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#1 |
Pile O'Bones
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 11
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If all the valar were certain parts of Eru the one, then surely this means that Morgoth was representing the darker side of Eru?
Therefore does this mean that there was a part of Eru that was also very dark, a side of him that maybe new that there was going to be strife on Middle Earth and maybe he knowingly let it happen. I have atheory that maybe Manwe and Morgoth were the two sides of Eru and that he wanted to see what would be more powerful Good or Evil, maybe he was testing to see what would happen and this is why there were Maia who were also good and evil. Its jsut something i've been thinking about i would be interested in waht other people think. [ November 24, 2002: Message edited by: Dimhuanion ]
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#2 |
Wight
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: In the house of Tom Bombariffic
Posts: 196
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I dunno if Eru really had a genuinely evil part...like I said in the discussion string about the dwarves and aule etc each of the Valar was the spawn of a different part of Eru's mind, and therefore only when they came together could they create the world. Anyway, I dont reckon he was from an evil part of Eru's mind, maybe from a cunning part, or the part that desires power, because we know that Eru did want power, and for everyone to worship him. I reckon Morgoth was from that part, but because he was able to think for himself, as all the valar were, he realised that the best way to gain his own power was through evil.
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The 'hum' generated by an electric car is not in fact the noise of the engine, but that of the driver's self-righteousness oscillating at a high frequency. |
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#3 | |||
A Northern Soul
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Valinor
Posts: 1,847
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Actually, all of the beings in Ea have free will apart from what Eru would have them do (and at the same time, it is what Eru wants them to do ultimately, as he has given them this free will). Because of *and* in spite of this free will, because they are of Eru, that is, existing in his world, they are bound to the ultimate goodness of him that is, of course, exemplified in his creation.
This is the third time in the last couple of hours I've found myself going to this quote, from Letter No. 153: Quote:
And two more (that thorondil pointed out in another thread)... From The Silmarillion: Quote:
Quote:
[ November 24, 2002: Message edited by: Legalos ]
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