![]() Is Jesus Who He says He is, and capable of spreading His truth in as seemingly trivial a way as a book? Or do you have to be special, charismatic, eloquent, etc. Watts’ denial of reality and embracing of Eastern unrealities (that is, doctrines that don’t have the fullness of truth in the person Jesus) led him to think that he had seen through the mirage of Christianity, with its sin and salvation and Heaven. If he took such claims at face value, then he would admit to not believing in miracles. Faith remains the basis of faith.īut actually, in spite of Watts’ lip service about miracles being possible, his spirituality was so scientized that any miraculous phenomenon was to be explained away by scientific principles merely undiscovered in our time. To be sure, the Church doesn’t treat miracles as evidence, but rather as signs to those with eyes to see, that God does reveal Himself to us personally. Similar to what I heard from Osho back when I read that stuff. What arrogance or carelessness one must have to assume one’s modern, Hinduized view is more instructive a lens to understand Jesus than the Jewish tradition in which He was raised!īeing the brilliant sage he was, Watts boasted of how Eastern thought put little stock in miracles. It reeks too much of a Creator’s personal plans for each one of us. Or rather, he never took such an idea seriously. Why would he take the Gospel as undiluted truth? How much more reasonable, it seemed to him, to doubt that the Holy Spirit, God Himself, could transmit truth to evangelists dozens of years after Christ’s death. To claim truth as true was to be slave to one viewpoint. Enlightenment was only available to those who saw truth as clever and evasive mystery. Watts didn’t outright express a disdain for wide-eyed, trusting children, the poorly educated, and the mentally challenged, but that’s what his attitude, of valuing smarts over faith, points to. (For the sake of simplicity we’re leaving out the fact that the Bible does involve proper, even scholarly interpretation and reasoning) ![]() If you’re not inclined to do so, then you can’t rise above what a powerful elite tells you to think, say, and do. Making up your mind about something, discovering your truth, is what’s liberating. Implying that being assured of the truth of something makes for unthinking acceptance. Watts maintained that the Bible couldn’t be what Christians said it was, namely, infallible, because his God would have wanted people to think for themselves. I am here critiquing some main points in this video ‘ Jesus, his religion’ where Watts claims to tell the audience who Jesus really was. But it’s left to us to do better, starting by not falling for his impressive-sounding but unsubstantial crap. Watts has been dead for nearly 50 years now, and there’s no use tarnishing his person further. He appreciated truth-seeking, and thought he was providing truth to a truth-starved audience. I guess I could be a little more charitable. “What hypocrisy of those priests.” “Jesus didn’t mean that literally.” “His followers got Christ’s message all wrong.” “Don’t be a sheep, think for yourself.” “Society has evolved since then.” And the list of ‘edgy’ clichés goes on. People ate his stuff up, in particular those who thought they knew what traditional Christianity was all about and who found it detestable. With his bad-guy British accent and white streak of hair, he had charisma. I thought he spoke out of a surmounting of the human condition, but he was just describing his brokenness as it was. ![]() And sure enough, in the audiobook I heard of his, he spoke of alcoholics who kept going back to alcohol even when they didn’t like the taste of it. That to me demonstrated how little a person’s words could reflect their internal life. Towards the end of my listen, I did a little googling about his life, and found out he died a miserable alcoholic. Eventually, I got to listen to an audiobook of his, where he was explaining all about life like he knew what he was talking about. I didn’t know anything else, he just seemed like some cult figure admired by artsy types, but I had no opinion of him. I first heard about Alan Watts from Van Morrison’s song ‘ Alan Watts blues.’ Great chorus.
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