmatar, Maid of Air, one of the primal spirits of creation. It is to be noted that in older versions of the Middle-earth legendarium the name Ilvatar meant "Sky-father", but this etymology was dropped in favour of the newer meaning in later revisions. Ilvatar was also the only name of God used in earlier versions — the name Eru first appeared in "The Annals of Aman", published in Morgoth's Ring, the 10th volume of The History of Middle-earth.
    

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gospel music association
gospel music hall of fame
hmcs bonaventure
dove award
anglo irish
dove award for song of the year
victoria class submarine
party discipline
stornoway
new france
george brinton mcclellan
polysynthetic language
fusional language
indonesian chinese
228 incident
dove award for songwriter of the year
carmen basilio
msnbc
sclerophyll
janus (mythology)
janus (moon)
bow wow
adhocracy
decapolis
italo svevo
lorrie fair
vienna international airport
northern europe
northeastern europe
glimt
gallic
beaucaire
danger triangle of the face
mucophagy
province of carbonia iglesias
rigas autobusu fabrika
province of ogliastra
network time protocol
ntp
pere bosch gimpera
palatine hill
shipping forecast
doolittle raid
gustav meyrink