Copyrighted Material
Tolkien at the End of Time; Alchemical Secrets of The Lord of the
Rings By Jay Weidner
and Sharron Rose
(Original Website:
http://www.2012theodyssey.com/articles-JayTolkien1.htm)
Introduction
It seems a simple story.
At first glance it appears to be nothing more than a very long
fairy tale about good and evil. Peopled with Elves, Dwarves,
Wizards, Monsters and more, J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the
Rings was not considered a great work of literature when it
first appeared in 1954. Now it is hailed as the book of the
20th century. What is it about this book that caused it
to be such a sensation? Why does it create such a warmth and
resonance in the hearts of its readers? Our answer to these and
other questions to be discussed in the course of this article is
that Tolkien was aware of the hidden esoteric history of humanity
and the powerful influence of the Great Work of Alchemy on European
culture.
Using Tolkien's splendid tale as a tool, this article will reveal
that like the great masters of old, Tolkien is initiating us into a
new level of awareness of our past, ourselves and the planet we
inhabit. It will also reveal that Tolkien somehow knew the deepest
secrets of Alchemy and embedded this mysterious knowledge into the
heart of his work. This is the real reason why The Lord of the
Rings has such a great and universal appeal, for it is our true
history and secret heritage that is being revealed to us through its
pages. Tolkien has mined a deep vein of mythic resonance that rings
true to all who delve deeply into this extraordinary work of Art.
In a fantastic land called Middle-earth a young Hobbit
named Frodo becomes entangled in an all-consuming spiritual and
political war that ultimately changes the entire face of the world.
As documented in Tolkien's first book, The Hobbit, by way of
his uncle Bilbo's adventures, Frodo has acquired a mysterious Ring.
Through the efforts of his friend Gandalf the Wizard, Frodo comes to
understand that this Ring, forged in an earlier Age by the evil
Sauron in the subterranean fires of Mt. Doom, not only grants its
bearer the power of invisibility, and possibly immortality, but also
holds the key to the dominion of Middle-earth.
With all of the odds against him, Frodo, the modest,
sincere and good-natured Hobbit of the Shire embarks on a quest to
destroy this ill-omened Ring of Power. Although he has little to
gain and much to lose by destroying the Ring, Frodo nevertheless is
ultimately successful in his quest. Despite being hunted by
thousands of Orcs, lost in an unknown wilderness with only the
assistance of his friend and gardener Sam and the shifty covetous
creature named Gollum, Frodo selflessly moves towards the ultimate
conclusion of the tale in which the great Ring of Power and
domination is destroyed in the blazing underground inferno of Mt.
Doom.
This destruction of the Ring of Power appears to have unintended
consequences that bring forth what Tolkien describes as the end of
the Third Age of Middle-earth. At the conclusion of this compelling
story of good and evil, heroes and villains, magic and mystery, all
of the fantastic inhabitants of Middle-earth, Wizards, Elves,
Dwarves, and Ents disappear from the landscape of Middle-earth
leaving the next Age, the Fourth Age to be ruled by Men. Aragorn,
the most noble of the human race, is crowned King of Middle-earth
and Men become the ultimate victors of this Great War against Sauron
and his agent Sauruman that ends the Third Age of Middle-earth.
When Lord of the Rings was published in 1954 no one, including
J.R.R. Tolkien himself ever dreamed that his trilogy would go on to
sell millions and millions of copies, be translated into nearly
every language on earth, and turned into one of the biggest motion
picture projects ever undertaken.
What is it about this simple story that could cause such an
enormous reaction? How is it possible that a simple fairy tale of a
selfless little Hobbit saving the world from ultimate evil could be
heralded as the greatest work of literature in the twentieth
century? Why do the books and the subsequent film resonate so
vividly in the hearts, minds and perhaps the souls of nearly all of
us? And who is J.R.R. Tolkien? Did he intentionally write this story
knowing the powerful impact it would have on the reader? Our
contention is that Tolkien somehow, someway had personal knowledge
of the pre-history of our planet and the extraordinary fact that at
this point in time, human history is moving irrevocably towards the
end of what is known by the mystics from many of the world's great
spiritual traditions as the Fourth Age of Humanity, just as The
Lord of the Rings relates the story of the end of the Third Age
of Middle-earth. In this context you will not only come to
understand the fundamental story that is being told to us, the
mytho-poeic story and its relevance to our lives, but also why
Tolkien time and time again insisted that The Lord of the
Rings is not an allegory.
Part One Rings of Time:
The Four Ages, the Precession of the Equinoxes and the Quality
of Time
In contrast to the materially based teachings offered to us by
today's schools and institutions of higher learning, the teachings
of Alchemy (which flowed from Egypt into the mystic heart of the
Hebrew, Islamic and Christian traditions) as well as the Tantric
teachings of India and Tibet, present a deeply spiritual view of
human history and evolution. As documented in the book, The Path
of the Priestess; A Guidebook for Awakening the Divine Feminine,
by Sharron Rose, this view is completely at variance with that of
the modern scientific Darwinian perspective.1 Rather than
perceive past and future from a purely linear point of view, the
great adepts, and masters of these ancient spiritually based
traditions, knew that the flow of time and human experience is not
linear but cyclic. In other words, in the same way that we as human
beings experience the ebb and flow of cycles such as the seasons of
nature, the phases of the moon, birth, growth, maturation and death,
humanity, as a whole, experiences the rise and fall of a larger
cycle of existence known as the Maha Yuga. This Maha Yuga or Great
Cycle is composed of four ages known as the Satya Yuga, or Golden
Age, the Treta Yuga or Silver Age, the Dvapara Yuga or Bronze Age
and the Kali Yuga or Iron Age.
The teachings state that as this cycle begins, the world and all
of its inhabitants are totally aligned with deep spiritual
principles, the natural world and shimmering realms of Divinity. It
is a time of unity, splendor, grace and luminosity. However, as the
cycle unfolds and these Ages metaphorically progress, from gold to
silver to bronze to iron, the bulk of humanity moves further and
further away from this pure, unsullied, essential knowledge and
experience of spirit. As time moves on, there is a gradual
distancing from the Primordial Source and descent towards an age of
total materialization and concretization. With each successive Age,
faith, integrity, and allegiance to spiritual values is decreased by
one-fourth. The veils between the realms of spirit and matter become
thicker, and our resistance to the forces of darkness becomes
weaker. By the final Age of the cycle, the pure light of spirit is
all but extinguished. Only a quarter of the original Divine energy
of truth, virtue and integrity remains and even that energy
diminishes with the unfolding of the final Age. This final stage of
the cycle, in which we now reside, is known as the Iron Age.
According to the texts, it is the Age our race has lived in for at
least 6000 years. It is the period of time known to us today as
history.
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