I've once heard on the radio that Tolkien was very... Christian. And in Christianity nothing much is above prophecies (I'm pointing at the Apocalypse).
I've once read on the internet that Tolkien was crazy and LoTR was a way of escaping reality for him. Your point is?
Besides, Arda is as far removed from Christianity as possible. Whatever Tolkien's own beliefs were, he clearly didn't feel the need to burden his creation with them.
Actually, Tolkien's mythology is almost completely compatible with Christianity. The Silmarillion was written from the elven point of view, which has a few interesting points in it:
1. The elves don't have a religion, because they already understood
who made the world go 'round.
2. Said creator (Ilúvatar, which has the same connotations in Elvish as "the Lord" does in English) is an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent being whose nature is not explained in the book, except that He was beyond
ANYONE'S comprehension (even that of the Valar!)
3. This being created the Valar to please Him; and so too Arda (the earth).
4. The greatest of the Valar and therefore the second-most powerful being in existence was Melkor, but he rebelled and was later named Morgoth.
5. Many of the Valar then entered Arda to serve inside it; they were later mistaken for gods by men.
6. The elves were called the first-born children of Ilúvatar, Men were the second.
7. The elves were completely contained inside the bounds of the world, and therefore were immortal (e.g. they couldn't leave if they wanted to, and the weight of the world was indeed heavy upon them).
8. Men were given the gift of being able to leave the world itself, (aka die) but Morgoth misled them to believe that that was a curse. (Seriously, if life sucks so much, why would you
not want to leave?)
9. The final fate of man was not known to the elves, but they said it may be revealed to men somewhere else. (aka the Bible)
So if you think about it, Tolkien did a really good job at getting pagan mythology to fit into christian religious teachings. Every moral lesson, for instance, actually coincides with age-old christian values.
And as for the dwarves...
The 7 fathers of the dwarves were created by Aulë, (see below) who was impatient with the emptiness of the world in the time before the elves awoke. He wasn't supposed to do that. Besides, the dwarves were as lacking of life as Toady's, only being able to act as and when ordained. Ilúvatar, who of course knew what was going on, came down and confronted Aulë; who repented, offering to destroy his creation. The dwarves were cowering, and from that it was known that they had, in fact, been given life. However, they were then put to sleep and hidden in different places under the mountains, to await the time of their awakening: after elves but before man.
Now, Aulë was one of the most similar of the Valar to Melkor, with the important difference of remaining loyal. He was the smith of the Valar, crafting things merely to create them, and giving them away freely afterwords.
A very *interesting* fact is that his wife is Yavanna, who created
TREES and asked for the creation of the Ents to guard them.