Is Sauron a lesser type of god? [on hold]












-1















Since he is a powerful being who is seemingly supernatural, could he be considered a god of some type?










share|improve this question









New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











put on hold as too broad by SteveED, Bellatrix, Jenayah, Vanguard3000, Ward 15 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 1





    Perhaps you could tell us a bit more about what you mean by a "god". You're pretty clearly not using the Judaeo-Christian definition.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • No, I don't mean an all-powerful, indestructible being. Here is the definition of "god". en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • Two points: First, There's actually more than one definition in your reference. It would help the clarity of your question of you took your preferred definition and added it to the question. Secondly, you really ought to judge creatures in Tolkien's universe by his rules (as best we can discern them) and not by the rules of some other book or game or culture.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago













  • That's just the problem. So many people define a god differently, which makes it hard for me to answer his question. I have been searching for a word that describes Sauron perfectly and have only found one: demon. What are Tolkien's rules? He only defines Ainur as "divine spirits". Naturally, we translate "divine spirits" to angels. However, Tolkien doesn't include words like angel or god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    Heh. If it makes it hard for you who are asking the question, how much harder is it for people answering it? (Also, in one of his letters, Tolkien explicitly says that Gandalf (and the other Istari) are angels. This would suggest that Sauron is one also, though at the start of the book it would appear that he is an angel in the process of falling (as is Saruman) and not one yet wholly fallen.)

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago


















-1















Since he is a powerful being who is seemingly supernatural, could he be considered a god of some type?










share|improve this question









New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











put on hold as too broad by SteveED, Bellatrix, Jenayah, Vanguard3000, Ward 15 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 1





    Perhaps you could tell us a bit more about what you mean by a "god". You're pretty clearly not using the Judaeo-Christian definition.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • No, I don't mean an all-powerful, indestructible being. Here is the definition of "god". en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • Two points: First, There's actually more than one definition in your reference. It would help the clarity of your question of you took your preferred definition and added it to the question. Secondly, you really ought to judge creatures in Tolkien's universe by his rules (as best we can discern them) and not by the rules of some other book or game or culture.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago













  • That's just the problem. So many people define a god differently, which makes it hard for me to answer his question. I have been searching for a word that describes Sauron perfectly and have only found one: demon. What are Tolkien's rules? He only defines Ainur as "divine spirits". Naturally, we translate "divine spirits" to angels. However, Tolkien doesn't include words like angel or god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    Heh. If it makes it hard for you who are asking the question, how much harder is it for people answering it? (Also, in one of his letters, Tolkien explicitly says that Gandalf (and the other Istari) are angels. This would suggest that Sauron is one also, though at the start of the book it would appear that he is an angel in the process of falling (as is Saruman) and not one yet wholly fallen.)

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago
















-1












-1








-1








Since he is a powerful being who is seemingly supernatural, could he be considered a god of some type?










share|improve this question









New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Since he is a powerful being who is seemingly supernatural, could he be considered a god of some type?







tolkiens-legendarium sauron maiar






share|improve this question









New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 mins ago







nuggetsnack













New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 17 hours ago









nuggetsnacknuggetsnack

84




84




New contributor




nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






nuggetsnack is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




put on hold as too broad by SteveED, Bellatrix, Jenayah, Vanguard3000, Ward 15 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






put on hold as too broad by SteveED, Bellatrix, Jenayah, Vanguard3000, Ward 15 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 1





    Perhaps you could tell us a bit more about what you mean by a "god". You're pretty clearly not using the Judaeo-Christian definition.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • No, I don't mean an all-powerful, indestructible being. Here is the definition of "god". en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • Two points: First, There's actually more than one definition in your reference. It would help the clarity of your question of you took your preferred definition and added it to the question. Secondly, you really ought to judge creatures in Tolkien's universe by his rules (as best we can discern them) and not by the rules of some other book or game or culture.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago













  • That's just the problem. So many people define a god differently, which makes it hard for me to answer his question. I have been searching for a word that describes Sauron perfectly and have only found one: demon. What are Tolkien's rules? He only defines Ainur as "divine spirits". Naturally, we translate "divine spirits" to angels. However, Tolkien doesn't include words like angel or god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    Heh. If it makes it hard for you who are asking the question, how much harder is it for people answering it? (Also, in one of his letters, Tolkien explicitly says that Gandalf (and the other Istari) are angels. This would suggest that Sauron is one also, though at the start of the book it would appear that he is an angel in the process of falling (as is Saruman) and not one yet wholly fallen.)

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago
















  • 1





    Perhaps you could tell us a bit more about what you mean by a "god". You're pretty clearly not using the Judaeo-Christian definition.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • No, I don't mean an all-powerful, indestructible being. Here is the definition of "god". en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • Two points: First, There's actually more than one definition in your reference. It would help the clarity of your question of you took your preferred definition and added it to the question. Secondly, you really ought to judge creatures in Tolkien's universe by his rules (as best we can discern them) and not by the rules of some other book or game or culture.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago













  • That's just the problem. So many people define a god differently, which makes it hard for me to answer his question. I have been searching for a word that describes Sauron perfectly and have only found one: demon. What are Tolkien's rules? He only defines Ainur as "divine spirits". Naturally, we translate "divine spirits" to angels. However, Tolkien doesn't include words like angel or god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    Heh. If it makes it hard for you who are asking the question, how much harder is it for people answering it? (Also, in one of his letters, Tolkien explicitly says that Gandalf (and the other Istari) are angels. This would suggest that Sauron is one also, though at the start of the book it would appear that he is an angel in the process of falling (as is Saruman) and not one yet wholly fallen.)

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago










1




1





Perhaps you could tell us a bit more about what you mean by a "god". You're pretty clearly not using the Judaeo-Christian definition.

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago





Perhaps you could tell us a bit more about what you mean by a "god". You're pretty clearly not using the Judaeo-Christian definition.

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago













No, I don't mean an all-powerful, indestructible being. Here is the definition of "god". en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





No, I don't mean an all-powerful, indestructible being. Here is the definition of "god". en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago













Two points: First, There's actually more than one definition in your reference. It would help the clarity of your question of you took your preferred definition and added it to the question. Secondly, you really ought to judge creatures in Tolkien's universe by his rules (as best we can discern them) and not by the rules of some other book or game or culture.

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago







Two points: First, There's actually more than one definition in your reference. It would help the clarity of your question of you took your preferred definition and added it to the question. Secondly, you really ought to judge creatures in Tolkien's universe by his rules (as best we can discern them) and not by the rules of some other book or game or culture.

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago















That's just the problem. So many people define a god differently, which makes it hard for me to answer his question. I have been searching for a word that describes Sauron perfectly and have only found one: demon. What are Tolkien's rules? He only defines Ainur as "divine spirits". Naturally, we translate "divine spirits" to angels. However, Tolkien doesn't include words like angel or god.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





That's just the problem. So many people define a god differently, which makes it hard for me to answer his question. I have been searching for a word that describes Sauron perfectly and have only found one: demon. What are Tolkien's rules? He only defines Ainur as "divine spirits". Naturally, we translate "divine spirits" to angels. However, Tolkien doesn't include words like angel or god.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago




1




1





Heh. If it makes it hard for you who are asking the question, how much harder is it for people answering it? (Also, in one of his letters, Tolkien explicitly says that Gandalf (and the other Istari) are angels. This would suggest that Sauron is one also, though at the start of the book it would appear that he is an angel in the process of falling (as is Saruman) and not one yet wholly fallen.)

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago







Heh. If it makes it hard for you who are asking the question, how much harder is it for people answering it? (Also, in one of his letters, Tolkien explicitly says that Gandalf (and the other Istari) are angels. This would suggest that Sauron is one also, though at the start of the book it would appear that he is an angel in the process of falling (as is Saruman) and not one yet wholly fallen.)

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














To borrow from another answer, the TL;DR answer is (emphasis mine)



No




Sauron wasn't always evil. He began his life as a Maia, essentially an angel, and of the same class as Gandalf and the other wizards. He was eventually corrupted by Morgoth, and became his most powerful lieutenant, but he never really had the same motives as Morgoth. Morgoth was one of the Valar (demigods or Archangels), and was far more powerful than Sauron; in fact, Morgoth was the second most powerful entity in the universe after Eru Ilúvatar (who is basically analogous to the Judeo-Christian god). While Morgoth was still around, Sauron seems to have served him very faithfully, but after Morgoth's defeat and exile into the void, Sauron showed himself to be somewhat different from his former master.




So to sum it up, you have on the power charts




  1. Eru Ilúvatar (God)

  2. Morgoth

  3. Sauron


Sauron wants to be God, he just never gets there






share|improve this answer
























  • I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • @nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

    – Machavity
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • @Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    "do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago



















1














In The Silmarillion, we see the origin of many of the most important beings in Tolkein's world of Middle Earth. Amongst the spiritual beings collectively referred to as Ainur, there were two orders of beings relevant to the discussion: the Valar and the Maiar.



The Valar were greatly more powerful than the Maiar, and many (or maybe all) Maiar served one of the Valar. The Valar are equivalent to a pantheon of Gods, albeit subservient to a yet greater and more abstract creator being referred to as Eru Ilúvatar. The Maiar, on the other hand, are more like what most people in a European-based culture would think of as "angels".



So now I can answer your question:



Sauron was a Maiar, as were the wizards Gandalf, Saruman, Radagast and a couple of others. This made him much less powerful than the Valar; in fact, he served the Valar Morgoth.



That he seemed more powerful than the wizards had to do with the condition that the wizards did not take over and interfere with the lands of Middle Earth.






share|improve this answer
























  • Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














To borrow from another answer, the TL;DR answer is (emphasis mine)



No




Sauron wasn't always evil. He began his life as a Maia, essentially an angel, and of the same class as Gandalf and the other wizards. He was eventually corrupted by Morgoth, and became his most powerful lieutenant, but he never really had the same motives as Morgoth. Morgoth was one of the Valar (demigods or Archangels), and was far more powerful than Sauron; in fact, Morgoth was the second most powerful entity in the universe after Eru Ilúvatar (who is basically analogous to the Judeo-Christian god). While Morgoth was still around, Sauron seems to have served him very faithfully, but after Morgoth's defeat and exile into the void, Sauron showed himself to be somewhat different from his former master.




So to sum it up, you have on the power charts




  1. Eru Ilúvatar (God)

  2. Morgoth

  3. Sauron


Sauron wants to be God, he just never gets there






share|improve this answer
























  • I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • @nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

    – Machavity
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • @Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    "do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago
















3














To borrow from another answer, the TL;DR answer is (emphasis mine)



No




Sauron wasn't always evil. He began his life as a Maia, essentially an angel, and of the same class as Gandalf and the other wizards. He was eventually corrupted by Morgoth, and became his most powerful lieutenant, but he never really had the same motives as Morgoth. Morgoth was one of the Valar (demigods or Archangels), and was far more powerful than Sauron; in fact, Morgoth was the second most powerful entity in the universe after Eru Ilúvatar (who is basically analogous to the Judeo-Christian god). While Morgoth was still around, Sauron seems to have served him very faithfully, but after Morgoth's defeat and exile into the void, Sauron showed himself to be somewhat different from his former master.




So to sum it up, you have on the power charts




  1. Eru Ilúvatar (God)

  2. Morgoth

  3. Sauron


Sauron wants to be God, he just never gets there






share|improve this answer
























  • I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • @nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

    – Machavity
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • @Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    "do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago














3












3








3







To borrow from another answer, the TL;DR answer is (emphasis mine)



No




Sauron wasn't always evil. He began his life as a Maia, essentially an angel, and of the same class as Gandalf and the other wizards. He was eventually corrupted by Morgoth, and became his most powerful lieutenant, but he never really had the same motives as Morgoth. Morgoth was one of the Valar (demigods or Archangels), and was far more powerful than Sauron; in fact, Morgoth was the second most powerful entity in the universe after Eru Ilúvatar (who is basically analogous to the Judeo-Christian god). While Morgoth was still around, Sauron seems to have served him very faithfully, but after Morgoth's defeat and exile into the void, Sauron showed himself to be somewhat different from his former master.




So to sum it up, you have on the power charts




  1. Eru Ilúvatar (God)

  2. Morgoth

  3. Sauron


Sauron wants to be God, he just never gets there






share|improve this answer













To borrow from another answer, the TL;DR answer is (emphasis mine)



No




Sauron wasn't always evil. He began his life as a Maia, essentially an angel, and of the same class as Gandalf and the other wizards. He was eventually corrupted by Morgoth, and became his most powerful lieutenant, but he never really had the same motives as Morgoth. Morgoth was one of the Valar (demigods or Archangels), and was far more powerful than Sauron; in fact, Morgoth was the second most powerful entity in the universe after Eru Ilúvatar (who is basically analogous to the Judeo-Christian god). While Morgoth was still around, Sauron seems to have served him very faithfully, but after Morgoth's defeat and exile into the void, Sauron showed himself to be somewhat different from his former master.




So to sum it up, you have on the power charts




  1. Eru Ilúvatar (God)

  2. Morgoth

  3. Sauron


Sauron wants to be God, he just never gets there







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 16 hours ago









MachavityMachavity

24.7k575142




24.7k575142













  • I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • @nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

    – Machavity
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • @Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    "do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago



















  • I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago











  • @nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

    – Machavity
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

    – Mark Olson
    16 hours ago











  • @Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    "do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago

















I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





I know he wasn't the most powerful. However, what keeps from making him a god? He had power over other evil forces in Middle-Earth e.g. orcs and Olog-hai.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago













@nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

– Machavity
16 hours ago





@nuggetsnack What stopped him was most of Middle-Earth showing up on his front doorstep and fighting a war that destroyed him. The One Ring is simply his bank-shot to try and regain power someday

– Machavity
16 hours ago




1




1





@nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago





@nuggetsnack: If by a "god" you mean "a powerful being" then sure. But a "god" that is defeated at least three times that we know of by humans and elves is a pretty miserable excuse for a god.

– Mark Olson
16 hours ago













@Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





@Machavity I didn't mean "god" as in king or lord. Like how the angel Lucifer never got the chance to take over the world, but Satanists still worship him as if he had. Lucifer tried to, yes. But he never did.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago




1




1





"do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





"do not all" but some do. My point: some people out there still worship this figure.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago













1














In The Silmarillion, we see the origin of many of the most important beings in Tolkein's world of Middle Earth. Amongst the spiritual beings collectively referred to as Ainur, there were two orders of beings relevant to the discussion: the Valar and the Maiar.



The Valar were greatly more powerful than the Maiar, and many (or maybe all) Maiar served one of the Valar. The Valar are equivalent to a pantheon of Gods, albeit subservient to a yet greater and more abstract creator being referred to as Eru Ilúvatar. The Maiar, on the other hand, are more like what most people in a European-based culture would think of as "angels".



So now I can answer your question:



Sauron was a Maiar, as were the wizards Gandalf, Saruman, Radagast and a couple of others. This made him much less powerful than the Valar; in fact, he served the Valar Morgoth.



That he seemed more powerful than the wizards had to do with the condition that the wizards did not take over and interfere with the lands of Middle Earth.






share|improve this answer
























  • Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago
















1














In The Silmarillion, we see the origin of many of the most important beings in Tolkein's world of Middle Earth. Amongst the spiritual beings collectively referred to as Ainur, there were two orders of beings relevant to the discussion: the Valar and the Maiar.



The Valar were greatly more powerful than the Maiar, and many (or maybe all) Maiar served one of the Valar. The Valar are equivalent to a pantheon of Gods, albeit subservient to a yet greater and more abstract creator being referred to as Eru Ilúvatar. The Maiar, on the other hand, are more like what most people in a European-based culture would think of as "angels".



So now I can answer your question:



Sauron was a Maiar, as were the wizards Gandalf, Saruman, Radagast and a couple of others. This made him much less powerful than the Valar; in fact, he served the Valar Morgoth.



That he seemed more powerful than the wizards had to do with the condition that the wizards did not take over and interfere with the lands of Middle Earth.






share|improve this answer
























  • Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago














1












1








1







In The Silmarillion, we see the origin of many of the most important beings in Tolkein's world of Middle Earth. Amongst the spiritual beings collectively referred to as Ainur, there were two orders of beings relevant to the discussion: the Valar and the Maiar.



The Valar were greatly more powerful than the Maiar, and many (or maybe all) Maiar served one of the Valar. The Valar are equivalent to a pantheon of Gods, albeit subservient to a yet greater and more abstract creator being referred to as Eru Ilúvatar. The Maiar, on the other hand, are more like what most people in a European-based culture would think of as "angels".



So now I can answer your question:



Sauron was a Maiar, as were the wizards Gandalf, Saruman, Radagast and a couple of others. This made him much less powerful than the Valar; in fact, he served the Valar Morgoth.



That he seemed more powerful than the wizards had to do with the condition that the wizards did not take over and interfere with the lands of Middle Earth.






share|improve this answer













In The Silmarillion, we see the origin of many of the most important beings in Tolkein's world of Middle Earth. Amongst the spiritual beings collectively referred to as Ainur, there were two orders of beings relevant to the discussion: the Valar and the Maiar.



The Valar were greatly more powerful than the Maiar, and many (or maybe all) Maiar served one of the Valar. The Valar are equivalent to a pantheon of Gods, albeit subservient to a yet greater and more abstract creator being referred to as Eru Ilúvatar. The Maiar, on the other hand, are more like what most people in a European-based culture would think of as "angels".



So now I can answer your question:



Sauron was a Maiar, as were the wizards Gandalf, Saruman, Radagast and a couple of others. This made him much less powerful than the Valar; in fact, he served the Valar Morgoth.



That he seemed more powerful than the wizards had to do with the condition that the wizards did not take over and interfere with the lands of Middle Earth.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 16 hours ago









cryptarchcryptarch

536113




536113













  • Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago



















  • Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago






  • 1





    @nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

    – cryptarch
    16 hours ago













  • en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

    – nuggetsnack
    16 hours ago

















Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





Some angels are considered as "gods" by many people around the world. Personally, I consider Sauron to be a demon; an evil spirit. I guess it all depends on how one defines a god.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago




1




1





@nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

– cryptarch
16 hours ago







@nuggetsnack You seem to be saying that you had already decided in advance what Answer you want; if there is no confusion in your mind then why did you ask the question? I've given the reason why Sauron is not a God: because there is an order of beings greater than him, who constitute a Tolkeinian Pantheon, and one of whom is Sauron's master.

– cryptarch
16 hours ago















The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





The difference is the wording. "God" means a being who is independent, self-existent, all-powerful, omniscient. "god" is a being believed to have more than natural attributes and powers.

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago




1




1





@nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

– cryptarch
16 hours ago







@nuggetsnack If you would like to dictate artificial definitions as a constraint on what answers you will accept, you should make it clear in your Question.

– cryptarch
16 hours ago















en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago





en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/god here is the definition of god if you don't accept mine

– nuggetsnack
16 hours ago



Popular posts from this blog

Knooppunt Holsloot

Altaar (religie)

Gregoriusmis