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Jan 3 17 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Today is J.R.R. Tolkien's birthday.

Tolkien penned some of our civilization's greatest works, but you may not know *why* he did — or how.

His stories are so enduringly real because he actually lived them... (thread) 🧵 Image
This was Tolkien's resume before authoring any books:

• Linguist (spoke ~15 languages)
• Conlanger (invented 15 more of his own)
• Soldier (fought at the Somme in WW1)
• Professor (Anglo-Saxon studies at Oxford)
• Code-breaker (recruited for WW2) Image
In fact, he only published his first book at age 45 (The Hobbit), and LOTR was released in his 60s.

Why do his stories feel so timeless and real? Because he lived them himself...Image
Languages were his early fascination — he started inventing them as a schoolboy of 12.

Elvish was created long before he penned books, and his stories written to give them a world to breathe in. Image
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Tolkien was of course a devout Catholic, orphaned in childhood and motivated through life by his faith.

Languages and scripture came together nicely, and he even once translated the Book of Jonah for the Jerusalem Bible. Image
He knew how to infuse Christian ideas into stories without heavy-handed moralizing, and disliked allegory for this reason.

His messages instead lie mostly in the background: in characters of virtue and small acts of courage. Image
But Tolkien's stories are relatable ultimately because they're real.

He fought on one of the most brutal fronts of WW1, and saw friends perish in the Dead Marshes before he wrote them. Image
Realizing that ordinary people suffered most in war, he made them the rightful heroes of his own tales.

It's the small hobbits who destroy the One Ring, rendering all the great wars meaningless... Image
And for all the might and machinery of war, that isn't what defeats evil — a small act of mercy wins in the end.

Bilbo spares Gollum's life, an action which leads to the Ring's eventual end. Image
Fighting in WW1 and living through WW2 also taught him the cyclicality of history.

Sauron was only the coming of a second dark force (after Melkor). We never learn from evil, and when we overcome it, we "thereby breed new Saurons." Image
Tolkien hated Disney for their sugar-coated approach to storytelling.

The Hobbit was written for children, but it contains hardship, horror, evil and death. He saw it necessary to retain challenging elements because of what he endured.Image
He also witnessed the industrialization of England and despised it.

The peaceful countryside of his childhood fell prey to industrialism, which he resisted via storytelling (like the satisfying siege of the Ents on Isengard). Image
Tolkien wanted us to reject the grind of modernity and live simpler lives, surrounded by beauty.

“I am in fact a Hobbit (in all but size),” he wrote. “I like gardens, trees and unmechanized farmlands; I smoke a pipe, and like good plain food.” Image
And when he finally penned his books, he did so in order to create a mythology for his beloved England.

He knew that cultures need foundational stories to guide them, and besides the legends of King Arthur, England lacked the mythology of other traditions. Image
The Lord of the Rings and its legendarium were thus reflections of a truly rich life story and philosophy.

Tolkien's stories feel so real because they're the culmination of experiencing just about everything life has to offer... Image
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Something else you may not know about him: he was a master illustrator.

He made these watercolors for The Hobbit in 1937... Image
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More from @Culture_Crit

Jan 2
Why would a good God create a world full of evil and suffering?

C.S. Lewis wrestled with this question for years until it finally hit him:

There is no "evil" — only a corrupted form of good... (thread) 🧵 Image
An atheist until age 32, C.S. Lewis struggled with the idea that a good God could create an unjust world.

Surely there cannot be an intelligent creator behind a world full of so much suffering... Image
But later he questioned: if the universe is meaningless and unjust, why then are we concerned with the idea of justness (and meaning)?

"A man does not call a line crooked unless he has some idea of a straight line."Image
Read 19 tweets
Dec 25, 2024
Christmas Day is NOT pagan, as many people claim.

But December 25 is also not Christ's real birthday — so when is it?

A clue is in the 12 days of Christmas... (thread) 🧵 Image
The Gospels don't specify the date of Christ's birthday — so where does December 25 come from?

Some claim that Christians took it from the pagans... Image
In the old Julian calendar, the winter solstice fell on Dec 25, so it's said that Christian traditions simply plagiarized older ones.

It's also said that Christmas trees came from Yuletide... Image
Read 17 tweets
Dec 24, 2024
Who actually is Santa Claus?

A mythical figure of Pagan or Norse origin — or a real person?

Well, we just discovered his ancient tomb… (thread) 🧵 Image
"Santa Claus" was originally a Christian figure.

Saint Nicholas was a 4th-century Greek bishop from Myra (modern-day Turkey) credited with many miracles and acts of generosity... Image
In one tale, he threw gold down the chimney of a desperately poor man about to sell his daughters into slavery.

It landed in their stockings drying by the fire. Image
Read 16 tweets
Dec 20, 2024
I asked X: "Which book changed your perspective on life more than any other?"

After THOUSANDS of replies, these were the top 50.

The ultimate 2025 reading list… (bookmark this) 🧵 Image
Note: Titles within each section are ordered roughly by how frequently they were suggested.

By FAR the most popular suggestion of all was the Holy Bible — so here are the top theological works...
Theology:

1. Mere Christianity, C.S. Lewis
2. Orthodoxy, G.K. Chesterton
3. The City of God, Augustine of Hippo
4. Summa Theologica, Thomas Aquinas
5. Confessions, Augustine of HippoImage
Image
Read 14 tweets
Dec 17, 2024
The fall of Rome is widely misunderstood.

It wasn't invasion, disease or famine that truly brought it to its knees.

Rome collapsed because the birth rate did… (thread) 🧵 Image
As with many nations today, Rome had a long period of prosperity followed by a decline in birth rates.

The same is true of urban populations throughout history... Image
Rome's fertility problem was identified as early as 49 BC by Caesar, and Augustus later tried to encourage childbearing.

Childlessness was especially common among the upper classes — why? Image
Read 14 tweets
Dec 15, 2024
This is "Christ the King" in Poland, Europe's tallest statue of Jesus (notice the people for scale).

It's 108 feet tall — but that's not even close to the largest of the world's colossi.

9 more you may not have seen before... 🧵 Image
Poland's is not even the tallest statue of Christ. Indonesia unveiled one on Sibeabea Hill this year — 200 feet tall.

It's made of reinforced concrete set around a giant steel frame. Image
And Europe's tallest statue is significantly taller still: The Motherland Calls in Volgograd, Russia.

It was erected to mark the victory at Stalingrad, a crucial turning point in WW2 — 280 feet high. Image
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Read 13 tweets

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