So, I haven't chimed in for a while (and haven't really had anything urth-shattering to add in any event), but a few things from recent discussions have caught my eye and brought up questions for me.<div><br></div>
<div><br></div><div>1) Christianity in the world of Urth</div><div>The question has been around a long time, no? Was there Christianity in the past of Urth, or is this a universe without Christ? Is this a universe which prefigures ours, with echos of the Christian story in it, but without the physical incarnation of Christ which would enact the salvic effect of that incarnation? My question, which I can't recall seeing discussion of, but doubtless has in fact been picked apart and answered in a number of ways already, is this:</div>
<div><br></div><div>If the guild of torturers practices a rite central to their mythology and close to the very nature of their order, a rite which involves a character named Catherine who's story we can easily and readily track to the real and actual Saint Catherine of our world, doesn't that strongly indicate the presence, in the distant past of Urth, of a real Christianity? The very existence of saints, and of this one in with details so similar to the details of the story we know of Saint Catherine, seems to beg the question for me. How could you have her story without having first had Christ? What sorts of 'close but not identical' circumstances could have existed to give rise to this exceptionally similar story to our own?</div>
<div><br></div><div>Is this simply a function and artifact of the translation gimmick? Gene Wolfe the discoverer of the manuscript attempting to translate untranslatable elements by placing in terms and whole myths with which we are familiar?</div>
<div><br></div><div>What has past thinking on this board done with this question?</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>So, now, and </div><div>2) The Flood: Is it a spiritual act of renewal/genocide, or pretty much just a physical by-product of the gravitational effect of the white fountain giving the sun the ol' hot beef injection? It was recently pointed out that in the future of Master Ash, most humans had escaped and dispersed to the four corners of the universe. This was, no doubt, a much better outcome for the individuals of Urth, many if not most of whom could have gone on to live lives of some meaning and worth. Better than being drowned, for sure. But the Heiro's have a plan. They want to turn Man into themselves, they want to uplift us, if we prove worthy. Severian passes that test, and man is found worthy, but not *as he is*. Gather the wheat and burn the chaff. If man has been shown to have the potential for evolving into the next stage, there must be the correct setting for such (the renewal of the Urth's resources as Ushas) and the removal and washing clean of all of the habits, traits and declining traditions which brought Humanity into the negative judgement in the first place, said judgement having resulted in the black hole sun. </div>
<div><br></div><div>In this sense, I think Severian, and the qualities which have been honed in him by his magnificent journey, takes on perhaps his most 'christian' role off stage in the series. I wish I had the book in front of me, but the few things he says to the new Humanity on Ushas sound very Christlike to me. Looked at as a god, his every word will serve as, at least in part, the basis for a new moral direction for man. Urth and Severian have both been put through the fire, and what is left is metal ready to be tempered to a finer degree than what was possible before. So there is a physical and yet quite spiritual dimension to the flooding of Urth.</div>