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Paul Tillich's dialectical humanism : unmasking the God above God / Leonard F. Wheat.

By: Material type: TextTextDescription: xiii, 287 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0801811619
  • 9780801811616
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • ARCH YNDC 231 W556P
LOC classification:
  • BX4827.T53 W5 1970
Contents:
Shaking the foundations -- He who has ears -- The God above God -- The symbolic Christ -- Dialectical humanism -- Critics and criticism.
Summary: The author argues that Tillich is an uncompromising atheist who quite deliberately concealed the real substance of his message in an analogical code that enabled him, like Saint Paul, to be "all things to all men". This calculated ambiguity protected his standing in the Church, allowing him to undermine from within. According to the author, Tillich held that Protestantism should change fundamentally in response to the gap between tradition and what modern man can believe. Faced with a disquieting spiritual emptiness after his own loss of faith, Tillich sought and found a new truth with which to fill the void. By guarding this truth from all but a few able to accept it, he hoped to lead individual Christians to whatever levels of religious sophistication they were capable of reaching.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Archives Archives SAIACS Archives Room Yandell Collection ARCH YNDC 231 W556P (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 063137

Includes bibliographical references.

Shaking the foundations -- He who has ears -- The God above God -- The symbolic Christ -- Dialectical humanism -- Critics and criticism.

The author argues that Tillich is an uncompromising atheist who quite deliberately concealed the real substance of his message in an analogical code that enabled him, like Saint Paul, to be "all things to all men". This calculated ambiguity protected his standing in the Church, allowing him to undermine from within. According to the author, Tillich held that Protestantism should change fundamentally in response to the gap between tradition and what modern man can believe. Faced with a disquieting spiritual emptiness after his own loss of faith, Tillich sought and found a new truth with which to fill the void. By guarding this truth from all but a few able to accept it, he hoped to lead individual Christians to whatever levels of religious sophistication they were capable of reaching.

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