.
.
Godly Hobbits
On
the Pentecostalism of Tolkien’s Inspired
Heroes
.
by Lance
Nixon
An odd thing happens to Samwise Gamgee on the
journey toward Mordor. Defending his wounded
master, Frodo, from the attack of the giant
spider Shelob, Sam is all but certain that he is
going to die. Then a thought comes to him “as if
some remote voice had spoken,” and Sam takes up
the Phial of Galadriel, the gift of the elf
queen, and speaks her name out loud.
J. R. R. Tolkien goes on to say in The
Two Towers:
And then his tongue was loosed and his voice
cried in a language which he did not know:
“A Elbereth Gilthoniel
o menel palan-diriel,
le nallon sí di’nguruthos!
A tiro nin, Fanuilos!”
At that point, Sam finds the resolve he so
desperately needs. It’s the second such incident
that Tolkien puts into The Two Towers.
Only a few pages earlier, Frodo also cries out
in what is for him an unknown tongue at the
moment when he also needs courage to face
Shelob. As Tolkien tells it: “‘Aiya Eärendil
Elenion Ancalima!’ he cried, and knew
not what he had spoken; for it seemed that
another voice spoke through his, clear,
untroubled by the foul air of the pit.”
Here Frodo Baggins, a rather well-to-do
hobbit, and Sam Gamgee, a simple gardener, have
both experienced in Middle-earth something like
the Pentecostal/charismatic spirituality that is
familiar to perhaps a quarter of the world’s
Christians. To put it another way: During the
first decade of the twenty-first century, the
number of Pentecostals in the world stood at
somewhere between 400 million and 525 million
people—and two hobbits. And odd as it may seem,
a close reading of Tolkien can reveal something
about this kind of Christianity.
The Mystical Torch
Pentecostalism emphasizes the New Testament
charisms that the Apostle Paul believed the Holy
Spirit distributed to build up the body of
Christ, including speaking in tongues,
interpretation of tongues, a word of wisdom, a
word of knowledge, gifts of faith, healing, and
miracles.
Defying attempts to define it doctrinally,
Pentecostalism is a movement primarily concerned
with the experience of the Holy Spirit and the
practice of spiritual gifts within a vast range
of Christian denominations and doctrinal
persuasions. Although it might not be readily
apparent, it is also concerned with a
theological and philosophical issue: Who hears
from God? Who speaks for God? How does this take
place? And what language, as we know it, could
possibly contain God, who is revealed as the
Word, yet who remains in some way utterly
Other?
Harvey Cox places Pentecostals within an old
tradition of writers and mystics who understand
the inadequacy of language. Cox cites Susan
Sontag’s observation in an essay some decades
ago about “something like a perennial discontent
with language” in major civilizations both East
and West, and her assessment that “the
antecedents of art’s dilemmas and strategies are
to be found in the radical wing of the mystical
tradition.” Sontag blasts her religious
contemporaries for being too timid to take up
this fight, suggesting that in our day, it is
artists, not religious mystics, who carry on
this grappling with language. But Cox points out
that Sontag has overlooked Pentecostals:
[I]t is not surprising that she did not think
of tongue speaking as a possible exception.
Pentecostalism was not as widespread or
visible when she wrote the essay in 1967, and
in any case, because of the social crevasse
that separates them, few high-culture writers
ever come in contact with Pentecostals. But
the case could be made that it is precisely
this ragtag religion from across the tracks
that is now bearing the mystical torch with
the most vigor and carrying on the insights of
the very same mystics Sontag discusses.
Let God Speak
The episodes of tongue-speaking hobbits in
Middle-earth correlate with Pentecostal
experiences. Frodo and Sam Gamgee find the
courage and strength they need to confront evil
after speaking in Elvish, a tongue they’ve never
learned. In a similar way, Pentecostals and
charismatics feel they are strengthened
by praying in tongues.
This is not merely Pentecostal experience
dictating theology. Rather, Pentecostals cite
Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 14:2–4: “For
anyone who speaks in a tongue does not speak to
men but to God. Indeed, no one understands him;
he utters mysteries with his
spirit. . . . He who speaks in a
tongue edifies himself.” Pentecostals also read
Jude’s advice to be “building up yourselves on
your most holy faith, praying in the Holy
Ghost,” as an exhortation to pray in tongues.
From tongues comes spiritual strength.
Tolkien scholar Ralph Wood notes that Frodo
and Sam seem especially devoted to the angelic,
mercy-bearing figure of Elbereth, also known to
the elves as Gilthoniel. “This queen of the
valar seems to be praying through them
as much as they are praying to her,”
Wood writes. “To use the language of the New
Testament, it is as if—the Hobbits being unable
to pray as they ought—the Spirit were
interceding for them.” Indeed, as Tolkien
himself says of Frodo, “it seemed that another
voice spoke through his.”
Yet Tolkien writes that Frodo also “knew not
what he had spoken,” which means more than mere
ignorance of the language. University of
Pennsylvania researchers reported in late 2006
that, in a fashion similar to what the hobbits
experience, praying with glossolalia is a
different kind of activity than speaking with
conventional language. Brain scans of five
Pentecostal women in the act of speaking in
tongues showed that their frontal lobes, or that
part of the brain through which people control
what they do, were relatively quiet, and so were
the language centers. Yet the regions involved
in maintaining self-consciousness were
active—that is, the women were not in trances,
but they were not processing language in the
same way as usual.
Frodo is not in a trance, either; yet it is as
though someone else, not he, is speaking through
him to confront the evil that he faces—similar
to what the Pennsylvania researchers describe as
“perceived loss of intentional control” in
glossolalia.
Dr. Andrew B. Newberg, leader of the study
team that did the research, was quoted in the New
York Times (November 7, 2006) as noting
that brain images supported the study
participants’ interpretation of what was
happening: “The way they describe it, and what
they believe, is that God is talking through
them.”
Crisis & Worship
Sam and Frodo are in dire circumstances when
their tongue-talking episodes occur. However
this happened to fit Tolkien’s story line, it
also fits with what sociologists have found
about glossolalia. The scholars H. Newton
Malony and A. Adams Lovekin cite a number
of studies from the 1960s and 1970s in which
there is broad agreement that those who
experience glossolalia are often in crisis at
the time the experience first occurs. Just as
with Frodo and Sam, it is at those times that
the inability of language to manage the
complexity of life is fully revealed and the
believer finds he must reach outside of
language.
Perhaps there is a similar crisis of
communication that goes on routinely when
believers approach the ineffable God to offer
praise and worship. In his 1994 book Word
and Spirit at Play: Towards a Charismatic
Theology, the Dutch theologian
Jean-Jacques Suurmond alludes to the
nineteenth-century enthusiast Edward Irving’s
overlooked observation that the gift of tongues
is an implicit criticism of any language that
tries to “capture” God.
Here might be an explanation for some
Pentecostal practices such as dancing and lying
face down, and such expressions as lifting,
waving, and clapping of hands. The believer may
simply be grappling with the inadequacy of
language to convey all he wants to say to God. A
Pentecostal who jumps or dances or lifts his
hands to God or falls face down is using his
body in the same way that he uses glossolalia—as
an instrument to play notes that do not exist on
the verbal keyboard that he’s been given.
In a letter in October 1958, Tolkien notes
that “Sam’s invocation” is in the style and
meter of an Elvish hymn fragment the epic
includes earlier, although Sam’s speech is
“composed or inspired for his particular
situation” and, in the crisis of the moment, the
meter and style of what he is saying are
probably the very least of his concerns.
Sam’s unawareness of using an ancient meter is
also an echo of Pentecostal practice. For though
Pentecostals are blissfully unaware of having
liturgies, the dean of Pentecostal studies,
W. J. Hollenweger, finds that they do.
Pentecostals are simply unaware that their
“services” often follow a historical pattern of
Invocation, Kyrie, Confession, Gloria,
Eucharistic Canon, and Benediction. God might be
aware of it, but Pentecostals are not, when they
meet to appeal for aid and offer worship.
Lesser Vessels
In Tolkien’s epic, glossolalia is a phenomenon
that befalls hobbits—not mighty leaders of men
such as Boromir and Aragorn, nor even the
learned and powerful wizard, Gandalf—but hobbits.
They are “halflings,” who at first glance do not
seem likely to make a great difference in
Middle-earth.
In socio-economic terms, hobbits have their
counterparts in the make-up of early
twentieth-century Pentecostals. Suurmond might
as easily have been speaking of hobbits when he
described those who became part of the
Pentecostal revival that spread outward from the
Azusa Street meetings in 1906 in Los Angeles:
It was above all the “little folk” of this
kind, in Scripture called the anawim,
who seem to have been receptive to this
movement of the Spirit. They belonged to the
oppressed and those without possessions. They
included many descendants of slaves,
illiterate women and workers without a voice
in society. In the revival they heard that at
the heart of the universe there was a God who
was concerned for them, concerned for the
“little folk.” Often the playthings of
impenetrable power structures, not noticed by
anyone, here they encountered a God who “saw”
them.
What would Tolkien have thought of the
suggestion of historian Philip Jenkins that the
most successful social movement of the twentieth
century was not one of those headline-making
movements like National Socialism or Communism,
but Pentecostal Christianity with its
wrong-side-of-the-tracks beginnings?
If Jenkins is right, then twentieth-century
history corroborates the thought Tolkien
expresses in an undated letter from about 1951.
He remarks on “the motive (to become dominant in
Hobbits) that the great policies of world
history, ‘the wheels of the world’, are often
turned not by the Lords and Governors, even
gods, but by the seemingly unknown and weak.”
This is reminiscent of the Virgin Mary
acclaiming, “He hath exalted those of low
degree” (Luke 1:52), as she reflects on becoming
the bearer of God the Word.
While the Elvish prayers give Sam and Frodo
strength, the weapon that helps Sam survive and
triumph is a gift, the Phial of Galadriel.
Galadriel is, of course, female, but one of the
most powerful figures in Tolkien’s epic.
Pentecostalism, similarly, recognizes and
makes good use of women’s gifts. Harvey Cox is
probably correct when he says that
Pentecostalism is “unthinkable” without women.
Starting with figures such as Lucy Farrow, a
black woman who was in at the ground floor of
the Azusa Street revival in 1906, and Aimee
Semple McPherson, the outrageous and colorful
founder of the International Church of the
Foursquare Gospel, women have had a powerful
prophetic voice in Pentecostalism.
In Tolkienesque terms, Pentecostalism sees in
every woman an elf queen. As a Roman Catholic,
Tolkien might have been sympathetic to the idea
that in the prophetic activities at the heart of
Pentecostalism, there are echoes of Mary’s
piety. For what is the prophetic element that is
so powerful in the Bible, if not the ability to
conceive and give birth to the words God would
say? Sam and Frodo would understand.•
Selected Sources
• The University of
Pennsylvania study, by Andrew B.
Newberg, Nancy A. Wintering, Donna
Morgana, and Mark R. Waldman, was
published in Psychiatry Research:
Neuroimaging 148 (2006) 67–71.
• Harvey Gallagher Cox, Fire from
Heaven: The Rise of Pentecostal
Spirituality and the Reshaping of Religion
in the 21st Century (Da Capo Press,
2001).
• Walter J. Hollenweger, The
Pentecostals (Hendrickson Publishers,
1988).
• Philip Jenkins, The Next
Christendom: The Coming of Global
Christianity (Oxford Univ. Press,
rev. & updated, 2007).
• H. Newton Malony and
A. Adams Lovekin, Glossolalia:
Behavioral Science Perspectives on
Speaking in Tongues (Oxford Univ.
Press, 1985).
• David Martin, Pentecostalism: The
World Their Parish (Wiley-Blackwell,
2008).
• Jean-Jacques Suurmond, Word and
Spirit at Play: Towards a Charismatic
Theology (Eerdmans, 1995).
Lance
Nixon is an information editor at South
Dakota State University in Brookings, where he
and his wife Ruth homeschool their five
children.
“Godly Hobbits” first appeared in the July/August
2011 issue of Touchstone. Used
with permission.. |