Tolkien, A Son and A Father’s Legacy
Recently the first
ever press interview with Christopher Tolkien, son of J. R. R. Tolkien and
the official executor of J.R.R. Tolkien's estate, was published (the link takes
you to an even more recent translation of the interview into English). The
headline makes much of Christopher Tolkien’s displeasure with Peter Jackson’s
movie interpretations, but what I found most intriguing was the story of a
father’s affection for his son and the son’s labors to preserve and advance the
work of his father. It is a beautiful story of father-son interaction and
devotion.
As those familiar with the works of Tolkien will
know, it is to Christopher Tolkien that we are indebted for The Simarillion and
other published pieces of the story of Middle Earth. When J. R. R. Tolkien died
his unpublished work was a mass of scattered and unorganized papers. Christopher
resigned his faculty position in Old English at New College Oxford and threw
himself full time into editing the work of his father and preserving and
advancing his legacy. As the article states: “One thing is certain: from father
to son, a great part of the work of J.R.R. Tolkien has now emerged from its
boxes, thanks to the infinite perseverance of his son.”
This devotion was fired by the father sharing his
stories with his son.
“Christopher Tolkien's oldest memories were attached to the story of the beginnings[The Silmarillion], which his father would share with the children. ‘As strange as it may seem, I grew up in the world he created,’ he explains. ‘For me, the cities of The Silmarillion are more real than Babylon.’”
Fathers, none of us are J. R. R. Tolkien, but we
do have great stories to pass down, especially The Great Story of redemption. This article encourages me to press
on in passing down the stories of the Bible and of God’s faithfulness in our
family’s life, allowing my children to see what these stories mean to me in
hopes that they will own these stories as well. It reminds me that we are
always inhabiting a story. The question is simply, “What story?” I want to be
providing the parameters of great stories so that my family can inhabit and be
formed by them.
Labels: classic stories, parenting, Tolkien
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home