My difficulties lay deeper. It was more than I could believe that Jesus was the only incarnate son of God, and that only he who believed in him would have everlasting life. If God could have sons, all of us were His sons. If Jesus was like God, or God Himself, then all men were like God and could be God Himself. My reason was not ready to believe literally that Jesus by his death and by his blood redeemed the sins of the world. Metaphorically there might be some truth in it. Again, according to Christianity only human beings had souls, and not other living beings, for whom death meant complete extinction; while I held a contrary belief. I could accept Jesus as a martyr, an embodiment of sacrifice, and a divine teacher, but not as the most perfect man ever born. His death on the Cross was a great example to the world, but that there was anything like a mysterious or miraculous virtue in it my heart could not accept. The pious lives of Christians did not give me anything that the lives of men of other faiths had failed to give. I had seen in other lives just the same reformation that I had heard of among Christians. Philosophically there was nothing extraordinary in Christian principles. From the point of view of sacrifice, it seemed to me that the Hindus greatly surpassed the Christians. It was impossible for me to regard Christianity as a perfect religion or the greatest of all religions.

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Source: The Story of My Experiments with Truth (Autobiography), ch. 39 'Religious Ferment'.

About this quote

Honest belief can't be forced past what your reason and heart will accept, and pretending otherwise is its own dishonesty. Admiring a figure as a teacher and example, without swallowing every claim made about him, is a way to respect a faith without surrendering your judgment.

When to use it

  • A student respects a revered theory yet refuses to parrot the parts the evidence doesn't support.
  • Someone raised in one tradition admires another's teachers without abandoning their own honest doubts.
  • A reader takes what rings true from a philosophy and sets aside the claims they can't accept.