O.K., so forgive me if you are not a Tolkien fan. I have been heavily into Tolkien now for quite a while and find he has answers where even the Bible falls short (No, I won't bring in the Book of Mormon, since it merely fobs off the Bible in so much, the Bible suffices, and Tolkien appears to me to be the more helpful way.) Please allow me to develop this in hopes it might help see this in yet another light.Gadianton wrote: ↑Wed Dec 31, 2025 3:16 amI appreciate your humor quite a bit, Limnor. I will say that a God-at-a-distance is so far the closest I can get to a version of God I could possibly accept. But in this case, God isn't micromanaging, which Plantinga is happy with (free will), and God isn't personal. It's what I call the Amazon Rainforest God. The Amazon (I think) is about the size of the entire US. Imagine just how heinous the ecology of a densely packed forest teeming with diverse life in every square inch but goes on for millions of square miles. It's ludicrous to imagine God determining the life of every bug, or even observing all of it and finding meaning in the step of every ant. The amount of pain experienced by living things there must be off the scale. Can it be seen as beautiful? Or better to destroy it? The creative, horrifying ways creatures kill each other there is very disturbing for me. Yet, I'm open to it as a thing of beauty that should exist, but as its own neighborhood. We study it a little, but don't get too involved. What happens there stays there.Limnor wrote:This is where Monet really earns his keep. The closer you look, the more detail gets in the way. But just step back farther and the picture slides into focus. The injuries don’t disappear, nay, there are just refocused, like one of those 3D posters where you have to cross your eyes to see the dinosaur.
It's a good suggestion, and I actually did consider it as an objection: we have a few simple rules and God takes it from there. Well, we've got to consider the criteria for good and evil. What makes something good? Utilitarianism tells us that we can add up happiness and suffering; if you take that seriously, then I don't think you can really say we're off the hook just because the calculations are hard. We simplify somewhat with rule utilitarianism -- I stop at the light every time -- but my kid is bleeding and there's no cars on the road? If my kid is starving and theft is the only way, I might steal and hope to make it right one day. Mormonism teaches that Adam's transgression of taking the forbidden fruit wasn't a "sin" because it fulfilled the higher law of multiplying and replenishing the earth. Adam had to learn crooked-line hopscotch. Well, all of this relies on teleological ethics -- consequences are what mater. If consequences matter, it's hard to absolve our duty to think beyond the rules when the rules are inadequate for maximizing goodness.We don’t need to know the ultimate outcomes to know how to act. Rather, Jesus grounds moral action in simple terms: Love your neighbor,
But if morality is based on either duty, or obedience to God, and we say consequences aren't the criteria, then you have the famous Kantian situation where "would you lie to the German soldiers to protect the lives of a Jewish family hiding in your basement?" And the answer is "No". Virtue ethics would also skirt outcome calculations. If we constrain God's Bible edicts to virtue, duty, or obedience, then they don't need to optimize aggregate outcomes, but that's because aggregate outcome optimization has nothing to do with morality. So in that case: "We have a few simple rules to live by" full stop. There is nothing for God to do beyond that to make things "better" or "worse".
I like especially your refusal to let complexity off the moral hook. Agreed. Now then, for something at a different angle than what you have here. Where I still struggle is here. Once God is fully non-personal and outcomes are morally irrelevant, it’s hard to see what finally gives our “simple rules” authority rather than just practicality. I think Tolkien, at least, has some bearing here. He seems to hold that while we’re not responsible for outcomes, outcomes still matter. And that includes even within a providence we don’t control. That tension feels essential rather than disposable. Tolkien's habit of sharing his insights are not to preach them, but to show them in his Legendarium. So realistically, the singular most powerful example we have is Frodo at Mount Doom destroying the One Ring. But Frodo blows it. He literally FAILS! He does not
choose the right action, and he doesn't complete the task.
So, Frodo is not what brought about the desired outcome. Yet, from a morality agency point of view here, Frodo cannot be considered the cause of the destruction of the ring. And Tolkien explicitly says this in Letter 246. Frodo did all he was asked to do. Yet his final act was beyond his moral capacity. Therefore, Frodo is not responsible for the Ring's destruction. He does not get the credit. Yet, and this is THE KEY, the outcome still matters immensely!
After all, the Ring is destroyed, and from this Sauron fails, which, of course, changes the world, and prevents the Shadow from over-ruling all beings in Arda now. Interesting isn't it that Tolkien insists on both truths at once?
But now we get to the sticky idea if outcomes don't matter then it appears that Frodo's failure would be morally final. End of story. The destruction of the Ring wouldn't have any meaning in the story. It is this which Tolkien refuses however. His presentation of the world is such that moral responsibility is bounded. There are times, and with several other characters in the stories, not just in Lord of the Rings, where outcome actually does exceed human control. But that doesn't take out meaning. Providence is still meaningful and that's exactly the tension you named. We are not responsible for outcomes, but outcomes still matter within a providence that we don't control. There is no micro-managing going on. There is no scheming for best outcomes no matter what.
Tolkien does not ask characters to compute outcomes or somehow maximize the total good with everything they do. There is no spread sheets giving them an option of choosing the least harmful way to go or action to perform in every instant. What Tolkien is asking them is to be faithful. They are also to refuse certain actions no matter what reward or payoff they may bring. Theirs is to simply act rightly even if and when the actual outcome is unknown or bad. Farimir comes to my mind on this score, because, like a few others, he was actually given the option of having the One Ring. He was desperate to help Gondor and the One Ring promised that right now, immediately. But he refused. I mean, even Frodo could not possibly see if he was going to make it at all, even with Sam accompanying him all the way. He could expect to succeed. King Theoden even rode out knowing... literally outnumbered 10's to 1 per person, he knew they couldn't win, yet he rides out anyway to defend Helm's Deep.
My point is that these choices we read about in this most magnificent story if we look at them with utilitarian eyes, are literally stupid. There is nothing rational about them. Yet in Tolkien's universe, they are the only sane ones to make. So, I mean that the idea that morality is about calculating which action produces the best overall outcome? That's not the only option. Tolkien appears to me to show another way, an actual better way in the long run, even if entirely unknown by those choosing that way. What Tolkien's characters are responsible for is faithfulness, not for optimizing results. But that faithfulness and those outcomes that occur are still woven into a meaningful providence. We see faithfulness carried out to its limit, which is then taken up into something larger. Tolkien states it through Gandalf, the best one to do so. “Behind that there was something else at work, beyond any design of the Ring-maker.
I can put it no plainer than by saying that Bilbo was meant to find the Ring, and not by its maker.” This isn't saying that Bilbo intended the outcome either. He obviously didn't control the result. None of them could have done that. And for all their goodness, that is still no guarantee they will succeed in the quest either! Tolkien's key word is "meant." Tolkien shows providence operates without canceling freedom, and without reducing events to moral bookkeeping, and many characters in this incredible tale elaborate on this through their actions.