Bishop Barron on Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower"

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2025

Комментарии • 413

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  15 лет назад +99

    Listen carefully to the lyrics to All Along the Watchtower, and then read the book of the prophet Isaiah and tell me that I'm just projecting my beliefs.

    • @annatmarshall5133
      @annatmarshall5133 3 года назад +1

      Thank you for this talk Bishop Barron. I have often wondered about this song after having a series of 3 inter-connected dreams around 8 or so, years ago, where the Jimi Hendrix version of this song played throughout one of the dreams.

    • @willtherealrustyschacklefo3812
      @willtherealrustyschacklefo3812 3 года назад +4

      It parallels many parts actually, (partly because the the old testament parallels the new)but yes mainly Isiah, revelation and Daniel. The joker and the thief relates to the two people crucified with Jesus, the one thief who got saved on the cross., The watchmen also relate to the end times and revelation, and the part towards the end is basically the watchmen of the end times seeing the end come,a wild cat did growl(Daniel 13:2) two riders( 2 of the 4 horsemen) were approaching and the wind began to howl, (the first time the Jews heard the name Yahweh it was in the wind)

    • @willtherealrustyschacklefo3812
      @willtherealrustyschacklefo3812 3 года назад +1

      There is sooooo much like this in all music it's unreal tho, there are actually more biblical messages in rock and heavy metal songs than actual "Christian" or gospel music. Music itself is actually also very special. And music was actually also king David's Main weapon, just look into that

    • @Zerocool215
      @Zerocool215 2 года назад +3

      BishopRobertbarron I'm a Catholic. And how u describe everything is so how I feel in my heart. I have suffered father from addiction and always thought that it's gods will. I want to use my pain for good. As u said. Love. I pray God knows I love him. I've been beaten by drugs very ashamed. I don't want to hurt my self no more. I want God to shine though me. As I know he will. I'm all in. Thanks for being a man I respect. I man I know God sees as a equal.. God bless. Please say a prayer for me Johnny wajda. My mother Joan who prays for everyone 3 hours everyday but leaves her self and wish's out. Please pray for my father John. Who is s suffering from alcoholism and was abused in his life for being a man not a statistic. Please 🙏 pray for us. As I am ready to let God heal my heart and put out my trails of fire. I pray it all happened as it has to lead us to a road of love and gratitude. I truly love u lord God. Jesus ur son. Holy spirit please come into my family's hearts and help us.. please. Bishop Robert. Please pray for us. Ty sir. Sincerely. John m wajda...1108pm. 7-23-22. God bless amen...

    • @nissi.k
      @nissi.k 2 года назад

      Your analysis is wonderful and makes so much sense. The joker is cynical and joins the doubters and the mockers. You are right the thief admits his sin and imperfection and he has faith enough to accept Jesus, repent, and says: “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom…”
      Then Jesus answers, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.” Luke 31: 41-43 Therefore, this is a beautiful example of being saved by faith as found in Scripture. Two come to my mind: “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved…” And:
      “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and this is not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”

  • @rockturtleneck
    @rockturtleneck Год назад +29

    This was a spot-on and brilliant interpretation of Dylan's enigmatic masterpiece. Like many others, I have heard this song thousands of times and always been fascinated by the imagery and symbolism. Another really interesting interpretation of the song, and the entire John Wesley Harding LP, is based on the fact that Dylan recorded it at the height of the flower-power era, in 1967, which he basically sat out by hanging out in upstate NY with his young family and members of the Hawks/Band. I've always thought he was observing and commenting at the civil unrest of the late 60s from a biblical point of view. I think he was also saying to people "Look I know there's a lot of social upheaval going on-Vietnam, the Civil Rights struggle, the Generation Gap, changing morals, etc.-but civilization has been through stuff like this before we'll get through it this time too."

  • @joerosendale7889
    @joerosendale7889 4 месяца назад +11

    What a phenomenal mind! Bishop Barron’s ability to blend and integrate theology, philosophy, art, culture, and psychology, so seamlessly and practically, is truly unmatched. So blessed to hear this. Godspeed to you, Bishop

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  12 лет назад +13

    God bless you! And welcome home.

  • @JesusPedroza
    @JesusPedroza 10 лет назад +77

    Absolutely incredible take on one of my most favorite songs.

    • @mariadaniele9335
      @mariadaniele9335 9 лет назад +5

      +Jesús Pedroza Incredible indeed.

    • @SuperBrictson
      @SuperBrictson 3 года назад

      Actually curious in favorites!!! Sympathy For The Devil is definitely in my book!!!

  • @petelarose998
    @petelarose998 3 года назад +31

    This was a great interpretation of Dylan song and Dylan is one of the greatest singer-songwriters and Poets of all time

  • @niallhogan1565
    @niallhogan1565 5 лет назад +26

    I have a Jimmy Hendrix cd in my car and recently have been listening to it quite a bit and then I came across this lesson by Bishop Barron and it gives now more meaning which I like a lot

  • @blindlemon9
    @blindlemon9 4 года назад +10

    What a brilliant analysis by Bishop Barron of one of Dylan’s most mystical and beautifully poetic songs. All Along The Watchtower has long spoken to me in a direct, instinctive way, but I now have a deeper intellectual appreciation of it.

  • @LMurphyMusic
    @LMurphyMusic 6 лет назад +45

    Even as an atheist this is the most accurate and best understanding of the song.

    • @michaela.754
      @michaela.754 3 года назад

      Just because you're an atheist. Doesn't give you any sort of authority. So shut up.
      I say this as an atheist.

    • @LMurphyMusic
      @LMurphyMusic 3 года назад +10

      @@michaela.754 my man this was two years ago. I wasn’t saying it from a point of authority I was simply saying it from a viewpoint outside of being Christian.

    • @nicholasdibari9095
      @nicholasdibari9095 Год назад +3

      @@michaela.754As a Christian (and former Atheist) I appreciate it.

    • @stringbender3
      @stringbender3 Год назад

      U ain’t atheist quit lying you just spiritually immature

    • @Kay_OC
      @Kay_OC 4 месяца назад

      @@nicholasdibari9095 even after the explanation?

  • @michaelhands2189
    @michaelhands2189 7 лет назад +57

    I've ALWAYS wondered what this song is about. Great analysis! Goosebumps on the good thief analogy

  • @bmck1956
    @bmck1956 10 лет назад +8

    Fr Barron has brilliant insight, and expresses his views so well. It is great to listen to a learned preacher.

    • @mariadaniele9335
      @mariadaniele9335 9 лет назад +2

      +Brian McKeever
      Dylan does not. Hear his Bobness talk:
      "But the enemy I see Wears a cloak of decency
      All nonbelievers and men stealers talkin’ in the name of religion"
      Read more: www.bobdylan.com/us#ixzz3jvxi5FeS

    • @Zimium
      @Zimium 8 лет назад +1

      He his a manipulator using Bob to gather listeners and make money. Man stealer. OPutrid indeed

  • @kimberlycolins1970
    @kimberlycolins1970 12 лет назад +16

    This is a wonderful exegesis of a song that is so compact & yet so full of meaning.

  • @Zeupater
    @Zeupater 4 года назад +42

    Hey, the good father likes good music! ✌️

  • @padreemiliobortolinineto4358
    @padreemiliobortolinineto4358 3 года назад +11

    Excellent!!! I had already made the connection with Isaiah 21 but the one between the watchtower and the Cross is simply billiant! Well done, God bless you!

  • @ddharris5168
    @ddharris5168 4 года назад +17

    Honestly this is a great analysis about this song

  • @Pitsku
    @Pitsku 7 лет назад +13

    Spot on, I think. Get this other Dylan message: 'On this earthly domain/full of disappointment and pain...you'll never see me frown.' Wonderfully spiritual. Death is not the end.

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  16 лет назад +2

    Yes, I agree with you. Perhaps I'll get around to commenting on the more recent work. Thanks for the suggestion.

  • @robertsullivan4773
    @robertsullivan4773 3 года назад +3

    Stubbled on this because I was listening to the good Bishop talk on the Trinity. I never was a Dylan fan or Hendrix for that matter. But now having asked Alexa to play the song I have a lot to ponder now I have to get my Bible out. Funny how a teacher can have his lesson flow through time.

    • @Telabib-q2d
      @Telabib-q2d 17 дней назад

      Wipe the dust off your Bible and read it.

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  16 лет назад +23

    What was Paul doing on the Areopagus when he praised aspects of the religious philosophy of the Greeks? He was reaching out to the environing culture for points of contact with the Gospel. This strategy was practiced, in turn, by Origen, Augustine, Irenaeus, Thomas Aquinas, and practically every other major theologian.

    • @saigoncamarad
      @saigoncamarad 4 года назад +2

      which or whose version do you personally prefer, Robert

    • @afterlate8866
      @afterlate8866 3 года назад

      Yes, Bishop, but did they give up (water down, ignore - choose any similar word -) their own beliefs to accommodate those of others, or did they stand firm in their own faith and insist upon their own faith being the fullest one and the only means of salvation?

    • @MOMOFCJ6
      @MOMOFCJ6 3 года назад

      I dont think your projecting your belief your interpreting the song through your story and morals

    • @MOMOFCJ6
      @MOMOFCJ6 3 года назад

      And alot of bob Dylan's song are inspired from the bible

  • @nicholasdibari9095
    @nicholasdibari9095 3 года назад +11

    This is one of the greatest things I’ve ever heard

  • @brucebooher2288
    @brucebooher2288 6 лет назад +25

    I'm 65 and Catholic. Growing up I listened to far more Dylan than to priests. Now I can see I wasn't going in opposite directions.

  • @ericking2511
    @ericking2511 3 года назад +4

    May god bless and keep you always & Bob too

  • @Annette_Mairi
    @Annette_Mairi Год назад

    I’ve always loved Bob Dylan…and, surely God has placed into the heart of Bishop “Bob” Barron (whom I also love) the interpretation he so eloquently and spiritually provides. Hallelujah! 🙏❤️

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  12 лет назад +9

    Well, he was always biblical--even before he explicitly became a Christian. And anyone immersed in American folk and blues is necessarily immersed in the Scriptures.

    • @terryorletsky
      @terryorletsky 4 года назад

      Given Dylan's (and Sarah's) knowledge of the Tarot, the Joker is the most powerful figure in the deck - with value of Zero. I think the Joker is Christ. When Jesus was in despair - forsaken - the thief consoled him.

  • @ginchen33
    @ginchen33 Год назад

    Great interpretation Bishop Barron, thanks for talking about one of my favorite artists

  • @AbetoNightjar
    @AbetoNightjar 4 года назад +7

    "There must be some way out of here"
    Said the joker to the thief
    "There's too much confusion
    I can't get no relief
    Businessmen, they drink my wine
    Plowmen dig my earth
    None of them along the line
    Know what any of it is worth"
    "No reason to get excited"
    The thief, he kindly spoke
    "There are many here among us
    Who feel that life is but a joke
    But you and I, we've been through that
    And this is not our fate
    So let us not talk falsely now
    The hour is getting late"
    All along the watchtower
    Princes kept the view
    While all the women came and went
    Barefoot servants too
    Outside, in the distance
    A wildcat did growl
    Two riders were approaching
    The wind began to howl

  • @Catholicdrummer
    @Catholicdrummer 17 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the great insights on how that song is contected to our faith Fr. Barron!

  • @ChrisLupetti
    @ChrisLupetti 12 лет назад +12

    Hello Fr. Barron. I love Bob Dylan. He walked by me in a hotel lobby once. I didn't get to talk to him. I must have seen him over 15 times. I really enjoy all of your videos. I am seriously thinking about returning to the Catholic Church. I grew up Catholic. But when I was 19 I went to the Protestant Church. However, my heart is being moved to return home. Thank you for your videos.

    • @toosiyabrandt8676
      @toosiyabrandt8676 3 года назад +2

      HI
      You should return ONLY to the Bible! Too much pagan traditions in the Hierarchical Roman Catholic Church. You CAN'T mix the two! Shalom to us only in Christ Yeshua.

    • @roarkkaufman9339
      @roarkkaufman9339 11 месяцев назад

      I hope you made it home to Christ's church, the Catholic church, God bless you🎉

  • @silverlight2004db
    @silverlight2004db 6 лет назад +6

    Having listened to a few of your Dylan Vlogs i have to say i think i have finally found a reviewer (after 40 years of looking) who actually 'gets' Bob Dylan. As well, you make a lot of sense on many topics besides. Thank You!

    • @BishopBarron
      @BishopBarron  6 лет назад +1

      silverlight2004db Well, God bless you!

    • @caseyjoanz
      @caseyjoanz 6 лет назад +1

      Bishop Robert Barron - But do you ever suspect that Dylan is a gifted wordsmith who reads a lot, but his songs don’t really have a message? I go back and forth. When he’s good he sounds inspired, but - man - the things he admits he feels no obligation to be truthful about give me pause.

  • @billcarrell8622
    @billcarrell8622 3 года назад +1

    I came to the same conclusion in 1971 Bishop. I wasn't able to enunciate as well as you have but the message was the same.
    Thank you for that.

  • @heretohelp1874
    @heretohelp1874 4 года назад +4

    @Bishop Robert Barron as a traditional Catholic, who attends Latin Mass, all I really have to say is this:
    Come mothers and fathers
    Throughout the land
    And don't criticize
    What you can't understand
    Your sons and your daughters
    Are beyond your command
    Your old road is rapidly agin'
    Please get out of the new one
    If you can't lend your hand
    For the times they are a-changin'
    Tradition is the new counter-culture, the first one now, will later be last.

    • @BishopBarron
      @BishopBarron  4 года назад +2

      Not that you're patronizing or anything...

    • @heretohelp1874
      @heretohelp1874 4 года назад +1

      Bishop Robert Barron the loser now will be later to win, Excellency. I’m rooting and patiently waiting for the comeback of the the Catholic Church, which can restore our literally burning civilization. Young people yearn for transcendence, not 1960’s aesthetic in Liturgy. Thus, the growth of the TLM, and even the thriving of the Ordinariate. All of this speaks to the larger point. Please lead us.

  • @bodhidharma9363
    @bodhidharma9363 3 года назад +5

    a great interpretation, I was just reading that Dylan wrote this after 18 months of being laid up from the motorcycle crash and then hearing that his hero Woody Guthrie died, does set the atmosphere of looking for hope while in despair.

  • @keithfitzsimons815
    @keithfitzsimons815 10 лет назад +26

    One thing is for sure,Dylan is one clever guy to say the least...

  • @abucs
    @abucs 14 лет назад +6

    My Favourite Dylan song about Jesus
    Suddenly I turned around and she was standing there
    With silver bracelets on her wrists and flowers in her hair
    She walked up to me so gracefully and took my crown of thorns
    "Come in" she said"I'll give you shelter from the storm".
    In a little hilltop village they gambled for my clothes
    I bargained for salvation and they gave me a lethal dose
    I offered up my innocence and got repaid with scorn
    "Come in" she said "I'll give you shelter from the storm".

  • @biswadipdasgupta4204
    @biswadipdasgupta4204 3 года назад +5

    "While all the women came and went" is from the chorus of T.S. Elliot's "Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock":
    "In the room the women come and go
    Talking of Michelangelo."

  • @jameshofbauer1089
    @jameshofbauer1089 3 года назад +3

    Beautiful Bishop Barron. I will rant a bit why this moved me. Searching for voices in the Church, I reflect upon a comment you made in an introduction highlighting the teaching of Bishop Fulton Sheen. You made the bold, brave, statement regarding Bishop Sheen that he is a challenge for ‘our dumbed down modern Church’. I hope I am not taking you out of context. To me you were saying that the scholarly Bishop Sheen was able to embrace the Fullness of Truth, while lovingly and respectfully embracing secular thought. He understood literature, art, films, philosophy, psychology, history-the humanities. His faith was not a means of conquering, dividing, and denouncing. He did not seek to rule, rather to lovingly spread the Gospel-Good News. I hear and associate with Traditionalist Catholics and I become nauseous. The authoritative demand, the declarative statements and judgements, the division they create within the Church, the extreme politics-constant hysteria and conspiracies, calling the Pope by his last name, associating Vatican II to demonic influence, so much ugliness; challenging everyone to understand them, while they refuse to understand anyone. Father Chad Ripperger, a Latin Mass and devotee to traditional practices, is acute in his criticism of the self-proclaimed traditionalist. He stresses the gossiping and competitive nature of the parishes, the constant criticism of priests and the hierarchy of the Church; narrow minded and an overall improper education of the Church in terms of being dominated by self-will and agenda driven, in the sense, of only finding what supports one’s self-righteousness. Father Ripperger makes the statement: while denouncing Modernist, traditionists are some of the worst Modernist. Franciscan thought of ‘seek to understand, rather than be understood’ is demolished. Then to the opposite extreme, there is the liberal aspect of the Church, I will not name names or religious orders, yet have a couple specific local churches I associate with in mind. Everything is grounded in secular politics, again the imposition of personal agenda and self-will dominating. The parishes tend to be well educated, not the self-taught know-it-all traditionalist, and also charismatic and nice people to socialize with. However, instead of opening one’s self to the world with trust and understanding of the Fullness of Truth we embrace as Catholics, there is a constant challenge for change, the approval of secular academia, and the demands of the world dominating, while also embracing a passive aggressive nature that is extremely confrontational and insulting to anyone who does not agree with them. I also find the lack of prayer, especially contemplative prayer such as a daily Holy Hour, troubling. Both extremes are overly-sensitive, aggressively defensive and offensive, absolutely intolerant of anyone who does not support them-the demonizing of others habitually evolving into a way of life. So, as I accept the challenge in my own life of moving away from opinions (so much work to be done), deepening my faith through the decreasing of myself, it is a pleasure to find a voice that brings peace and understanding. I do not enjoy clashing with others. It is something I have to overcome--'too much confusion, I can't get no relief...Then the thief he kindly spoke'.

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  12 лет назад +3

    Gruss Gott! The Heilige Geist is stirring in you. Follow his promptings! Peace.

  • @suzanneperrin6937
    @suzanneperrin6937 Год назад

    What a revelation! Babylon has fallen There is a new world! Wow so there has been a spiritual element in Dylan's songs right from the start Thank you so much Bishop Barron and bless you Bob for spreading the Good News for so many years!

  • @jp791
    @jp791 3 года назад +1

    True, Dylan's songs have a strong spiritual component. Thanks for your analysis! About your reference to God breaking through into our circumstance (2:42)...He, may I say, from the beginning has already absolutely and Lovingly done that! Emmanuel can never not be Emmanuel again.

  • @yutehube4468
    @yutehube4468 7 месяцев назад

    What my dad said years ago about this, I've never forgot... "It's like a 4 minute album". Bishop Robert Barron puts across such powerful points in this video.

  • @ShawnMichaelNeal
    @ShawnMichaelNeal 14 лет назад +6

    Very interesting take on a great song. I personally never would have thought of it that way.

  • @jayparillo
    @jayparillo 8 лет назад +8

    Dylan's lyrics have that timeless quality, relevant to times past and present. Listen to Hurricane as another example

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  14 лет назад +8

    @bongolongo Then you've ruled out 99.9% of all literary interpretation! Last time I checked, we can't discuss the meaning of Moby Dick with Herman Melville or the themes of Oliver Twist with Charles Dickens. That doesn't stop the informed critic from analyzing as far as he can, the forms on display in the work.

  • @jeffstumpf9129
    @jeffstumpf9129 3 года назад +5

    Yes, popular culture delivers on rare occasions. Even Leonard Cohen used biblical references, in his poetic, yet worldly, “Hallelujah.”

  • @themoderateecowarrior
    @themoderateecowarrior 3 месяца назад

    Best video I've seen on RUclips for a long time

  • @bamboolaceway
    @bamboolaceway 4 года назад +2

    Thank you Fr. Barron, I love this interpretation! I also enjoy looking into the deeper spiritual meaning of popular music and movies. I would love to see your interpretation of songs by Twenty One Pilots, especially on their album, "Blurryface". God Bless.

  • @colinmcneil3428
    @colinmcneil3428 7 лет назад +11

    I think the very last line ("and the wind began to howl") symbolized the last breath of Jesus that tore the veil in the temple.

    • @paulorlando6087
      @paulorlando6087 3 года назад

      Or the Holy Spirit!

    • @thebacons5943
      @thebacons5943 2 года назад +1

      It’s also a fascinating way to end the song because it really sounds like it should be the opening:
      Two riders were approaching, the wind began to howl… ‘There must be some kind of way out of here’…
      It creates an impression of a cycle, a snare we get trapped in if we are not careful

  • @carlosreira413
    @carlosreira413 3 года назад +6

    "Plowmen dig my earth." Love it.

  • @casperdog777
    @casperdog777 14 лет назад +2

    Excellent Fr. Barron, great series keep up the good work !

  • @jamesm2942
    @jamesm2942 4 года назад +1

    I had never even heard of this song! Very interesting. Thanks Bishop Barron.

  • @johnprimm35
    @johnprimm35 3 года назад +4

    To paraphrase Tolkien in the Silmarillion, ‘God uses all things for His purposes, even if evil thinks otherwise’. Yep, rough paraphrase but the point is the He knows. Bishop Barron is a great soul.

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  12 лет назад +21

    Children are perfect?! Have you ever met one?

    • @urielurrutia3137
      @urielurrutia3137 4 года назад +3

      They are and always will be perfect. Anyone knows that. Their love has no limits.
      Go lie to someone else.

    • @phaedrussmith1949
      @phaedrussmith1949 4 года назад +1

      Exactly Rodrigo. Children are perfect and then systems such as religion break them so that they can then try to sell them back salvation. That's what the song is about.

    • @namasi7070
      @namasi7070 3 года назад +2

      @@phaedrussmith1949 most children are selfish, unforgiving, petulant, uncaring...talk to kindergarten teachers or mum and dads.
      Despite that children are still lovely, adorable, etc.
      Generally children are taught to do right because they naturally do wrong.
      Teach to share their toys, to care, to say sorry, to forgive etc etc

    • @phaedrussmith1949
      @phaedrussmith1949 3 года назад

      @@namasi7070 That thought is the worst residual of the process I addressed. You are mistaking the behaviour of children being broken during the domestication process with the true nature of children. Compulsory education systems are another primary component of the breaking process. The most hideous part of it is, as I said, that it produces adults who can't see the horror that was inflicted upon them as children and so become active participants in inflicting the same horror on future generations of children.

    • @a1lawnservice
      @a1lawnservice 3 года назад

      @@phaedrussmith1949 Ridiculous! 'The Lord of the Flies'

  • @timotheusn.h.nakashona1001
    @timotheusn.h.nakashona1001 7 лет назад +10

    Bob Dylan is a GENIUS!

  • @davidiancrux
    @davidiancrux 6 лет назад +2

    Bishop Barron nerds out. Loved this video.

  • @markrenfrow9873
    @markrenfrow9873 2 года назад +1

    "Playing for Change" (a RUclips channel) has the most outstanding cover ever of this song!

  • @FrankEnanoza
    @FrankEnanoza 6 лет назад +3

    I never thought about it this way. Wow!

  • @liamodalaigh3201
    @liamodalaigh3201 3 года назад +1

    can’t get enough of Father’s insights

  • @andrearomano9482
    @andrearomano9482 8 лет назад +1

    Lyrics
    "There must be some way out of here" said the joker to the thief
    "There's too much confusion", I can't get no relief
    Businessmen, they drink my wine, plowmen dig my earth
    None of them along the line know what any of it is worth.
    "No reason to get excited", the thief he kindly spoke
    "There are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke
    But you and I, we've been through that, and this is not our fate
    So let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late".
    All along the watchtower, princes kept the view
    While all the women came and went, barefoot servants, too.
    Outside in the distance a wildcat did growl
    Two riders were approaching, the wind began to howl.

  • @williamzrenner7206
    @williamzrenner7206 2 года назад +2

    Most people seem convinced of 'one' interpretation of the song, ie. Spiritual OR Sociopolitical. Yet maybe, Dylan's genius resides in his ability to convey dual meanings in his allegorical lyrics!!

  • @emilefeltesse
    @emilefeltesse 5 лет назад +2

    And I hear it as an inner discussion between 2 of his own sides of a popular songwriter. Inspired by bible for sure but a personnal poetic way to express his own state of soul.

  • @metatron107
    @metatron107 2 месяца назад +1

    Read the book of Enoch and then look at the lyrics. The Joker and the Thief are Azazel and Semjaza, discussing what they're about to do.

  • @nicholasdibari9095
    @nicholasdibari9095 Год назад +1

    “Prepare the table, watch in the watchtower, eat, drink: arise, ye princes, and anoint the shield. For thus hath the Lord said unto me, Go, set a watchman, let him declare what he seeth. And he saw a chariot with a couple of horsemen, a chariot of asses, and a chariot of camels; and he hearkened diligently with much heed: and he cried, A lion: My Lord, I stand continually upon the watchtower in the daytime, and I am set in my ward whole nights: and, behold, here cometh a chariot of men, with a couple of horsemen. And he answered and said, Babylon is fallen, is fallen; and all the graven images of her gods he hath broken unto the ground.”
    ‭‭Isaiah‬ ‭21‬:‭5‬-‭9 KJV

  • @MrSpacejase
    @MrSpacejase 7 лет назад +23

    I think father is a rocker mixed in there somewhere. 😊

  • @BloggerMusicMan
    @BloggerMusicMan 10 лет назад +6

    Father, which version of the song do you find most musically satisfying?

  • @Bloki1997
    @Bloki1997 4 года назад +4

    Bob Dylan one of the great minds of our time

  • @BlindEyeJones
    @BlindEyeJones 10 лет назад +6

    This with "Don't Fear the Reaper" are my great jam songs. A vi-V-IV progression that is the mainstay of rock, that you will hear everywhere even in "Stairway To Heaven." The lyrics of Watchtower almost don't matter because the focus is usually on great guitar playing -- the rockers all do this song so the real statement is usually found in their solos. Worlds open up in the solos from Neil Young sputtering and stuttering to Eric Clapton (God) being inspired to reach out and make a mistake!, to Richie Kotzen (dressed like Johnny Depp who was dressed like Keith Richards in "Pirates of the Caribbean") doing it like an R&B version of "Beast of Burden" to flatter the Rolling Stones that he opened up for on one of their many world tours, to Jimi Hendrix's manic psychedelia, to countless other musicians who make it their own. "The wind begins to howl" with these guys because there is a Spirit there. And there is a knock at the Watchtower's door. Who is there? Death? The two riders approaching, to my mind, symbolize the two motorcyclists that accompany lady Death in Jean Cocteau's movie Orphee. So this is my take, one guitar players take, one amongst many....

  • @martinhasson4942
    @martinhasson4942 4 года назад +3

    That's the Truth.
    Jesus is the Way Out of Here!👈

  • @ElvisRockatansky
    @ElvisRockatansky 15 лет назад +2

    Late to the party, but oddly the joker and thief references also evoked in me for awhile now the same image of the two thieves executed on either side of Jesus. The joker - mocking, dismissive of any meaning to life; the thief - a wrongdoer who nevertheless recognizes his wrong, which means he also recognizes what's right. The joker knows neither wrong nor right. He is a nihilist, like so many modern sages. That's what I hear, anyway.

  • @Bijdenatuur
    @Bijdenatuur 5 месяцев назад

    Love your interpretation. Thanx!

  • @SrVerataro
    @SrVerataro Год назад

    i love how literally everyone has a different interpretarion of the meaning of this song and yet... i feel like the meaning is somewhere in between them all

  • @Elsuper68
    @Elsuper68 4 года назад +2

    It's how you analyze the song , remember there were great thinkers in the past that try to free people conciousness, not to be trap in the history that others is telling you .

  • @JobinJacobKavalam
    @JobinJacobKavalam 3 месяца назад

    "We shouldn't be fooling around wit this lie that life is meaningless"; for so long I have put the "question" of the meaning of life on a pedestal, as the great quest of life. Now that I "know" the answer, I realise that was just the easy part. Now I am excited about really "living" it now ! Jesus, here I come into Thy arms.

  • @TolkienStudy
    @TolkienStudy 7 лет назад

    Thank you Bishop Barron great analysis!

  • @superfrodies
    @superfrodies 16 лет назад +2

    great commentary. I really like your interpretation of the watchtower as being up on the cross and seeing the world from Jesus and the two criminal's POV. I love Bob Dylan but never made this connection before. Thanks for your wise insight! Please do more dylan commentaries!

  • @peterjohnson1761
    @peterjohnson1761 3 года назад +2

    The last verse of this song sounds like it should be the first verse. The riders arrive, then the rest happens….I doubt Dylan would say that the bishop’s interpretation was his but he wouldn’t say it wasn’t either. Dylan’s songs can mean whatever they mean to anyone who listens.

  • @michaelbergfeld8751
    @michaelbergfeld8751 3 года назад +1

    Thank you, i never knew what to make of this text. I'm not sure many did. But what would be the purpose that the song was so popular as non-understood?

  • @DanielDiCenso
    @DanielDiCenso 6 лет назад +4

    Love this interpretation! Never thought of it that way, but then again, I prefer the Hendrix cover!

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  16 лет назад +1

    Two problems with that reading, friend. Dylan was deeply religious himself, and the riders in the song are taken directly from the prophet Isaiah.

  • @jaimlawson
    @jaimlawson 5 месяцев назад

    This is what I feel the wounded healer is. Who else can recognize the dire situation, other than those that have, or are going through destruction? The Hell they once had ignited or was ignited upon them in their life. It leads to one seeking redemption, realizing that it is en masse, the new norm, as it was a mere tool when they used the means as a single individual.

  • @benkata
    @benkata 3 года назад +2

    When you gonna review his Christian trilogy?

  • @docsavage8640
    @docsavage8640 3 года назад +2

    Fascinating

  • @Autobotmatt428
    @Autobotmatt428 10 дней назад

    I would love your take On A Complete Unknown

  • @BishopBarron
    @BishopBarron  13 лет назад +6

    @dogma2100 "There must be some way out of here," said the joker to the thief. There's too much confusion; I can't get no relief." I don't know: that just doesn't sound like God to me!

    • @Crooner-ds9sy
      @Crooner-ds9sy 6 лет назад

      Bishop Robert Barron well done! Personally I'm an Agnostic theist. However, I admire your interpretation of the song. I research the Bible from time to time and I admire many stories from the scripture and their heroes. The Bible from my opinion is the original story, a source of all types of artistic influence and symbolism. Thank you for your input. You father, have earned yourself a subscriber.

    • @caseyjoanz
      @caseyjoanz 6 лет назад

      Crooner1901 - I’m an atheist, but I appreciate believers. Atheists haven’t matched the cultural contributions of those who gave us the Cistine Chapel or the Pyramids. If God is inspiration where does it come from? Dylan seems to channel SOMETHING at times. But he says himself he’s lost that.

    • @richardbird8097
      @richardbird8097 4 года назад

      the Joker is Satan. He tells the thief, that there must be someway out of here. "Here" is the Hell where Satan lives. So the thief looks over at Jesus Christ to ask Him to remember him when He comes into His Kingdom. and Jesus assures the thief that he will be in Paradise with Him. (The Joker was also the Devil in I AM the Walrus by the Beatles. "choking smoker don't you know the Joker laughs at you...")

  • @daemondif7051
    @daemondif7051 2 года назад +2

    I understand and respect your opinion about the interpretation of the song. But I always had another interpretation, almost opposite to yours. I always felt it was a political critique towards the upper classes, namely the businessmen, and the princes who stand on the top of the watchtower with their "barefoot servants". The joker and the thieve representing something like people rejected and loathed by society, but who stands in a position of questioning the status quo. I know this interpretation has some contradictions but so do yours. To not extend myself, why would a watchtower representing jesus have women, princes and barefoot servants inside of it? I think this song is a wonderfull work of art, and the fact that so many interpretations can be drawn out of it only endorses the richness of the song.

  • @jejameson49
    @jejameson49 3 года назад +1

    Great review Father

  • @AndrewKennyBelfast
    @AndrewKennyBelfast 4 года назад +1

    Hi, thanks for your critique. I was wondering if you could tell me whether you came across any problems with regards to copyright infringements through using his lyric?. Thanks.

  • @erichwalrath970
    @erichwalrath970 Год назад +1

    Interesting interpretation, somewhat undermined by the fact that Dylan was not a professing Christian when this was recorded. Still, he used Biblical analogies before, and the two crucified thieves is definitely Dylan territory. It's a leap, though, to suggest that he celebrates the Resurrection at this time with this tune.
    That comes later.

  • @henryuribe4322
    @henryuribe4322 3 года назад +1

    Very good interpretation. I have a different opinion of the meaning of these lyrics, but this was a great breakdown and could very well be the true meaning.

  • @kimberlycolins1970
    @kimberlycolins1970 12 лет назад

    Also, it has been reported that during the period when he wrote "Watchtower", he was living in his country home in Woodstock & his most often-read book was a Bible which he kept on a bookstand in his study, according to an interview with his mother (& other friends) - as noted in several bios of him. He did say about that song he'd been reading the Prophets & that he wrote it during a thunderstorm.

  • @Pig45Pen
    @Pig45Pen 2 года назад

    Great insight by a clergyman into a classic Bob Dylan track. Well done Bishop Barron. I will get into Isiah 21 straight away.

  • @christianf5131
    @christianf5131 2 года назад +1

    What, this is amazing! I love Dylan.

  • @JamminInTaiwan
    @JamminInTaiwan 12 лет назад +1

    Father Barron, I am becoming a huge fan of yours! I am particularly impressed by how you are letting the world know that we are not all Biblical literalists. I believe you mentioned in one of your videos how the new atheism is a direct result of Christian fundamentalism. I couldn't agree more. I wrote a little piece on Facebook about The Who's Eminence Front and its relation to the Book of Ecclesiastes. I wish I could post a link but I don't think this is possible. Keep up the good work!

  • @williamwightman8409
    @williamwightman8409 3 года назад +1

    "No reason to get excited, the thief, he kindly spoke,
    There are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke.
    But you and I, we've been through that, and this is not our fate,
    So let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late." If this is truly inspired by bible verse then this is may be reference to knowledge through Jesus almost by symbolic proximity. Jesus here is the second person of the Trinity, or knowing and lucidity in the older religious traditions. "So let us not talk falsely here" is Dylan's intuitive perception of that view. "the hour is getting late" may be an Eastern religious reference to the many streams through incarnation and hinting at spiritual maturity and an end to this "joke".

  • @Wedget
    @Wedget 4 года назад +1

    G'day Fr Bob, thank you for your insight into the meaning of this absolutely legandary song , which by the way the late great Jimi Hendrix version put more than just meaning to, which I do wonder if Dylan's original penning of the song was religiously orietatated or maybe written with a differant perspective with a coincidental similarity to the biblical overtones!! Either way I respect all insights, God bless.

  • @WLDB
    @WLDB 17 лет назад +1

    Hmm thats a very neat way of looking at the song. I new it was probably his most biblical song but didnt exactly know where the story was. I think I'll check out those parts of the Bible now.

  • @de0den
    @de0den 8 лет назад +1

    "There must be some way out of here," ... There is no escape.
    This thought enters peoples mind as they get old, approaching mortality. It enters mine.

  • @zorrocachondo
    @zorrocachondo 7 лет назад

    Nunca había interpretado esta canción desde esa prespectiva, pero es una visión maravillosa

  • @geoffburton822
    @geoffburton822 3 года назад +2

    Perhaps the riders approaching are the joker & the thief. There was some way out of there, after all: Hallelujah! No?

  • @patrickreilly7256
    @patrickreilly7256 4 месяца назад

    Many people cover Dylans songs...
    but only he can tell the story ♡.

  • @bongolongo
    @bongolongo 15 лет назад +1

    @wordonfirevideo Did Pink Floyd write 'Dark Side Of The Moon' to match the Wizard of Oz movie? I'd like to know, because they match up perfectly too.
    Never underestimate the human capacity for seeing patterns where there are none.
    Have you asked Mr. Dylan if your interpretation is correct? I don't think I'd presume to know what other people thought during a creative process before I had asked them in person. It's very, very presumptious to do so on your own.