Subject: Minor note?
Author:
Posted on: 2012-01-09 08:13:00 UTC

The trinitarian allegory with Aslan and the Emperor could be done without three-- since the Holy Ghost is on Earth to minister to humanity while the Father and Son are not, it would be different in Narnia; for most of the series, Aslan is either physically present or on the cusp of arrival.

(Oh ye gods and little fishies, the Space Trilogy. So much love/hate. The best part of that series is either the bit at the end of Perelandra, "Have no fear, lest your shoulders be bearing this world. Look! It is beneath your head, and carries you." Or possibly his point that despising creatures simply for being the shape that they are is absurd. He's got so much very excellent, very interesting theology there! And then he sandwiches it with... the rest of the text.)

As per your original question, I do think it makes more sense to say that each universe is handled by their own deity or demigod-- because there's just bits and pieces where they don't add up. To get unforgivably and unhumorously theological on you, I'd say humans trying to write allegories of God can be likened to people trying to construct a mirror-perfect representation of an image, but all of us from different angles, with different tools, in whatever light in which we've perceived the original. All of them have some merit, all of them are faithful to the author's intent (more or less), but none of them are the original.

In a more practical-for-purposes-at-hand sense, that would simplify things a great deal for Agents from a monotheistic world. How do you go from Eru/Ilùvatar to Aslan/Emperor to the version of YHWH in World One-base series? And any Agent with a fervent view would probably be contending that their deity was in charge of the multiverse, and the rest were demigods/false/etc.

But from an author's perspective, I have to say it makes more sense for them all to be single-'verse deities; of course, that's just what, as pointed out above, a character would say.

...On further consideration, I think Dann is right, and it's far too late in this time zone to keep up with this thread.

Reply Return to messages