Philo wrote:Frodo wasn’t commanded to destroy the Ring; he freely chose to bear it as far as he could, and Tolkien is careful to judge him by faithfulness, not by outcome. There wasn't a law given with a design failure of a task. It was a burden freely accepted, a journey without guarantees, and it is a task beyond finite strength without being a trick. In the Letters Tolkien said Frodo was morally complete and forgiven since his failure does not negate his faithfulness. He got the ring to Mount Doom, and from his earlier gift of mercy letting Gollum live, that was how the ring was destroyed. No one knew how it would go, or that it even would succeed. There was no lying command of destroy the ring. Even the company of 9 was volunteers, not commandments for them. And they could leave the Fellowship at any time they wanted. So with the false premise, I don't think your argument holds. There is no 5D chess being played here, since there was no plan requiring failure so that a higher order could intervene. No higher order intervened in any manner. Gollum did. At least that is how the Tolkien set up was crafted.
It's about time someone on this forum made the bolded accusation correctly. As I understand it, it was a counsel of wisest who decided the imperative "destroy the ring". I figured, well, let's see if we can make this more religious by making it a commandment of some form. At that point, I didn't realize there is a God, Eru, and I figured maybe this was a close approximation for fantasy. Not so. Because there is a God available, such an imperative could be issued or inspired by Eru, yet codified moral law and divine commands and revelation are totally lacking. You did explain the music. This seems like common-sense morality based on empathy and community participation. The decision to destroy the ring was made by fallible individuals on their own reasoning. So I agree with you, there does not appear to be any switcharoo going on. "thou shalt not kill" -- "better kill that guy over there, though -- trust me, I play 5d chess".
I do maintain there is 5d chess in the way God stepped in and saved the plan. I think there is the parable of the penny jar and bicycle here also. However, is God writing straight with crooked lines? Well, the way this phrase has been interpreted so far by both critics and MG, I'd say no.
Lost Gospel of Thomas 1:8 - And Jesus said, "what about the Pharisees? They did it too! Wherefore, we shall do it even more!"