Tillich

Abingdon Pillars of Theology is a series for the college and seminary classroom designed to help students grasp the basic and necessary facts, influence, and significance of major theologians. Written by major scholars, these books will outline the context, methodology, organizing principles, primary contributions, and major writings of people who have shaped theology as we know it today.
"Tillich served as a theological pioneer, exploring boundaries and traversing creatively between the territories of philosophy and theology, between the faith and culture, between Christianity and Buddhism, between the academy and the public. He was a thinker who theorized about everything and who attempted to show what matters and why." from the book

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Tillich

Abingdon Pillars of Theology is a series for the college and seminary classroom designed to help students grasp the basic and necessary facts, influence, and significance of major theologians. Written by major scholars, these books will outline the context, methodology, organizing principles, primary contributions, and major writings of people who have shaped theology as we know it today.
"Tillich served as a theological pioneer, exploring boundaries and traversing creatively between the territories of philosophy and theology, between the faith and culture, between Christianity and Buddhism, between the academy and the public. He was a thinker who theorized about everything and who attempted to show what matters and why." from the book

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Tillich

Tillich

by Donald W. Musser, Joseph Price
Tillich

Tillich

by Donald W. Musser, Joseph Price

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Overview

Abingdon Pillars of Theology is a series for the college and seminary classroom designed to help students grasp the basic and necessary facts, influence, and significance of major theologians. Written by major scholars, these books will outline the context, methodology, organizing principles, primary contributions, and major writings of people who have shaped theology as we know it today.
"Tillich served as a theological pioneer, exploring boundaries and traversing creatively between the territories of philosophy and theology, between the faith and culture, between Christianity and Buddhism, between the academy and the public. He was a thinker who theorized about everything and who attempted to show what matters and why." from the book


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781426764561
Publisher: Abingdon Press
Publication date: 02/01/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 738,074
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Donald W. Musser is Senior Professor of Religious Studies and Hal S. Marchman Chair of Civic and Social Responsibility (Emeritus).
Joseph L. Price is the Genevieve Schaul Connick Professor of Religious Studies at Whittier College, Whittier, California.

Read an Excerpt

Tillich


By Donald W. Musser, Joseph L. Price

Abingdon Press

Copyright © 2014 Donald W. Musser and Joseph L. Price
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4267-6456-1


CHAPTER 1

Life and Career


James William McClendon once wrote that all theology is autobiography. That aphorism and its cognate—that all theology is contextual—surely apply to Paul Tillich's theology, which was decisively shaped by his life's personal and cultural contexts. A sketch of his life and the shape of his career illumine this intersection.

Tillich was born into a Lutheran pastor's home on August 20, 1886, in Starzeddel, Germany (now Poland). Until 1933 he resided in Germany; in that year he immigrated to the United States, where he lived the remainder of his life in New York City, Boston, and Chicago. After he died on October 25, 1965, his ashes were interred at Paul Tillich Park in New Harmony, Indiana.

Tillich studied at the universities of Berlin, Tübingen, Halle, and Breslau. Seminal influences on him were the theologian Martin Kähler, the idealist philosopher Friedrich Schelling, the religious theorist Rudolf Otto, and the existentialist philosopher Martin Heidegger. Schelling was the topic of both of his dissertations, at Breslau in 1910 and at Halle in 1912. While at Halle, he became an army chaplain during World War I. His experiences with violence and death caused him psychological trauma, resulting in treatments and expressing itself in radical shifts of his point of view. When the war ended, for example, he received an appointment at the University of Berlin, where he became a social and political activist, sharply criticizing capitalism and embracing religious socialism. His marriage to Margarethe Wever (in 1914) ended in divorce in 1921. In 1924 he married Hannah Gottschow.

Also in 1924 Tillich became a professor of theology at Marburg, where Rudolf Otto and Martin Heidegger were colleagues. In 1925 he moved to a position in Dresden, and in 1927 to the University of Leipzig. Then from 1929 to 1933 he served at the University of Frankfurt as professor of philosophy until the Nazis dismissed him from his position for his public criticism of the Hitler regime and his close relationship with Jewish intellectuals.

With the support of Reinhold Niebuhr, in 1933, he left Germany for a position at Union Theological Seminary in New York City, where he taught until 1955. Thereafter, he became University Professor at Harvard University and, in 1962, the Nuveen Professor of Divinity at The University of Chicago until his death.

A prolific writer and frequent lecturer, Tillich addressed public and academic audiences with such clarity that many of his works remain in print. Foremost is his Systematic Theology, published in three separate volumes in 1951, 1957, and 1963. Other notable works are The Courage to Be (1952), Love, Power, and Justice (1954), and The Dynamics of Faith (1957). Collected essays include The Protestant Era (1948), Theology of Culture (1959), What Is Religion? (1969), Political Expectation (1971), and The Thought of Paul Tillich (1985). A fruitful entryway into Tillich's intellectual world is through his sermons, which are collected in The Shaking of the Foundations (1948), The New Being (1955), and The Eternal Now (1963). Engaging autobiographical writings include On the Boundary (1966), My Search for Absolutes (1967), and My Travel Diary (1970). A selection of Tillich's writings can be accessed at www.religion-online.org. Click on "Tillich." At the conclusion of this volume, there is a bibliography of primary and secondary sources.

By the mid-1950s Tillich had become the most notable and perhaps the most controversial theologian in America. In 1959 he appeared on the cover of Time, which featured him as America's "foremost Protestant thinker." In 1963 he was the plenary speaker at the magazine's fortieth anniversary dinner, addressing hundreds of celebrities who had appeared on Time's cover. Through the 1960s, he was the visible face of American theology.

Along with Karl Barth, he remains an abiding presence in theology. In a speech to the American Academy of Religion in 1989, Jonathan Z. Smith, in an analysis of the structure and ethos of the scholarly study of religion, noted that "Tillich remains the unacknowledged theoretician of our entire enterprise." Professor Smith, a historian of religion at The University of Chicago, references the expanse of the study of religion per se and not merely Christian theology. Tillich's work continues to be an object of study in colleges, universities, seminaries, and divinity schools. Scholars continue to write dissertations, monographs, and articles on him, often in comparison or contrast with newer approaches to theology. The North American Paul Tillich Society supports scholarship on Tillich along with its German counterpart, the Deutsche-Paul-Tillich-Gesellschaft.

For some, like the authors of this text, Tillich is an iconic figure, a deep and serious person of faith who was a brave and creative interpreter of the core of Christian belief. For others, he is a representative of all that is wrong with theology. He is portrayed as a betrayer and denier of historic orthodoxy, a heretic, a relativist, and even an atheist. Despite the deep divide of opinion about Tillich, there is considerable veracity to Yale professor John E. Smith's aphorism: "You can think with him or against him, but not without him."

In approaching Tillich's thought, a reader needs to keep several orientations in mind in order to understand his work. Central, as many interpreters have noted, he is a thinker "on the boundaries." Perhaps no other point is as important for "getting" what Tillich is saying. This application of a boundary metaphor suggests a style of thinking that mediates between "this" and "that," typically finding a concept with polar extremes in tension with each other. He speaks, for example, of being and nonbeing, the infinite and the finite, essence and existence, the human and the divine, life and death, the Catholic substance and the Protestant principle, and faith and doubt. In some sense these dualities are the opposite of each other, but at the same time, they are in lively tension with each other.

As one on the boundary between two concepts or contexts, Tillich was also "in" each of the poles of a "boundary situation." He was a person with his feet in worlds and thoughts in tension. He also lived on a variety of cultural and contextual boundaries throughout his life. His thought traversed between idealist and realist orientations. He was pointedly objective and rational but with a polar tension with nature and emotion. An objective and a romantic thinker, a philosopher and a theologian, an academic and a preacher, a European and an American, and an optimist and a pessimist—he referred to living on and in boundary situations as being on a frontier:

Existence on the frontier, in the boundary situation, is full of tension and movement. It is in truth not standing still, but rather a crossing and return, a repetition of return and crossing, a back-and-forth—the aim of which is to create a third area beyond the bounded territories, an area where one can stand for a time without being enclosed in something tightly bounded.


This dialectical rhythm will be copiously illustrated as we describe his core ideas on almost every page in this volume.

One of the many ways that this kind of thinking is manifest in his work is in his most important publication, Systematic Theology. In this three- volume project, he seeks to bring the poles of reason and revelation into a creative dialogue so as to find "a third area beyond the bounded territories" of philosophy and theology. In this introduction to his thought, as we work through his magnum opus, we find the rhythm of his dialectical thinking, of question and answer, on every page. To accomplish this amazing consideration of "either/or" or "both/and," he employs his famous "method of correlation." Simply put, he asks five core questions from philosophical reason and provides five answers from faithful belief. Thus, the system is divided into five sections:

1. Reason and Revelation—a study of human rationality in unity with the structures of reality; the questions about reality implied in reason; and the answers about reality proposed by faith.

2. Being and God—a study of humanity's essential nature; the questions of reason about human finitude; and the answers of faith about God.

3. Existence and Christ—the study of human existence as estrangement; the questions of reason implied in existence; and the answers of faith about Jesus as the Christ.

4. Life and the Spirit—the study of humanity as living; the questions of reason about the ambiguities of life; and the answers of faith about spiritual presence.

5. History and the Kingdom of God—an analysis of humanity's existence in history; the questions implied in the ambiguities of history; and the answers of faith with reference to the kingdom of God.


We follow this introductory overview with a chapter on Tillich's theological method and use of language (chapter 2). Then we offer a guide through these five major sections of Systematic Theology (chapters 3 through 7). Chapters 8 and 9 treat two of Tillich's most important contributions, those of faith and a theology of culture; and in chapter 10 we highlight the abiding import of Tillich for our time. Finally, because Tillich distinctly employed words and phrases, we have provided a lexicon of key words and phrases that are crucial to his concepts.


Questions for Reflection

1. How important are a theologian's life experiences to his or her theology? Should, for example, a divorce or a violent experience such as war or a dislocation from one culture to another be a factor in the theologian's thinking? If so, to what extent?

2. If theology has to do with the enunciation of eternal truths, what value is brought to theology from finite, human experiences?

CHAPTER 2

Method and Symbols


The sources of systematic theology can be sources only for one who participates in them, that is, through experience.

The object of theology is found in the symbols of religious experience.

The language of faith is the language of symbols.

The wholly transcendent transcends every symbol of the Holy.


For Paul Tillich, theology is the enterprise of bringing the core concepts of Christianity intelligibly into our present existence. The kerygma of faith—its message—must be explained in contemporary language. The classic symbols and concepts related to God, Christ, Spirit, church, and kingdom, for example, must be expounded in contemporary language in order to be understood. Thus Tillich defines theology as "the methodical explanation of the contents of the Christian faith." Moreover, it is an apologetic or "answering" theology because "it answers the questions implied in the 'situation' [i.e., the cultural milieu] in the power of the eternal message [i.e., the gospel kerygma] with the means provided by the situation whose questions it answers."

Tillich's foremost partner in the theological task is philosophy, specifically the philosophical enterprise that raises existential questions about the structure of being. Correspondingly, he recognizes that theology also presupposes the structure of being "in every sentence." While "philosophy deals with the structure of being in itself," Tillich determines that "theology deals with the meaning of being for us." Tillich concludes that all of the "big" questions of philosophy—questions about "time, space, cause, thing, subject, nature, freedom, necessity, life, value, knowledge, experience, being and not-being"—are presupposed "on every page of every religious or theological text."

Because culture and philosophy pose the pertinent religious questions, Tillich reasons that the answers of theology cannot be a recital of scriptures and creedal statements but require the language of our present existence. Tillich therefore creates new ways of understanding traditional theology's symbols, such as God as being itself or Being, sin as estrangement and alienation, Christ as the New Being, and the presence of God as kairos. In order to grasp Tillich's theology, one must grasp these new terms. Tillich himself raises a question that some of his critics have also put forth when he asks, "Can the Christian message be adapted to the modern mind without losing its essential and unique character?"

Tillich's response is the development and application of a "method of correlation" that "tries to correlate the questions implied in the situation with the answers implied in the message." Embedded in and reflecting upon the human condition, his method of correlation begins with existential questions framed and posed by philosophy and culture. To these questions, then, theology must provide answers. This responsive interaction is not a presumptive theological assertion of its privilege in resolving the existential conundrums articulated by philosophy. Since philosophy and culture participate in the very ground of being that provides the ultimate goal and criterion of theology itself, the formulation of the questions emerges from religious situations. Philosophy and culture are not befuddled by these situations; instead, they provide the means—the discursive language and the linguistic symbols—for specifying and articulating the problematic situations and conditions.

For Tillich, the task of philosophy is to draw from an analysis of the human condition and its experience of finitude and then to formulate questions of ultimate significance. In response, theology must move beyond stodgy concepts that merely reiterate scriptural lessons and historic dogmatic assertions to locate answers in evocative, revelatory symbols. Tillich's method of correlation involves more than the logical application of certain criteria to central symbols of Christian tradition. Instead, his method of correlation, as Mark Kline Taylor notes, "is an interpretive art requiring sensitive readings of both human situations and also of Christian symbols in the tradition. It is a continual tacking back and forth between a situation and a Christian message that are always already in some kind of mutual interrelation."

While it addresses the questions articulated by philosophy and culture, theology must also wrestle with unanticipated challenges by new philosophical propositions and cultural expressions, bracketing its anticipated answers to recurrent questions and reenvisioning responses in light of the new dimensions of the questions and situations. Yet the answers proposed by Christian theology are meaningful, Tillich avers, "only in so far as they are in correlation with questions concerning the whole of our existence, with existential questions."

Tillich developed his method of correlation in a conscious attempt to avoid, as he put it, several "contradictory errors in theology"—the supranaturalistic, the naturalistic, and the dualistic. The supranaturalistic tendency, he observes, "makes revelation a rock falling into history from above, to be accepted obediently without preparation or adequacy to human nature." By contrast, the naturalistic orientation "replaces revelation by a structure of rational thought derived from and judged by human nature." Avoiding the errors engendered in both perspectives, the method of correlation "shows a way out of the blind alley in which the discussion between fundamentalism or neo-orthodoxy on the one hand, and theological humanism or liberalism on the other, is caught." The third inadequate method that Tillich identifies is dualistic. In a minimal way, it recognizes and tries to address the problem that the method of correlation resolves. Building upon the naturalistic and supranaturalistic methods, the dualistic method seeks to explicate a positive relation between them "by positing a body of theological truth." Persons can reach this body of theological truth by exploring "natural revelation" (an oxymoron!), especially as it might be formulated in the so-called proofs of the "existence of God"—a phrase that Tillich also regards as self-contradictory since God is being itself and is not bound by the structures and strictures of existence.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Tillich by Donald W. Musser, Joseph L. Price. Copyright © 2014 Donald W. Musser and Joseph L. Price. Excerpted by permission of Abingdon Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xi

Abbreviations xiii

1 Life and Career 1

2 Method and Symbols 5

3 Reason and the Quest for Revelation 13

4 Being and God 21

5 Existence and New Being 27

6 Life, Its Ambiguities, and the Quest for Unambiguous Life 33

7 History and the Kingdom of God 39

8 Faith and Truth 51

9 Theology of Culture 59

10 Abiding Contributions 67

Appendix 1 Life and Career 69

Appendix 2 Selected Published Works 70

Appendix 3 Lexicon 71

Bibliography 81

Notes 85

Index 93

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