Beowulf The passage at the start of the
Old English poem
Beowulf about
Scyld Scefing contains a cryptic mention of
þā ("those") who have sent Scyld as a baby in a boat, presumably from across the sea, and to whom Scyld's body is returned in a
ship funeral, the vessel sailing by itself. Shippey suggests that Tolkien may have seen in this both an implication of a Valar-like group who behave much like gods, and a glimmer of his
Old Straight Road, the way across the sea to Valinor forever closed to mortal Men by the remaking of the world after
Númenor's attack on Valinor.
Norse Æsir , the strong and combative Norse gods of Asgard. Painting by
Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, 1817.|alt=Painting of the pantheon of Norse gods Scholars such as
John Garth have noted that the Valar resemble the
Æsir, the Norse gods of
Asgard.
Thor, for example, physically the strongest of the gods, can be seen both in Oromë, who fights the monsters of Melkor, and in Tulkas, the strongest of the Valar. Manwë, the head of the Valar, has some similarities to
Odin, the "Allfather", while the wizard
Gandalf, one of the Maiar, resembles Odin the wanderer.
Godlike power Tolkien compared King
Théoden of
Rohan, charging into the enemy at the
Battle of the Pelennor Fields, to a Vala of great power, and to "a god of old": The
Episcopal priest and author
Fleming Rutledge comments that while Tolkien is not equating the events here with the
Messiah's return, he was happy when readers picked up
biblical echoes. In her view the language here is clearly biblical, evoking
Malachi's messianic prophecy "See, the day is coming, burning like an oven, when all the arrogant and all evildoers will be stubble ... And you shall tread down the wicked, for they will be ashes under the soles of your feet".
Pagan gods or angels s, intermediaries between the creator and the created world. Painting by
Lorenzo Lippi, c. 1645|alt=Painting with a Christian angel The theologian
Ralph C. Wood describes the Valar and Maiar as being what
Christians "would call
angels", intermediaries between the creator, Eru Ilúvatar, and the created cosmos. Like angels, they have
free will and can therefore rebel against him.
Matthew Dickerson, writing in the
J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia, calls the Valar the "Powers of Middle-earth", noting that they are not incarnated and quoting the Tolkien scholar
Verlyn Flieger's description of their original role as "to shape and light the world". Dickerson writes that while Tolkien presents the Valar like
pagan gods, he imagined them more like angels and notes that scholars have compared the devotion of Tolkien's Elves to Elbereth, an epithet of Varda, as resembling the
Roman Catholic veneration of
Mary the mother of Jesus. Dickerson states that the key point is that the Valar were "not to be worshipped". He argues that as a result, the Valar's knowledge and power had to be limited, and they could make mistakes and moral errors. Their bringing of the Elves to Valinor meant that the Elves were "gathered at their knee", a moral error as it suggested something close to
worship. The scholar of literature
Marjorie Burns notes that Tolkien wrote that to be acceptable to modern readers, mythology had to be brought up to "our grade of assessment". In her view, between his early work,
The Book of Lost Tales, and the published
Silmarillion, the Valar had greatly changed, "civilized and modernized", and this had made the Valar "slowly and slightly" more Christian. For example, the Valar now had "spouses" rather than "wives", and their unions were spiritual, not physical. All the same, she writes, readers still perceive the Valar "as a pantheon", serving as gods. File:Raffaello, concilio degli dei 02.jpg|Tolkien's Valar behave as a group, so that readers perceive them as a
pantheon like the
Olympian gods of the Greeks.
Elizabeth Whittingham comments that the Valar are unique to Tolkien, "somewhere between gods and angels". In her view, they mostly lack the rough brutality of the Norse gods; they have the angels' "sense of moral rightness" but disagree with each other; and their statements most closely resemble those of
Homer's
Greek gods, who can express their frustration with mortal men, as
Zeus does in the
Odyssey In a letter to
Milton Waldman, Tolkien states directly that the Valar are "'divine', that is, were originally 'outside' and existed 'before' the making of the world. Their power and wisdom is derived from their Knowledge of the cosmogonical drama". Whittingham notes further that Tolkien likens lesser spirits, wizards, who are Maiar not Valar, to
guardian angels; and that when describing the Maiar he "vacillates between 'gods' and 'angels' because both terms are close but neither is exactly right". Tolkien states in another letter that the Valar "entered the world after its making, and that the name is properly applied only to the great among them, who take the imaginative but not the theological place of 'gods'." Whittingham comments that the "thoughtful and carefully developed explanations" that Tolkien gives in these letters are markedly unlike his depictions of the Valar in his "earliest stories".
Luck or providence The Tolkien scholar
Tom Shippey discusses the connection between the Valar and "
luck" on Middle-earth, writing that as in real life, "People ... do in sober reality recognise a strongly patterning force in the world around them" but that while this may be due to "
Providence or the Valar", the force "does not affect free will and cannot be distinguished from the ordinary operations of nature" nor reduce the necessity of "heroic endeavour". He states that this exactly matches the
Old English view of luck and personal courage, as
Beowulfs "
wyrd often spares the man who isn't doomed, as long as his courage holds." The scholar of humanities
Paul H. Kocher similarly discusses the role of providence, in the form of the intentions of the Valar or of the creator, in
Bilbo's finding of the
One Ring and
Frodo's bearing of it; as Gandalf says, they were "meant" to have it, though it remained their choice to co-operate with this purpose. Rutledge writes that in
The Lord of the Rings, and especially at moments like Gandalf's explanation to Frodo in "
The Shadow of the Past", there are clear hints of a higher power at work in events in Middle-earth: Rutledge notes that in this way, Tolkien repeatedly hints at a higher power "that controls even the Ring itself,
even the maker of the Ring himself [her italics]", and asks who or what that power might be. Her reply is that at the surface level, it means the Valar, "a race of created beings (analogous to the late-biblical angels)"; at a deeper level, it means "the One", Eru Ilúvatar, or in Christian terms, divine Providence. == Notes ==