| Beyond the Shire      “Gimli
                the Dwarf ” Joins a Fellowship of Students, Faculty and Staff
                to Explore Tolkien’s Middle-Earth
              On a Saturday morning in
January, ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ
Minister of Discipleship
Matthew Koenig watched as
young people clad in greenhooded
capes made their way
into Upper Gwinn Commons
to claim seats — several hours before the scheduled speaker even arrived at the
podium.
 
              
                |  
 |  |  What would draw students out of their residence halls on a weekend?
              And in costume, no less? It was not just a movie star who drew
              them, although his arrival would cause a stir on any campus. These
              students were attracted by the same power that has provoked a 50-year
              publishing phenomenon and, more recently, record-breaking box office
              receipts. They were drawn by the power of the One Ring 
 or, more
              accurately, the allure of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.
              
 Koenig first journeyed through Middleearth only recently. As so
              many readers have experienced since the first publication of “the
              book of the century” in 1953, he was challenged and captivated
              by Tolkien’s imagination, voice and resonant Christian themes.
              Moreover, he was inspired.
 
 Koenig joined with Bryan Cole in the
              Office of Student Programs to create The Lord of the Rings Film
              and Lecture Event, a campus festival coinciding with the theatrical
              run of the third film in director Peter Jackson’s adaptation of
              the trilogy. On January 15 and 17, New Line Cinema’s “The Fellowship
              of the Ring” and “The Two Towers” played on SPU screens. One of
              the film’s beloved stars — Rhys-Davies (Gimli) — made a guest appearance.
              Seminars hosted by faculty, staff and guests covered a variety
              of perspectives on the saga. For a finale, Koenig arranged for
              almost 100 students to attend a Saturday evening screening of “The
              Return of the King” at Seattle’s famous Cinerama theater.
 
 While
              Koenig has not yet gone so far as to don hobbit garb like some
              enthusiastic students, he does find Middle-earth to be a rewarding
              context in which to consider the challenges of following Christ
              into places unknown. The sacrificial departure of Frodo the hobbit
              from his idyllic home in the Shire and the desperate quest he undertakes
              to destroy the One Ring — Middle-earth’s weapon of mass destruction — suggest
              the story of a savior who bore a cross in order to save the world.
              Similarly, the tale of Aragorn, a man wrestling with the responsibility
              of accepting his destiny as king, suggests to Koenig the way people
              must wrestle with their own self-doubts in order to embrace God’s
              call.
 
 “I don’t want students to leave SPU thinking discipleship
              is heavy, draining or unexciting,” Koenig explains. “The path of
              discipleship is relentlessly demanding, but at the same time it
              is invigorating and life-affirming.”
 
 Many Readers, Many Interpretations
 Koenig’s vision proved contagious. Tolkien experts and enthusiasts
              from on and off campus volunteered to lead students in exploring
              various corners of Middle-earth.
 
 In a seminar titled “Notions of
              Fellowship in The Lord of the Rings,” Residence Life Coordinator
              Chuck Strawn focused on the heroes’ demonstrations of loyalty,
              forgiveness, self-sacrifice, wisdomseeking, and willingness to
              overcome prejudice and personal desires. “I think we are hungering
              for this,” he said, “because we can’t find it in those whose lives
              usually fill our television and movie screens.”
 
 “We idealize freedom
              without restraint, but we’re wrong to do so,” Associate Professor
              of Philosophy Phillip Goggans told the audience in his session
              titled “The Meaning of Life in The Lord of the Rings.” “It’s not
              in our best interest to be absolutely free. We can never succeed
              anyway, and we make ourselves miserable in the attempt. The characters
              in The Lord of the Rings have a fixed purpose not subordinate to
              their will. This is the truth about us and what we long to believe.”
 
 Christie
              Eppler, assistant professor of counselor education, explored the
              resiliency of Frodo in her presentation, “To Journey On When All
              Seems Lost.” Other seminar topics included “I Fear a Cage: Courage
              and Calling for Women in The Lord of the Rings,” presented by Laurie
              Wheeler, associate pastor of Seattle’s Church at the Center; and “Tragedy
              and Triumph in The Lord of the Rings,” led by Gregory Wolfe, editor
              of Image: A Journal of the Arts and Religion.
 
 A Small Character
              Played by a Big Name
 For many, a visit from Rhys-Davies — who participated
              in all three installments of Peter Jackson’s film trilogy as both
              the temperamental, axe-wielding dwarf named Gimli and as the voice
              of Treebeard — proved the highlight of the Seattle Pacific event.
 
 As Gimli, this 60-year-old veteran of stage and screen was made
              unrecognizable beneath layers of makeup and a bristling red moustache
              and beard that required several hours of application daily. (Don’t
              let the movies fool you: He’s actually taller than the actors who
              played Gandalf, Aragorn and Legolas.) Nevertheless, students quickly
              recognized him as Sallah, Indiana Jones’ boisterous and beloved
              sidekick.
 
 During the 90-minute talk-back session, one fan expressed
              reservations about the differences between the film’s Gimli and
              the dwarf of the novels. To defend the screenwriters, Rhys-Davies
              offered his summary of the trilogy: “In The Lord of the Rings 
 things
              are sort of OK, and then they go bad, and then they get worse,
              and then they seem to get a little bit worse, then something really
              bad happens, and then there’s a fight, and things look really bad,
              and there’s another battle, and then things look really, really
              bad.” He explained that, to combat the constantly escalating tension,
              the screenwriters made Gimli a “lightning rod” of comic relief.
 
 During his work on the films, Rhys-Davies grew fond of the character. “I
              think that the key to the laughter Gimli generates for us is that
              he simply doesn’t realize that he is small. No matter what the
              odds are, he’d rather turn and fight than run. He may not be as
              agile as that pointy-eared fellow who runs up the trunks of heffalumps — or
              whatever they are — but, give him something 30 times higher than
              him, like a cave troll, and he’ll give it a go.”
 
 Rhys-Davies, who
              grew up in colonial Africa and Wales, finds a lot of his own life
              lessons echoed in Tolkien’s writings. Regarding the author’s compelling
              story of war, mercy and sacrifice, Rhys-Davies says, “I think some
              generations do face challenges. Sometimes you become opposed to
              the evil so vehemently that you become part of the evil itself 
 and
              yet to do nothing is to write the destruction of most of the things
              that you really love.”
 
 Steps of Fellowship in a Grand Adventure
 The ongoing enthusiasm for Tolkien’s work — which was definitely
              in evidence at SPU’s January event — begs the question: What makes
              his achievement so powerful?
 
 According to Wolfe, Tolkien was an
              exemplary Christian artist. “He created a truly incarnational form
              of art. He refused to turn his faith into the preachy abstractions
              that one finds in so much that purports to be Christian art today.
              Rather, his Christian vision is totally absorbed into the deeply
              imagined world of Middle-earth. The Word becomes flesh through
              artistically crafted words.”
 
 As students returned to their coursework
              with Tolkien’s language, Rhys-Davies’ stories and Howard Shore’s
              lush film soundtrack resonating in their minds, Koenig was already
              looking ahead to the next meeting of his weekly “Theology Goes
              to the Movies” cadre. There he encourages attendees to examine
              contemporary films and discuss their artistry, themes and spiritual
              implications. The cadre’s current subject: “The Truman Show.”
 
 “This
              is a special time for SPU,” he says. “As students take seriously
              the call to engage the culture, they realize they’re going to have
              to be shrewd to do it. I see this in how they view film. No doubt
              there’s a desire for entertainment, but there’s also a hunger to
              identify deeper themes in movies and to interpret them on a more
              sophisticated level. I see a great passion for following Christ
              beyond campus and into the culture. That’s a wonderful thing to
              see.”
 
 
  
 Editor’s Note: Response writer Jeffrey Overstreet,
              also a film columnist with Christianity Today, taught
              one of the seminars at The Lord of the Rings Film and Lecture Event.
              Students in his session listened to excerpts from interviews in
              which film cast and crew members offer their own interpretations
              of the story. Edited transcripts are now available from this 
                                                                                    issue's .
 
  
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