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==Page archived==
page archived if only to provide a moment's peace from the relentless screeds. saul tillich, why not just start a freaking blog somewhere. you aren't interested in writing an encyclopedia, you're interested in promulgating your views. that's just what blogs are for. they're great! even i have one! ] (]) 04:00, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

:That isn't archiving, it's censorship. Had archiving been your real objective, you might have archived material more than a month old. Instead, you deleted -- that's what you really did -- fresh material with which you disagreed. I posted the commentary you call a "screed" at 2:22 on March 11; you deleted it less that two hours later at 04:00. And your use of the epithet "screed" demonstrates that you knew exactly what you were doing, and why.

:You are free to delete ("edit mercilessly") material in the Tillich article. You are not authorized to delete the opinions and arguments of contributors to the Talk page. You yourself complained vigorously when, in quoting you for purposes of refutation, I corrected a typo of yours by capitalizing the first word of a sentence. So please quit censoring.] (]) 00:27, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

::please visit the link to the archives, conveniently located above. your claim that i deleted your comments is utterly meritless. ] (]) 01:27, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

:''That isn't archiving, it's censorhsip.''

::It's called keeping the crap to a minimum Saul. ] (]) 01:57, 13 March 2008 (UTC)


== Tillich Article’s Section on Theology ==

The article’s “Theology” section pretends to explain, but the author (Jonalexdeval) is merely paraphrasing statements he himself doesn’t understand. At the same time, in referring to “the norm,” which is “Jesus as the Christ,” the author misleads his readers in four ways:

* By failing to say that Tillich, in many ways and in many places, said he did not believe in the divinity of Jesus, the author creates the false impression that Tillich regarded Jesus as a divine savior (Tillich didn’t believe in souls or life after death either).
* The author also fails to say that Tillich uses the phrase “as the Christ” to differentiate between the supernatural Christ of mythology and the real historical Jesus of Nazareth.
* The author fails again to say that Tillich created his “norm” in order to create a theology that would not crumble if, some time in the future, evidence emerged that the historical Jesus never existed. The Christ of what Tillich regards as mythology would still exist (as a myth) and would have the crucial characteristic Tillich bases his concept of God on.
* As the biggest failure of all, the author ignores Tillich’s careful explanation of why “Jesus as the Christ” is the norm. Tillich’s reason is that, according to the Council of Nicaea, the Christ was not half God and half man but “fully God and fully man.” The norm calls for a God that is fully God and fully man.

As the article now stands, it is mostly unintelligible gibberish, meaningless abstraction. Take this pair of sentences: '''“It is important to remember that, for Tillich, no formulation of the question can contradict the theological answer. This is because the Christian message claims, a priori, that the logos ‘who became flesh’ is also the universal logos of the Greeks.”''' Don’t you see the non sequitur? How does either (a) identifying the Greek Logos with God or (b) having God become incarnated as a man make it impossible for a question to contradict a theological answer, assuming contradiction really is impossible? Taken literally, those are two unrelated assertions. The author is claiming, thoughtlessly and without comprehension (just paraphrasing what either McKelway or Tillich said), that if God is not or was not also the Logos, or else was not incarnated, a question COULD contradict the theological answer.

The author pretends to explain but clearly doesn’t understand what Tillich means in the two sentences, taken from another source, that he paraphrases. He is taking the words literally, whereas they have no literal meaning. What does it mean for a question to contradict its answer? How does God’s being the Logos prevent such contradiction? Taken literally, the words are unadulterated nonsense. Tillich is using his private symbolic language. To those who understand this symbolic language, the sentences do make sense. But I challenge the author (and his friends) to explain, by giving a nontheological example of a Q and its A, (1) what it means for a question to “contradict” an answer and (2) how, if “the Logos became flesh” (Jn. 1:14), does it become impossible for a question to contradict an answer. Not even the author can explain either (1) or (2), so what we have is nonsense, gibberish. (Only those who know what “question” and “answer” symbolize, what “contradict” means in this context, and why “Jesus as the Christ” must be “the norm,” can turn nonsense into sense.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Saul Tillich (talk • contribs) 02:22, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

: I was trying to be concise when I wrote the section, so some important aspects I only briefly touched on which would actually require much more explanation. The statement "no formulation of the question can contradict the answer" has to do with Tillich's view (explicitly stated somewhere in the intro to ST) that the theological answer can and must be reformulated in light of new formulations of the existential questions. This is his philosophical honesty at work, and he can claim to be constantly true the Christian message throughout this modification of the theological answer because, as he claims, the logos of Christianity is identical with the Greek logos. Why does this latter claim support the former? Because if the two logos are the same then any reformulation of the philosophical logos will, a priori, be compatible with the Christian logos (so long as it remains true to the norm). And they are the same in the first place because Christianity uses the Greek terminology from the get-go. The reasoning does involve this basic assumption, that on a deeper structural level the the question and answer involve the same principle or truth, one universal and the other concrete. Jonalexdeval (talk) 20:19, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

::Your answers are nonresponsive. My first question was: what does it mean for a question to contradict an answer? And I asked for an example. Instead, as you have done several times the past, you falsely assert that Tillich gives the answer somewhere (“somewhere in the intro to ST”). But the answer isn’t in ST or anywhere else. You don’t know the answer; and the first of the two consecutive sentences from your article that I quoted remain, as I said, nonsense. You don’t understand your own writing, and your readers won’t understand either.


::I next asked you to explain the non sequitur in your second bold face sentence, which says that a PHILOSOPHICAL question can’t contradict its THEOLOGICAL answer “BECAUSE . . .the logos who became flesh is also the universal logos of the Greeks.” Where is the causal relationship – the “because” connection? You again give a nonresponsive answer by observing that the Christian logos is also the Greek logos. I didn’t ask if logos A = logos B. The logos of John (the God/Logos who became flesh) is indeed the Greek logos – that is the premise of my question – but this fact has nothing to do with why a philosophical question can’t contradict its answer IF logos A = logos B. The Christian logos is a religious concept, not an answer; the Greek logos is a philosophical (metaphysical actually) concept, not a question.
==Request for comment==
{{RFCreli| section=Request for comment !! reason=Comments requested on style and content of theological sections !! time=13:42, 8 February 2008 (UTC)}}
Comments requested on style and content of theological sections. ] (]) 13:59, 8 February 2008 (UTC)


::Your reply includes a statement purporting to explain why Tillich “can claim to be constantly true the Christian message.” Nonresponsive again. I didn’t ask how or whether Tillich can claim to be true to the Christian message. I asked how what you say about the logos makes it impossible for a question to contradict its answer. As things stand, you don’t understand your own writing, which makes no sense at all. ] (]) 01:14, 16 March 2008 (UTC)


::I am not sure if this is the right place to put this comment, but I wonder if the first quote in the Theology section is incorrect in saying "Theology formulates the questions implied in human existence, and theology formulates the answers implied in divine self-manifestation..." Should it not be "Philosophy formulates the questions..."? I just ask as it seems odd as it stands.] (]) 16:10, 11 November 2012 (UTC)Jer.
==Archived==
Because this talk page had become staggeringly large in a very short time, i decided to be be ] and archive everything except for the above pending RfC. I can't imagine there's even a syllable in existence that has not been yet expressed in these discussions, sadly. perhaps we can begin again, less verbosely, and simply discuss ''improving the wikipedia biography of Paul Tillich'', and keep it at that, which is the raison d'etre of the article talk page. ] (]) 07:29, 15 February 2008 (UTC)


==Turning Nonsense into Sense==
==Photo of Tillich==
I may have missed the discussion on this before, but are there no available/public-domain photos of Tillich available? ] (]) 22:20, 15 February 2008 (UTC)


The reason your paraphrased summary of what Tillich wrote is nonsensical is that it misrepresents what Tillich wrote. You claim Tillich said this: “It is important to remember that, for Tillich, '''no''' formulation of the '''question''' '''can contradict''' the theological '''answer'''. This is '''because''' the Christian message claims, a priori, that the logos '''‘who became flesh’''' is also the universal logos of the Greeks.” But Tillich actually said that no philosophy (not “no question”) based on the Greek logos can contradict the logos of John 1:14 (meaning a philosophy–not an “answer”-- based on John 1:14). The words “question” and “answer” do not appear in the quotation that follows; neither does “because” or its equivalent.
:my mother was a student and friend of his, and i recall seeing snapshots of him at home. i'll ask her whether i can scan them. i recall at least one that may be adequate. ] (]) 01:25, 16 February 2008 (UTC)


Here, from page 28 of ST, vol. 1, is what Tillich actually wrote: “The Christian claim that the logos who has become concrete in Jesus as the Christ is at the same time the universal logos includes the claim that wherever the logos is at work it agrees with the Christian message. '''No philosophy''' which is obedient to the universal logos '''can contradict''' the concrete logos , the Logos '''‘who became flesh’'''.” The implicit reason the two philosophies can’t conflict is that the Greek logos and the Christian logos (God) are the same.
::very cool. Of course there are a few photos floating around on the internet, but I am not aware of which have copyright issues. ] (]) 07:03, 16 February 2008 (UTC)


Had you understood what Tillich means by an “apologetic” theology you might have avoided turning Tillich’s thought into nonsense. An apologetic theology is a proselytizing theology. More specifically, it is a theology in which the proselytizer says to the person being recruited, “Our God is your God under another name.” Example: “Our God is Allah under a different name, so you can become a Christian.” When Paul and the author of the gospel of John proselytized in the Hellenistic (culturally Greek) world, they told the Hellenists that they could become Christians because their “God”–not really a god but the metaphysical Logos–was God under another name. “John” claimed that the Greek logos became Jesus. To my knowledge, nobody has ever questioned the obvious fact that, in applying the name “Logos” to God and Jesus, John’s author was not entertaining the idea that there is more than one logos.
==Format for Article==
Just looking at the ] article, one option would be to construct this one in a similar way: focusing on broad, biography-oriented sections which break the article into Early Life, Education/Influences, Theology, Political Views & Religious Socialism, etc. Under Theology could be short sections on The Systematic Theology, Courage to Be, Sermons, and possibly Philosophy of Religion. ] (]) 22:20, 15 February 2008 (UTC)
:That looks a good model. The main biography section is at the moment a bit complicated because it mixes the nuts-and-bolts biography with the timeline for his publications and theological development. The detail on the latter would be better somewhere in the theology section. ] (]) 16:55, 16 February 2008 (UTC)


In calling his own theology apologetic, Tillich is doing essentially the same thing as Paul and “John.” He is offering a “theology” of humanism to the Christians he would recruit to humanism by giving the name “God” to his metaphorical god, humanity. Christianity’s God becomes the counterpart of the Hellenists’ logos. Tillich is saying, in effect, “you can become humanists because your God of theism and my ‘God above the God of theism’ are both named God.” <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 00:05, 27 March 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
== Vandalism ==


:Let's put it this way. The theological response (responding to the existential issues of philosophy) is based on revelation and hence based on "the logos become flesh". So the FORM of this theological response can be modified and changed in order that it may ACTUALLY BE a response to the existential issues. When Tillich says that you cannot just throw the Christian message like a stone into a crowd he means that the theologian must mold the theology to the audience, times, and culture. This molding means changing the FORM but not the CONTENT of the Christian message.
Gordon and Anastrophe, please stop deleting my contributions to talk. They are not "disruptive"; they are intelligently written, well reasoned, and correct. The fact that you happen to disagree with my views is no excuse for censorship. I have correctly described Tillich's method of correlation. You have incorrectly described it. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, but I am equally entitled to mine. Your excuse that my opinion is not "mainstream" is irrelevant.


:The reason why no formulation of the existential issues can contradict the theological response is because this FORM of the theological response is DETERMINED BY the existential issues (philosophy) AND BECAUSE the CONTENT of the response is NOT essentially altered or modified by the existential formulation. So the form is modified while the content is changed, hence the existential analysis can be formulated and re-formulated through various historical epochs along with the FORM of the response without doing "damage" to the CONTENT of the message. The other part (about the logos) explains why the content is not altered).
] (]) 03:19, 16 February 2008 (UTC)


:Now if you want to know PRECISELY in all the gory details EXACTLY why and how the logos issues connects up with this, well, I think we are safe to say that the issue is beyond the scope of this article. We can be content here to say that, in any case, these are Tillich's words. ] (]) 10:38, 30 March 2008 (UTC) <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 23:54, 29 March 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:please familiarize yourself with ]. misrepresenting things as vandalism which are not so is not helpful, and as disruptive to the commerce we're engaged in here as actual vandalism. please READ the second section of this page. the previous discussion has been ''']'''. you have not been censored. however, it must be pointed out further: other editors are fully within their rights to remove comments from the talk page that are not focused specifically upon ''article improvement''. long discourses upon and justifications for your viewpoint, that in no way directly address the article itself, are discouraged, and may be removed, as they are disruptive to our primary task. wikipedia's fundamental rules encompass a number of principles which are tightly interlinked. pushing a point of view about tillich that is outside of the mainstream opinion of him and his work is not acceptable. it may be ''noted'', but it must be given weight appropriate to how widely held that view is. the previous revision of this article gave all weight to this minority viewpoint. it also contained considerable volumes of ] as well as being far too detailed for a general encyclopedia biography. last but not least, like it or not, wikipedia runs by ''consensus''. you have made your arguments, others have made theirs, and the consensus is not with you on this. it's time to let this battle go, and work towards creating a good quality, general audience encyclopedia biography of Paul Tillich. ] (]) 05:16, 16 February 2008 (UTC)


::Your reply is again nonresponsive – and nonsensical. It fails to address either (1) the nonsensical nature of your article’s false paraphrase that claims Tillich said no QUESTION can contradict its ANSWER and (2) my accurate quotation of what Tillich actually said, specifically, that no PHILOSOPHY based on the Greek logos can (philosophy A) contradict a PHILOSOPHY based on the Bible’s Johannine logos (philosophy B). Your reply (above) asserts that philosophy A can be made consistent with philosophy B by changing the form of philosophy A without changing its substance.
::My accusation of censorship does not refer to the archiving; it refers to your erasing my post-archiving criticism of the article’s false explanation of Tillich’s method of correlation. You try to rationalize your censoring my factually oriented (many quotations from Tillich) criticism of the interpretation you defend by claiming that my remarks are “not focused specifically on article improvement.” But my remarks were focused on article improvement. I was pointing out (1) why the “questions and answers” interpretation borrowed from McKelway is false and (2) that the real method of correlation involves correlation of analogous theological and philosophical concepts.


::What you say is again nonresponsive because it deals with a Tillich quotation that exists only in your imagination. Tillich said nothing about form; he was talking about a conflict in substance. Your reply is also nonsensical. If the substance of philosophy A conflicts with the substance of philosophy B, changing the form of philosophy A without changing its substance can’t eliminate the conflict. Suppose philosophy A, theism, says in spoken language (form = oral) that a supernatural being is God but philosophy B, pantheism, says in an written language (form = written) that a metaphysical “essence” within everything that exists is God. Changing the form of philosophy A from oral to written, or for that matter from poetry to prose, cannot eliminate the substantive conflict. You still have two different definitions of God (a substantive difference). Your answer is therefore nonsensical.
::I provided quotations in which Tillich specifically said the two members of each of three pairs were “correlated – God and being, revelation and reason, the Son and “existence” (a Hegelian word for antithesis). I also identified many other analogical theology-philosophy correlations used by Tillich. I provided a quotation showing that these individual correlations are part of Tillich’s broader plan to achieve what Tillich called “a unity of theology and philosophy.” I pointed to Tillich’s statement that “Philosophy and theology . . . are correlated,” and noted that Tillich said that even in his student years he “hoped that the great synthesis between Christianity and humanism could be achieved.” All of this has a direct bearing on the article’s inaccuracy.


::The real answer reflects what Tillich means by “apologetic theology,” a concept your article fails to grasp. In calling his theology apologetic, Tillich is analogically doing what Paul and John did. He is proselytizing by telling people who worship the God of theism that both their God and his have the same name, “God” (even though the substance of the proselytizer’s God is vastly different). Tillich is offering a “theology” of humanism to the Christians he would recruit to humanism by giving the name “God” to his metaphorical god, humanity. Christianity’s God becomes the counterpart of the Hellenists’ logos. Just as Paul told the Hellenists (falsely) that Christianity’s God was the logos – the two concepts are really entirely different – Tillich is saying, in effect, “you can become humanists because your God of theism and my ‘God above the God of theism’ are both named God.”
::Your argument that my views about Tillich are “outside the mainstream” are both irrelevant and false. They are irrelevant because majority vote is not the way truth is achieved. (Consult the belief systems of Muslim and Hindu nations for evidence on this point.)


::I should have commented on what Tillich means in his Systematic Theology’s page 28 quotation when he implies that the “concrete” (Jesus) and the “universal” are identical. He is alluding to a characteristic of Hegel’s metaphysical Spirit, which is also a characteristic of Tillich’s “God above the God of theism.” The Spirit is essentially “one” entity, the invisible essence of everything in the universe, but it is composed of many things – everything specific thing in the universe. Spirit is one composed of many. Both Hegel and Tillich use many variations of the “one composed of many” (or one = many) theme. These variations include (1) one and many, (2) universal (general) and particular, (3) infinite and finite, (4) abstract and concrete, and (5) world and self. Like Hegel’s Spirit, Tillich’s “God above the God of theism” is both one and many, both universal and particular, both infinite and finite, both abstract and concrete, and both world and self – all of which amount to the same thing.
::Your argument is false because my view that Tillich is an atheist is as mainstream as any other view. At least 12 interpreters have directly or indirectly labeled Tillich an atheist, sometimes by calling him a pantheist. These interpreters are Sidney Hook (1961), Walter Kaufmann (1961), David Freeman (1962), Kenneth Hamilton (1963), Alasdair M MacIntyre (1963), Bernard Martin (1963), John A. T. Robinson (1963), J. Heywood Thomas (1963), Guyton Hammond (1966), Nels Ferre (1966), William Rowe (1968), Leonard Wheat (1970). Several others have expressed uncertainty concerning whether Tillich is a theist. Now, how many interpreters can you name who have affirmed that Tillich believes in the God of theism?


::Were there no other information to go on, Tillich’s God could be interpreted as either (1) the God of pantheism or (2) humanity. Both potential gods are one and many, universal and particular. Humanity is the universal, infinite, abstract, or world – one (general). Individual humans constitute the particular, finite, concrete, or self category – many. Tillich therefore asks, “How is it possible that the many are diverse, but nevertheless form the unity of a cosmos, of a world, of a universe?” He answers: “There must be an original unity of the one and the many.” (Tillich, 1967b, p. 144).
::You say “Misplaced Pages runs by consensus.” That’s not exactly correct. Wiki’s administrators operate by consensus but, as you warned me when I first began editing this article, you can expect to be “edited mercilessly” by other editors (contrasted with administrators) who consider your contributions incorrect – and this realistically applies also to the contributions of those like yourself who restore deleted errors.


::But is Tillich’s “God above God” the metaphysical God of pantheism or the figurative God of humanism? Most interpreters call Tillich a pantheist, an interpretation the article unconscionably hides. But Tillich has specifically repudiated pantheism (e.g., ST, v. 1, pp. 276-77; ST, v.2, pp. 6-7) and, in more general language, he has said that supernaturalism (which pantheism is a form of) is alien to “all” of his thinking. So we know Tillich’s one-composed-of-many God isn’t the literal “universal” of Hegel’s pantheism. Then what is the God above God? Tillich’s “norm,” “Jesus as the Christ,” says God must conform to the ruling of the Council of Nicaea. Nicaea held that the Christ was “fully God and fully man,” not half-God and half-man. When humanity is defined as God, God is “fully God and fully man,” because God is man. Tillich’s Hegelian dialectic progresses from God (thesis) to man (antithesis, the opposite of the thesis) to God = man (synthesis).
::More important, despite your constantly invoking your version of Wiki policy (policies that Wiki policy says are “made to be broken”), you have violated Wiki’s policy of “assume good faith.” I quote it here:


::Why haven’t you at least revised the article to eliminate the false, nonsensical paraphrase that says a question can contradict its answer? Tillich never said what you say he said, namely, that “no formulation of the question can contradict the theological answer.” He said, “No philosophy which is obedient to the universal logos can contradict the concrete logos , the Logos ‘who became flesh’.” ] (]) 02:10, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
::* Unless there is strong evidence to the contrary, assume that people who work on the project are trying to help it, not hurt it.
::* If criticism is needed, discuss editors' actions, but it is never necessary or productive to accuse others of harmful motives.


While this is all very interesting, Misplaced Pages isn't really the place to debate Tillich's theology. The article should have a simple summary of the various opinions scholars have put forth in the literature, and not take sides. --] (]) 10:37, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
::“To assume good faith is a fundamental principle on Misplaced Pages. In allowing anyone to edit, we work from an assumption that most people are trying to help the project, not hurt it. Consider using talk pages to clearly explain yourself, and give others the opportunity to do the same.”


:I agree that the article should summarize "the various opinions scholars have put forth in the literature, and not take sides." I am criticizing the article for (1) taking sides and (2) presenting only one of the several interpretations. Roughly 3/4 of the scholars take Tillich at his word when he says the God of theism doesn't exist and when he calls for allegiance to "the God above the God of theism." All but one of the 3/4 who offer nontheistic interpretations of Tillich regard him as an atheist; one regards him as a panENtheist, which combines pantheism with theism. Most of the other interpreters consider Tillich a pantheist (pantheism is a form of atheism), but one -- the only one that is consistent with Tillich's repeated disavowals of supernaturalism -- holds that the "God above God" is humanity. Jonalexdeval's article ignores, indeed hides, these other interpretations, pretending that all but a "tiny minority" of interpreters regard Tillich as a theist. ] (]) 02:10, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
::Despite this policy, and also despite the related policy calling for courtesy, you accused me of bad faith by asserting that my edits were motivated by a desire to “discredit Tillich.” Totally false – and a gross violation of Wiki policy. Moreover, definitely not justification for censoring my Talk page arguments, thereby preventing others from judging for themselves which interpretation is correct. Censorship of the arguments and evidence of those who disagree with you is not the proper way to achieve your goal of consensus.
::Pardon a nitpick, but "is a form of atheism" seems notably absent from the ] article. ] (]) 03:28, 14 April 2008 (UTC)


:::Your nitpick is reasonable but it depends on how you define atheism. Atheism has both a narrow, or literal, meaning and a broad meaning. The narrow meaning, which I use, is disbelief in monotheism's Supreme Being -- the personal, caring, intervening, concerned-about-man God of theism. The broad meaning is disbelief in any supernatural entity (this includes impersonal metaphysical entities like pantheism's impersonal "essence" of nature) that is "God" to the believer. An intermediate definition would exclude polytheism, with its many personal gods, from the definition of atheism.
::] (]) 03:22, 17 February 2008 (UTC)


:::Those pantheists who have weighed in on the linguistic issue typically regard themselves as atheists, because pantheism is a form of rebellion against belief in the personal, self-conscious God of theism. A pantheism website, www.pantheism.net, has this to say: "Atheism simply makes the statement that there is no creator God, no personal God, no judging God. Beyond that atheists can be nature-lovers or nature-haters, they can see life and the Universe as joyful - or absurd. . . . World Pantheism has many members who would also describe themselves as atheists and/or humanists, but to these they add an emotional and aesthetic dimension in their connection with nature, the universe, and their fellow humans."] (]) 23:03, 20 April 2008 (UTC)
i so enjoy how you've taken up the AGF cause, now that it's convenient for you. you ignored it when i challenged you on several occasions for your projecting motive upon me, and failing to AGF with me. be that as it may, there's so much factually wrong above, not least of which being that i've never removed your comments from this talk page, that i'm just going to do my best to ignore you. 'assume good faith' goes only so far as the point at which an editor makes it clear that his motives are destructive to the encyclopedia. your insistence on promoting a minority viewpoint about tillich as the only "correct" interpretation simply won't stand. sadly, tillich is not alive to defend himself from your attacks. but i'm quite sure that if he had been asked the simple question "are you an atheist - yes or no?" his response would have been 'no'. that's my personal interpretation. you're welcome to your personal interpretation of tillich. just don't try to force it upon this biography. ] (]) 04:02, 17 February 2008 (UTC)


==Ground of Being==
:You write, "I've never removed your comments from this talk page." Untrue. Post-archive, on the present (new) talk page, you removed my explanation of "The Real Method of Correlation," which showed why the pseudoexplanation you keep restoring to the article is false. In other words, you used censorship to suppress discussion of the article's accuracy.
I have no idea what is meant by "Ground of Being". That sentence is vague, and since it's apparently one of his big contributions, can we get a better description? ] (]) 15:38, 1 November 2008 (UTC)


== God above God section ==
:::this will be my last comment in response to you, because my good will is utterly spent in dealing with your poisonous methods. i did not remove your comments from this talk page. period. end of story. where's the diff? you can't provide one, because you are completely, totally, wrong. i have never removed your comments from this talk page. it's as simple as that. prattling on, over and over with false accusations like the above are good enough reason for me to close the book on this faux communication. i cannot waste another moment of my life dealing with you. ] (]) 02:20, 18 February 2008 (UTC)


It seems that this section is slightly anachronistic. It is reading Tillich's definition of God as the "Ground of Being" through Marion's "God without Being." Tillich still reads "God" as an ontological designation (not just a semiotic one) . Further the many different definitions listed of God ("Ground of Being", "Abyss", etc) are all pointing to one reality, they are not different attempts at a definition but different attempts at description because God is infinite and different--which is why he says that the analogia entis (analogy of being) is what gives us our only justification for speaking about God (Sys Theo 1, 266).
::::Well, somebody deleted my refutation of the question-and-answer interpretation of Tillich's method of correlation. I assumed, apparently erroneously (and on the basis of your previously having impugned my motives), that it was you. I'll take your word for that it wasn't you; perhaps it was Gordon. In any case, I apologize for the hasty assumption.
Also, I'm not sure that one can really say Tillich rejects the personal God. For instance, the providence of God is "God directing creativity creating through the freedom of man" (Sys Theo 1, 296). Further, the principle of participation (sys Theo 1, 300) is one that is "personal" by its very nature. Man is "saved" by reuniting with the divine, not in a pantheistic or panentheistic way, but in communion and participation (Sys Theo 3, 48 and 222). He also says that participation only works as love (Sys Theo 3, 48). Reading him as pantheistic or panentheistic turns him into an Eastern mystic, something which did not really interact with Christianity until well after Tillich died. ] (]) 16:03, 4 November 2009 (UTC)


Impleri, I concur with this assessment, and I have made some modifications to the beginning of this section. I am still working on this section, and welcome comments and criticism. I have authored the first 3 paragraphs almost exclusively. I should like to point out, however, that the analogia entis has a different meaning for Tillich than its medieval employment, and thus in a way does not exactly correlate to what Barth criticizes, in my view. Tillich states in the same place that he does not mean by analogia entis "the property of a questionable natural theology which attempts to gain knowledge of God by drawing conclusions about the infinite from the finite" . Instead, he means to say that, once we understand that God is not a being but is the ground of being itself and constitutes its structures, this then means that a description of "a finite segment being" can become the basis of an assertion about the infinite "because that which is infinite is being-itself and because everything participates in being-itself" . T's understanding of the symbol, in this way, is more classical than modern: the symbol is a finite reality which participates in the infinite, and thus mediates its reality. Likewise, everything can become a symbol of God in some way, and his understanding of revelation is related. T then does have this in common with Barth's analogia fidei: that the circle of faith or of theology cannot be entered into by means of an analysis of being, but only that in the apologetic moment, such ontological common ground can be found because God is the ground of being, of all being, inside and outside the circle of faith. This is why T's method is a method of correlation: we do not derive Christian symbols from the contemporary situation, but we correlate them. The older meaning of the analogia entis meant that the doctrine of God could be derived from an analysis of the world and then predicating it of God. In my view, this is not what Tillich means (and if he did then I suspect he really would be a pantheist, which would then render impossible the divine-human encounter...), and so I find the statement that T views the analogia entis as the only justification for theology to be in need of clarification. I only say this since this topic might be interesting to include in the article in some fashion, as his relationship to Barth and to traditional Lutheran theology is currently an open debate. -Gamorgan10
::::] (]) 04:06, 18 February 2008 (UTC)


The section on "God Above God" refers to God as "Being" but later refers to God as Being and uses a lower-case B. Why is this?] (]) 08:30, 28 December 2018 (UTC)
:Why do you choose to characterize arguments showing that Tillich was an atheist as "attacks" on Tillich -- just as you previously (in your archived remarks) accused me of trying to "discredit" Tillich? As far as I'm concerned, it makes no difference whether Tillich is a theist, a pantheistic or mystical atheist, or a totally nonsupernaturalistic atheist. My interest is a scholarly one: accuracy. I think all of the other twelve interpreters who regard Tillich as an atheist -- except Kaufmann, Freeman, and Ferre -- would say the same thing about their interests.


== Criticism ==
:When you say my regarding Tillich as an atheist is just a "personal interpretation" and not "mainstream," you simply ignore those twelve interpreters who agree with me. I again challenge you to name a dozen interpreters -- your "mainstream" -- who say Tillich is a theist, someone whose God is a rational, self-conscious supernatural being. Your own personal opinion that Tillich is a theist seems to be the minority view.


I would like to see someone who has broad theological knowledge contrast the theological ideas of Paul Tillich with the ideas of other well-known theologians (e.g. Thomas Aquinas, Augustine, Luther, Calvin, etc.). For example, although I have read three books by Paul Tillich it is not clear to me where or how he differs from the theology of my own religion (i.e. Roman Catholicism.) I think this because he seldom, if ever, states clearly how he differs from other positions. Perhaps if I read his "Systematic Theology" I'll understand him better? ] (]) 17:41, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
:] (]) 01:49, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
In his auto-biography, "On the Boundary" he says he could not sit on the boundary between Protestantism and Roman Catholicism. He does talk about other boundaries. ] (]) 09:22, 24 November 2018 (UTC)


== Why a one-dimensional Tillich? ==


I'm no expert in Tillich's theology (I only have an M.Div), although I greatly appreciate the aspects of his thought that I do understand. That's why, when I read the Wiki article (as it is today, 15/06/11), I didn't have the same objections that many others have on this talk page. I'll leave all that to those who really know what they're talking about.
To Saul Tillich: I do not think your statements about the method of correlation are in contradiction to what is presently in the article on that subject. The “questions and answers” paradigm appears in the STI and also in Biblical Religion and the Search for Ultimate Reality (BRSUR, 58). It is not really borrowed from McKelway so much as it is directly lifted from terminology in primary works. You are right that the pairs of concepts forming the headings of each section of the ST are indeed correlated. I did not mention that in my summary, but it might be a good thing to incorporate eventually. As far as Tillich being an atheist, that is a critical opinion of an incredibly small minority of "scholars". I say "scholars" because most all serious theologians--and certainly those who've studied Tillich carefully--would raise an eyebrow or two in visible consternation at any suggestion that the man or his work could be called "atheistic". A figure like Tillich calls for far too much nuance for such broad labels. Furthermore, many of the accusatory critics who are fond of labes like "atheist" are not sympathetic with Tillich's style or method from the get-go on account of their background in predominately analytic or pragmatic philosophy. Also, this is not an article on what Paul Tillich’s critics thought about Paul Tillich. It is an attempt to summarily present his own life and thought in a way that would not stand in direct contradiction to what he thought or wrote of himself. Since Tillich did not and never would have called himself an “atheist”, it is misleading to characterize him as such in an encyclopedia article (other than to relegate it to a possible section on criticism). It is true that no treatment or summary of a subject or body of work can reasonably be expected to comply perfectly with the subject's own statements or manifestly self-evident articulations, but it IS reasonable that such a summary treatment should not stand in stark opposition to what are quite obviously well-accepted loci of reasonable interpretations of primary sources. ] (]) 21:44, 17 February 2008 (UTC)
:''Furthermore, many of the accusatory critics who are fond of labels like "atheist" are not sympathetic with Tillich's style or method from the get-go on account of their background in predominately analytic or pragmatic philosophy''.
:Or, conversely, ones from the hard-line theist end of the spectrum who treat as "atheism" anything that diverges from traditional personal-God theism.
:The issue, however, seems to me to be one of ]. How can we be sure that those twelve sources aren't cherry-picked to present a particular slant? The test is to go, as I've said previously, to more general secondary/tertiary sources with reliable reputations and see if they summarise Tillich as an atheist. Do ''Encyclopædia Britannica'', his ''Times'' obituary, ''Who's Who in the Twentieth Century'', OUP 1999, the ''Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions'', or the ''Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy''. No.
:''EB'', in particular, specifically rejects it:
:''Those who see him as an advocate of agnosticism or atheism, however, may have misunderstood his intent. He rejected the anthropomorphic “personal God” of popular Christianity, but he did not deny the reality of God, as the conventional atheist has done. Modern “Christian atheists” who cite Tillich in support of their “God is dead” claim overlook the fact that for Tillich the disappearance of an inadequate concept of God was the beginning of a grander vision of God''
:(And I'm sure US equivalents can be found). ] (]) 02:49, 18 February 2008 (UTC)


My only objection is this article presents a sort of one-dimensional view of Tillich. The Paul Tillich of the Misplaced Pages article comes across as barely human; as an almost disembodied '''Super Mind'''. But the greatest thinkers in history (in all disciplines) are also real humans, and Hannah Tillich's memoir fills in the human side of the man. Years ago I was appalled by the sexist ranting of Rollo May, when he fumed against the book (''From Time to Time''). He claimed she had no right to say any of that, and that had she not been married to Tillich in the first place, she never could have published a book, because who gives a rip about some old German woman anyway? It was as if Hannah had committed some horrible act of blasphemy.
::Your assertion that “many of the accusatory critics” who call Tillich an atheist are unsympathetic to him because they are philosophers. That is unadulterated nonsense. Only two (Kaufmann and Hook) are philosophers (Hook certainly isn’t “accusatory”), one (Martin) is a rabbi (and definitely not “accusatory”), one is a political scientist-economist, and eight are students of theology. Your implicit belief that only theologians are capable of objectively interpreting Tillich (or even capable?) is incredibly biased. Philosophers and political scientists are actually better qualified than divinity students, because (a) they are generally familiar with Hegelian dialectics, which is the background of Tillich’s thought, (b) they are not predisposed to believe that a Christian theologian could not be an atheist, and (c) Tillich is an existential philosopher as well as a theologian (he was a professor of philosophical theology at Union).


Hannah's book is not a polemic, not an argumentum ad hominem at all. She and Paul were both products of Weimar-era Germany, and sexuality was normal, open, non-taboo (that is, until the Right Wingers took over in 1933). For everything sexual she states about her husband, she states as many or more about herself. E.g., after the first 60 pages or so it's crystal clear to the reader that she was fully bi-sexual, and had no shame or angst about it.
::Atheism is indeed “anything that diverges from traditional personal-God theism.” Where did you get the idea that it could be something else – except perhaps a panentheist (but not a pantheist) or a deist (technically a deist is an atheist, but I wouldn’t quibble about this). Why are you implicitly asserting that metaphysical interpretations of Tillich make him a theist, hence not an atheist? That’s nonsense. Are you going to deny that Hegel and Spinoza (pantheists) were atheists?


So...why (at the bottom/end) of the article, can't there be a mention of her book; of Paulus the real, living, flesh & blood human? I'm not proposing a salacious cut & paste from only the sexy parts of the book. Nor, a long drawn out portrait that would end up looking like Tillich-trivia. Rather, just a mention of the book's subject matter, a cited reference to Rolo May's objections to it, and a reference to Martin Marty's ''Christian Century'' review of the book (from the 26 SEP 1973 edition).
::You ask, “How can we be sure that those twelve sources aren't cherry-picked to present a particular slant?” And just what is “cherry-picked,” as opposed to just plain “picked,” supposed to imply? Of course they were picked! I picked out the 12 interpreters who classify Tillich as an atheist. I was refuting the Anastrophe-Gordon thesis that atheistic interpretations are out of the “mainstream” and thus shouldn’t be mentioned in the article. What’s so wicked or irrational or tricky about that? Now I’m inviting you to “cherry-pick” your own set of theistic interpreters so as to justify your claim that theistic interpretations represent the “mainstream.”


But, if (and it's only an ''if'' ; I'm not accusing anyone) this page is dominated by hagiographers--if most of the editors are trying to project a "Saint Paul Tillich,"--then I won't even waste my time, cuz I know it will get deleted a few minutes after posting. (Similar crap has happened before on Wikipdedia; e.g. when Hindu nationalists hijacked the Jeffry J. Kripal article about six years ago).
::You say, “The test is to go, as I've said previously, to more general secondary/tertiary sources with reliable reputations and see if they summarise Tillich as an atheist.” Keep your eye on the ball. The issue we’re discussing at the moment is whether “mainstream” opinion denies Tillich’s atheism. That issue calls for primary sources, not for a superficial summary by a paid article-writer who has not immersed himself/herself in Tillich’s theology (and doesn’t need to, because he is just writing a summary and may be relying on just one or two primary sources). I’m asking you to name your primary sources. Apparently you can’t.


But I doubt it's that bad on this page; after all ''From Time to Time'' is used as an endnote on this article.
::You say Tillich cannot be an atheist because he “did not deny the reality of God.” But he did deny the reality of the God of theism. He endorsed only the reality of “the God above the God of theism.” That God happens to be humanity, but even if it were Life (Hammond) or Love (Robinson) or some other nonsupernatural God or even a supernatural “essence” embodied in everything (Hegel) or everything natural (Spinoza), the God above God would not be the God of theism – which means Tillich would still be an atheist.


Any thoughts on this?
::Furthermore, Tillich DID deny the reality of the God of theism. “If existence refers to something which can be found within the whole of reality, no divine being exists” (Tillich, 1957, p. 47). Tillich said that his concept of religion “has little in common with the description of religion as the belief in the existence of a highest being called God: (Tillich, 1959, p. 40). “Ordinary theism has made God a heavenly, completely perfect person who resides above the world and mankind. The protest of atheism against such a highest person is correct” (Tillich, 1951, p. 245). “Atheism is the correct response to the ‘objectively’ existing God of literalistic thought” (Tilllich, 1966, p. 65). “In making God an object besides other objects, the existence and nature of which are matters of argument, theology supports the escape to atheism. . . . is perfectly justified in destroying such a phantom” (Tillich, 1948b, p. 45). “God is being-itself, not a being” (Tillich, 1951, p. 237).


] (]) 14:46, 15 June 2011 (UTC)
::You say that “for Tillich the disappearance of an inadequate concept of God was the beginning of a grander vision of God.” Agreed. We just don’t agree on what this “grander vision of God” – the God above the God of theism – is. You apparently think this God is a being who should not be called a “being” because . . . too far above man? no arms and legs? doesn’t consign sinners to a hell of fire? But I know the higher God is a dialectical God who is nonsupernatural; “he” (the symbolic term for “it”) is a dialectical synthesis of (1) the thesis, theism, or Yes to God + Yes to supernaturalism in general and (2) the antithesis, atheism, or No to God + No to supernaturalism in general, which gives the synthesis of Yes to God + No to supernaturalism = Yes to a nonsupernatural God, the God above the God of theism. This God is “not a being” – not one being – because it is billions of human beings, humanity, one composed of many.


:Well I think the main objection is that the book depicts Tillich has having a fondness for pornography featuring females depicted in crucifixion. For you non-believers out there the crucifixion is central to Christian Theology, featuring the ritual torture and execution of the deity. There's a large psychological component to sexual "deviance" of a transgressive nature, so I figure a discussion of this belongs in the abnormal psychology section.
::] (]) 05:23, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
] (]) 04:08, 10 November 2011 (UTC)


Thank you for this. I read "From Time to Time" (on loan from a library) many year ago. I remember a review in a paper said that with the exception of ], we know little of the sex lives of theologians. It described the book as a "wounded and wounding account" of Hannah's life with Paul, and noted how, according to the book, Tillich was hopelessly devoted to ]. However, the review did point out that at times, Hannah appeared to give grounds for her own execution (the review's words, not mine). It also mentioned how Rollo May interpreted Tillich's love affairs as looking for his lost mother. Tillich's mother actually died when Tillich was seventeen, not as young as Tillich liked to make out. If any one has read "From Time to Time" by Hannah Tillich, or "Paulus" by ] more recently than I have done, s/he is welcome to put this information in the article. ] (]) 15:17, 28 September 2011 (UTC)


If there is to be a section about Tillich's personal and family life, then it should take into account the latest scholarship, including the articles written which rather contextualize Hannah Tillich's character assassination book. In particular the essay by René Tillich called "My father, Paul Tillich" in the volume "Spurensuche. Lebens- und Denkwege Paul Tillichs" (2001), sheds important light. ] (]) 13:41, 13 June 2014 (UTC)


Yes, I agree that there needs to be some mention of the Tillich the man. At the moment the article tends to be almost all about his theology. And the treatment does not need to be salacious nor should it be malicious; but it relevant to know more about his attitudes to sex and sexuality. ] (]) 16:57, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
:Like Anastrophe and Gordon, you are ignoring the evidence when you write that Tillich’s atheism is merely the opinion of “an incredibly small minority of ‘scholars.’” I named a dozen of those scholars. If this is an “incredibly small minority,” you should be able to name at least 48 scholars who have published interpretations affirming that Tillich is a theist. Those 48, if you can find them, will turn my 12 into an “incredibly small minority” of 12/60 = 20%. But for now, those 12 scholars are a majority.


== Influenced By ==
:How can you possibly justify saying that Tillich’s supposed belief that God is a supernatural being is “well-accepted.” That view is widely rejected. You have your head in the sand.


I have been a big fan of Tillich since high school, and I also just completed Tillich's "A History of Christian Thought". I came to this article because I was curious about how it was written, and I was immediately struck by the "influenced by" section on the right hand column. Tillich's thought was so rich and comprehensive that we really could include any philosopher or thinker in that list (like Descartes and Fichte are currently), but he himself admits to being most influenced by Augustine and Origen of ancient Christianity, Martin Luther of the Reformation, and Schelling and Martin Kahler in the more modern period. I am slightly correcting this list to recognize the thinkers who Tillich holds close to his heart in "A History of Christian Thought". Fichte and Descartes cannot be considered amongst the several most important philosophical and theological influences in his thought. And while he does mention in his works his respect for many, many thinkers, only the ones he attaches himself to should be mentioned.
:I don’t need to be told where the Questions and Answers bit appears. I also know that it can’t be taken literally, because there are no question and answers. I challenge you to name six, or even one, of those alleged-to-exist correlative “Questions,” supporting each question with a sourced quotation from Tillich. Then tell us what Tillich’s answers are. There won’t be any answers, because there aren’t any questions. “Questions” is a symbol for philosophy, “Answers” a symbol for theology. Tillich is correlating philosophy and theology to produce what he calls a “philosophical theology.” “Philosophy and theology,” he wrote, “are not separated and they are not identical, but they are correlated” (Tillich, 1948, p. xxii).
] (]) 02:22, 29 August 2012 (UTC)


== Martin Luther King Jr. ==
:The simple truth is, Tillich’s Systematic Theology does not follow a question-and-answer format. The questions aren’t there. Neither are the answers.


I understand that King wrote his doctoral dissertation on Tillich's work. If true, I believe that point is worth mention here. --] (]) 13:35, 17 January 2016 (UTC)
:These are the principal theology-philosophy correlated (analogous) concepts:
:: Yes, I concur. ] (]) 16:50, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
:* God and being: Tillich specifically refers to “the correlation of being and God.”
:* The Trinity and a thesis-antithesis-synthesis dialectic: “trinitarian thinking is dialectical.”
:* Father and thesis
:* Son and antithesis
:* Holy Spirit and synthesis
:* The Fall and the movement from thesis (union with God) to antithesis (separation from God)
:* Sin and self-estrangement
:* Salvation and the movement from antithesis (above) to reunion with God (union with new God)
:* Revelation with reason, which produces “the correlation of revelation and reason).
:* The Kingdom of God and philosophy’s utopias (e.g., Marx’s communism).


==Second spouse==
:You cite Ultimate Concern: Tillich in Dialogue. You might want to read it more carefully. In it you will find these statements pointing to Tillich’s atheism.


In the top right corner, there is a table saying spouse/s which is followed by Hannah. In fact, Paul divorced from his first wife and then married Hannah, so the table requires the necessary modification.] (]) 21:28, 20 June 2016 (UTC)
:* “As for the mythology concerning the third person of the Trinity coming down from heaven – forget all about it” (p. 77). Compare: “The doctrine of the Trinity does not affirm the logical nonsense that three is one and one is three; it describes in dialectical terms the inner movement of the divine life as an eternal separation from itself and return to itself ” (Tillich, 1951, p. 56).
In fact, if you read this article carefully it does say that Tillich had been married to Margarethe Wever before he met Hannah (and in From Time to Time, Hannah does that Tillich's spouse was leaving him for his best friend) so this rather reinforces the previous suggestion. ] (]) 19:19, 21 June 2016 (UTC)
:* If a person answers Yes to the question, “Was Jesus the Son of God?” that person is “guilty of crude mythology” (p. 90). Compare: “If the Christ – a transcendent, divine being – appears in the fullness of time, lives, dies and is resurrected, this is an historical myth” (Tillich, 1957, p. 54).
:* Question from student: “Why couldn’t there be some supernatural power at work here that is actually suspending the laws of nature?” Tillich: “All these questions,if taken literally, are nonsense. . . You approach something here that is fundamental to all my thinking – the antisupernaturalistic attitude. . . .I would recommend the one section about reason and revelation in the first volume of my systematic Theology, where I deal extensively with miracle, inspiration, ecstasy, and all these concepts, and try to interpret them in a nonsupernaturalistic – and that would also mean nonsuperstitious – way” (pp. 157-58).
:* Student: “In Sunday school, we learned that miracles imply a ‘suspension of the laws of nature.’” Tillich: “Now if you define a miracle like this, then I would simply say that this is a demonic distortion of the meaning of miracle in the New Testament” (pp. 158-59).


==This sounds like a contradiction==
:] (]) 03:58, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
This article says that Tillich taught undergraduates after becoming Professor at Harvard because Harvard did not have a Department of Religious Studies for them. Wording it in this way makes it sound contradictory, and if what this article really means is that Tillich was the first Professor of Religious Studies at Harvard, this could be pointed out. ] (]) 15:57, 12 October 2017 (UTC)


== External links modified ==
::Your comments are bordering on the inane. I am aware that Tillich's "question" and "answer" do not necessarily refer to any set of concrete questions or answers. And it is not a mere matter of finding 48 or 50 or even 200 scholars to support my claim that Tillich is not considered an atheist in the mainstream literature. Rather, it is a matter of every serious encyclopedia and/or third party source within philosophy and theology refusing to utilize such terms in an overly simplistic fashion. Of course Tillich DOES NOT believe that God is a supernatural being (God is not A being). But this does not mean that he is not a theist. Your notion of "theism" is apparently myopic. ] (]) 05:43, 18 February 2008 (UTC)


Hello fellow Wikipedians,
==Snipped from biography==
Text for re-use in "development of theology" section. Also needs assessment for accuracy of summary. ] (]) 13:50, 17 February 2008 (UTC)


I have just modified one external link on ]. Please take a moment to review ]. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit ] for additional information. I made the following changes:
''During 1924-25 he was a Professor of Theology at the University of Marburg, where he began to develop his systematic theology. He even taught a course on it during the last of his three terms. In this course be began using his own theological terminology, a subject of fascination for the students. God became "the Unconditioned", a term whose meaning the students could not have understood but which actually means that God–humanity–is not subject to the condition that parts of the human race are excluded; exclusivity constitutes "demonism" (Wheat, 1970, pp. 20-21, 39, 144, 149-53, 198, 209).''
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20060106105318/http://www.religion-online.org/showbook.asp?title=2310 to http://www.religion-online.org/showbook.asp?title=2310


When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
''The Courage to Be. The latter book, called "his masterpiece" in the Pauks’s biography of Tillich (p. 225), was based on his 1950 Dwight H. Terry lectures at Yale. This is the book where Tillich espoused "the God above the God of theism" (Tillich,1952, pp. 182-90). He depicted this higher God as the answer to a series of No’s to the supernatural that cause existential human anxiety.''


{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}}
:The information about Tillich's terminology at Marburg comes from pages 95-96 of the Pauk biography.


Cheers.—] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">(])</span> 06:13, 11 December 2017 (UTC)
:Regarding The Courage to Be, here are some things Tillich says on the last ten pages of the book: "There are no valid arguments for the existence of God. . . . The content of absolute faith is 'The God above God.' Absolute faith . . . takes the radical doubt, the doubt about God, into itself, transcends the theistic idea of God. . . . The God of theological theism is a being beside others and as such a part of the whole of reality. . . . He is seen as a self which has a world, as an ego which is related to a thou, as a cause which is separated from its effect . . . He is a being, not being-itself. As such,. . . he deprives me of my subjectivity . . . appears as the invincible tyrant. This is the deepest root of atheism. It is an atheism which is justified as the reaction against theological theism and its disturbing implications. . . . Only if the God of theism is transcended can the anxiety of doubt and meaninglessness be taken into the courage to be. . . . All forms of courage are re-established in the power of the God above the God of theism. The courage to be is rooted in the God who appears when God has disappeared in the anxiety of doubt."


:] (]) 02:21, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
::I'd rather see a third-party summary of the thrust of the lectures and book. ] (]) 02:43, 18 February 2008 (UTC)


==Was Tillich a pantheist?==
I am sure I have read that Tillich's reliance on idealism implies ]. If this is so, he could be put in the category "pantheism". ] (]) 19:16, 8 January 2018 (UTC)
:Not a pantheist, but, with a slight change of spelling, a panentheist. Pantheists believe that God and the universe are identical; God is not separate from the universe. Panentheists believe that God is separate from the universe, but is in all things. God suffuses all things. ] (]) 17:31, 9 June 2020 (UTC)


==Method of correlation==
=="The Norm": Jesus as the Christ==
The box in the top-right-corner of this article mentions "Notable ideas" of Tillich. I wonder whether this list should include the method of correlation. ] (]) 19:24, 8 January 2018 (UTC)


==Systematic theology and the Courage to Be==
The article’s “explanation” of Tillich’s “the norm” is misleading, out of place (it doesn’t belong under the “Correlation” heading), and extremely incomplete – all of which problems reflect the author’s profound misunderstanding of what “the norm” is about.
This article has a paragraph in which "Systematic Theology" is in italics, then "The Courage to Be" is in italics, and then says the latter is his masterpiece. I have always thought that it was "Systematic Theology" that was seen as his masterpiece. ] (]) 19:36, 8 January 2018 (UTC)


==The Protestant Era==
Way back in 1911, when he was still a student, Tillich presented to friends some “theses” that “raised and attempted to answer the question” of how Christian theology could proceed “if the non-existence of the historical Jesus should become historically probable” (Hopper,1968, pp.27-28). Tillich’s answer, an answer that became “the norm,” was to base theology (meaning Tillich’s theology”) not on (1) the historical Jesus, in whose existence Tillich has no real doubts, but on (2) the mythological “Jesus as the Christ,” in whom Tillich did not believe.
This article mentions "The Protestant Era". Was this book about the Reformation? If so, this could go in the article. ] (]) 09:15, 24 November 2018 (UTC)


==Criticisms of Tillich==
Tillich didn’t believe in the supernatural Christ? “If the Christ – a transcendent divine being – appears in the fullness of time,lives, dies, and is resurrected, this is an historical myth” (Tillich, 1957b, p. 54). Giving an example of his symbolism, Tillich wrote, “As an example, look at the one small sentence: ‘God has sent his son.’” This statement, he says, “if taken literally is absurd” (Tillich, 1959, pp. 62-63). When a student asked why it was necessary for Jesus to be tempted if Jesus was the Son of God, Tillich replied that the student was “describing the superstitious concept of the Son of God” (Tillich, 1965, pp.136-37). How about the Johannine concept holding that Jesus was God incarnate (Jn. 1:14) rather than the Son of God? “If the engeneto in the Johanninine sentence, Logos sarx engeneto, the ‘Word became flesh,’ is pressed, we are in the midst of a mythology of metamorphosis” (Tillich, 1957a, p. 149). “Protestantism . . . does not deny the idea of Incarnation, but it removes the pagan connotations and rejects its supranaturalistic interpretation” (ibid.). Consider too that Christianity’s Christ is a divine savior whose death on the cross made it possible for people to be “saved” – to go to heaven after dying. But without salvation, there can be no savior, no Christ, and Tillich regards supernatural salvation as a superstition: “Immortality” is just a “popular superstition” (Tillich, 1963a, pp. 409-10), and “man should not boast of having an immortal soul” (Tillich, 1957b, p. 36).
I am sure that I once read in a dictionary of Christianity that the strongest criticism of Tillich are his reliance on ] that implies pantheism and belief in a personal God, and his failure to grasp the sola Scriptura principle of the Protestant tradition in which he stood.] (]) 09:32, 10 January 2019 (UTC)


== Allied Propagandist ==
Yet it the mythological Christ, not the real historical Jesus, that Tillich adopts as his norm. “A Christianity which does not assert that Jesus of Nazareth is sacrificed to Jesus as the Christ is just one more religion among others” (Tillich, 1951, p. 135). Why does Tillich insist that the Christ, in whom Tillich does not believe, rather than the historical Jesus be his “norm”? To begin with, we must understand what “the norm” means. A norm is a standard or criterion, something by which something else is judged. Tillich is using “Jesus as the Christ” as a standard by which a theology (his theology) is validated.


Paul Tillich was in the service of the Allies against his own country during world war two as a propagandist. I think this is notable: https://archive.org/details/WarTimeRadioAddressesAgainstNaziGermanyPaulTillich/page/n20 --] (]) 00:46, 2 February 2019 (UTC)
Next comes the part Jonalexdeval (and his authority, McKelway) leaves out. “Jesus as the Christ”must be the norm because the early Church’s Council of Nicaea (AD 325), and later the Council of Chalcedon (AD 451), declared that Jesus was fully God and fully man rather than part God and part man. “The decision of Nicaea saved Christianity from a relapse to a cult of half-gods” (Tillich, 1957a, p. 144). A Christ who “could only be a half-god who at the same time is half-man” could not serve as the norm (ibid., p. 93). Tillich’s point, a well-hidden point as it happens, is this: If God is a supernatural being, 100 percent God plus 100 percent man is arithmetic nonsense, because the parts of a person can add only to 100 percent, not 200 percent. But there is a definition of God that makes God “fully God and fully man.”


== I propose revising the opening description of Tillich ==
Now put your thinking cap on. How can Tillich define God in a way that makes God “fully god and fully man”? Well, God by any definition is fully God – as a matter of definition. The God of theism, the God of deism, the God of pantheism, the God of mysticism, and such nonsupernatural Gods as Love (Robinson), Life (Hammond’s interpretation of Tillich’s God), and humanity are all “fully God” if defined as God.


The opening characterization of Tillich as a “German-American Christian existentialist philosopher and Lutheran Protestant theologian” misrepresents him. He was, in his defining years, first a theologian and then, in a secondary way, a philosopher. His list of published works demonstrates that "theologian" should go first.
But how can a God be, at the same time, “fully man”?


Also, while he had a Lutheran upbringing and ordination, none of his books expound Lutheran confessional theology except as an item in A History of Christian Thought. He rather vigorously did claim the mantle of Protestant.
* Could Tillich’s God be the God of pantheism, a mindless metaphysical “essence” found in everything that exists in the universe, including man? No, because the God of pantheism is only partly man and mostly other things such as stars, trees, mountains, raindrops, and squirrels.
* Could the God above God be the God of theism or the God of deism? No: a theistic or deistic God has certain human characteristics – rational, self-conscious, possibly loving, possibly capable of anger and vengeance – but is certainly not human, not “fully man.”
* Could Tillich’s God be Love or Life? No, because then God would not be even partly man.
* Could Tillich’s God be all living creatures, including animals, birds, fish, and man? Absolutely not: then God would be only partly man.
* Could Tillich’s God be humanity? Yes, because if God is defined a humanity, God is “fully God and fully man.”


I propose revising the description thus: “…was a German-American Protestant theologian and Christian existentialist philosopher."
Therefore, fully God and fully man is “how to think the unity of a completely human with a completely divine nature” (Tillich, 1957a, p. 142). Hence, in Jesus as the Christ “Christian theology has received a foundation . . . which is absolutely concrete and universal at the same time” (Tillich, 1951, p. 16).


His Lutheran background is well-explained in the biography section. ] (]) 12:34, 6 June 2020 (UTC)
Tillich’s norm for judging theology, then, requires that a theology be based on the premise that God and man are identical. In such a theology, God is man–humanity. Of all the theologies ever written, only Tillich’s can meet this requirement.


Agreed, ] (]) 20:43, 5 October 2022 (UTC)
I realize that the other contributors to Talk have closed minds when it comes to the possibility that Tillich’s God is nonsupernatural, or even something other than a supernatural being, but the article simply cannot ignore the fact that “the norm,” as explained by Tillich, calls for a theology whose God is “fully God and fully man,” not part God and part man.

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page archived if only to provide a moment's peace from the relentless screeds. saul tillich, why not just start a freaking blog somewhere. you aren't interested in writing an encyclopedia, you're interested in promulgating your views. that's just what blogs are for. they're great! even i have one! Anastrophe (talk) 04:00, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

That isn't archiving, it's censorship. Had archiving been your real objective, you might have archived material more than a month old. Instead, you deleted -- that's what you really did -- fresh material with which you disagreed. I posted the commentary you call a "screed" at 2:22 on March 11; you deleted it less that two hours later at 04:00. And your use of the epithet "screed" demonstrates that you knew exactly what you were doing, and why.
You are free to delete ("edit mercilessly") material in the Tillich article. You are not authorized to delete the opinions and arguments of contributors to the Talk page. You yourself complained vigorously when, in quoting you for purposes of refutation, I corrected a typo of yours by capitalizing the first word of a sentence. So please quit censoring.Saul Tillich (talk) 00:27, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
please visit the link to the archives, conveniently located above. your claim that i deleted your comments is utterly meritless. Anastrophe (talk) 01:27, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
That isn't archiving, it's censorhsip.
It's called keeping the crap to a minimum Saul. Jonalexdeval (talk) 01:57, 13 March 2008 (UTC)


Tillich Article’s Section on Theology

The article’s “Theology” section pretends to explain, but the author (Jonalexdeval) is merely paraphrasing statements he himself doesn’t understand. At the same time, in referring to “the norm,” which is “Jesus as the Christ,” the author misleads his readers in four ways:

  • By failing to say that Tillich, in many ways and in many places, said he did not believe in the divinity of Jesus, the author creates the false impression that Tillich regarded Jesus as a divine savior (Tillich didn’t believe in souls or life after death either).
  • The author also fails to say that Tillich uses the phrase “as the Christ” to differentiate between the supernatural Christ of mythology and the real historical Jesus of Nazareth.
  • The author fails again to say that Tillich created his “norm” in order to create a theology that would not crumble if, some time in the future, evidence emerged that the historical Jesus never existed. The Christ of what Tillich regards as mythology would still exist (as a myth) and would have the crucial characteristic Tillich bases his concept of God on.
  • As the biggest failure of all, the author ignores Tillich’s careful explanation of why “Jesus as the Christ” is the norm. Tillich’s reason is that, according to the Council of Nicaea, the Christ was not half God and half man but “fully God and fully man.” The norm calls for a God that is fully God and fully man.

As the article now stands, it is mostly unintelligible gibberish, meaningless abstraction. Take this pair of sentences: “It is important to remember that, for Tillich, no formulation of the question can contradict the theological answer. This is because the Christian message claims, a priori, that the logos ‘who became flesh’ is also the universal logos of the Greeks.” Don’t you see the non sequitur? How does either (a) identifying the Greek Logos with God or (b) having God become incarnated as a man make it impossible for a question to contradict a theological answer, assuming contradiction really is impossible? Taken literally, those are two unrelated assertions. The author is claiming, thoughtlessly and without comprehension (just paraphrasing what either McKelway or Tillich said), that if God is not or was not also the Logos, or else was not incarnated, a question COULD contradict the theological answer.

The author pretends to explain but clearly doesn’t understand what Tillich means in the two sentences, taken from another source, that he paraphrases. He is taking the words literally, whereas they have no literal meaning. What does it mean for a question to contradict its answer? How does God’s being the Logos prevent such contradiction? Taken literally, the words are unadulterated nonsense. Tillich is using his private symbolic language. To those who understand this symbolic language, the sentences do make sense. But I challenge the author (and his friends) to explain, by giving a nontheological example of a Q and its A, (1) what it means for a question to “contradict” an answer and (2) how, if “the Logos became flesh” (Jn. 1:14), does it become impossible for a question to contradict an answer. Not even the author can explain either (1) or (2), so what we have is nonsense, gibberish. (Only those who know what “question” and “answer” symbolize, what “contradict” means in this context, and why “Jesus as the Christ” must be “the norm,” can turn nonsense into sense.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Saul Tillich (talk • contribs) 02:22, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

I was trying to be concise when I wrote the section, so some important aspects I only briefly touched on which would actually require much more explanation. The statement "no formulation of the question can contradict the answer" has to do with Tillich's view (explicitly stated somewhere in the intro to ST) that the theological answer can and must be reformulated in light of new formulations of the existential questions. This is his philosophical honesty at work, and he can claim to be constantly true the Christian message throughout this modification of the theological answer because, as he claims, the logos of Christianity is identical with the Greek logos. Why does this latter claim support the former? Because if the two logos are the same then any reformulation of the philosophical logos will, a priori, be compatible with the Christian logos (so long as it remains true to the norm). And they are the same in the first place because Christianity uses the Greek terminology from the get-go. The reasoning does involve this basic assumption, that on a deeper structural level the the question and answer involve the same principle or truth, one universal and the other concrete. Jonalexdeval (talk) 20:19, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
Your answers are nonresponsive. My first question was: what does it mean for a question to contradict an answer? And I asked for an example. Instead, as you have done several times the past, you falsely assert that Tillich gives the answer somewhere (“somewhere in the intro to ST”). But the answer isn’t in ST or anywhere else. You don’t know the answer; and the first of the two consecutive sentences from your article that I quoted remain, as I said, nonsense. You don’t understand your own writing, and your readers won’t understand either.
I next asked you to explain the non sequitur in your second bold face sentence, which says that a PHILOSOPHICAL question can’t contradict its THEOLOGICAL answer “BECAUSE . . .the logos who became flesh is also the universal logos of the Greeks.” Where is the causal relationship – the “because” connection? You again give a nonresponsive answer by observing that the Christian logos is also the Greek logos. I didn’t ask if logos A = logos B. The logos of John (the God/Logos who became flesh) is indeed the Greek logos – that is the premise of my question – but this fact has nothing to do with why a philosophical question can’t contradict its answer IF logos A = logos B. The Christian logos is a religious concept, not an answer; the Greek logos is a philosophical (metaphysical actually) concept, not a question.
Your reply includes a statement purporting to explain why Tillich “can claim to be constantly true the Christian message.” Nonresponsive again. I didn’t ask how or whether Tillich can claim to be true to the Christian message. I asked how what you say about the logos makes it impossible for a question to contradict its answer. As things stand, you don’t understand your own writing, which makes no sense at all. Saul Tillich (talk) 01:14, 16 March 2008 (UTC)
I am not sure if this is the right place to put this comment, but I wonder if the first quote in the Theology section is incorrect in saying "Theology formulates the questions implied in human existence, and theology formulates the answers implied in divine self-manifestation..." Should it not be "Philosophy formulates the questions..."? I just ask as it seems odd as it stands.86.45.222.23 (talk) 16:10, 11 November 2012 (UTC)Jer.

Turning Nonsense into Sense

The reason your paraphrased summary of what Tillich wrote is nonsensical is that it misrepresents what Tillich wrote. You claim Tillich said this: “It is important to remember that, for Tillich, no formulation of the question can contradict the theological answer. This is because the Christian message claims, a priori, that the logos ‘who became flesh’ is also the universal logos of the Greeks.” But Tillich actually said that no philosophy (not “no question”) based on the Greek logos can contradict the logos of John 1:14 (meaning a philosophy–not an “answer”-- based on John 1:14). The words “question” and “answer” do not appear in the quotation that follows; neither does “because” or its equivalent.

Here, from page 28 of ST, vol. 1, is what Tillich actually wrote: “The Christian claim that the logos who has become concrete in Jesus as the Christ is at the same time the universal logos includes the claim that wherever the logos is at work it agrees with the Christian message. No philosophy which is obedient to the universal logos can contradict the concrete logos , the Logos ‘who became flesh’.” The implicit reason the two philosophies can’t conflict is that the Greek logos and the Christian logos (God) are the same.

Had you understood what Tillich means by an “apologetic” theology you might have avoided turning Tillich’s thought into nonsense. An apologetic theology is a proselytizing theology. More specifically, it is a theology in which the proselytizer says to the person being recruited, “Our God is your God under another name.” Example: “Our God is Allah under a different name, so you can become a Christian.” When Paul and the author of the gospel of John proselytized in the Hellenistic (culturally Greek) world, they told the Hellenists that they could become Christians because their “God”–not really a god but the metaphysical Logos–was God under another name. “John” claimed that the Greek logos became Jesus. To my knowledge, nobody has ever questioned the obvious fact that, in applying the name “Logos” to God and Jesus, John’s author was not entertaining the idea that there is more than one logos.

In calling his own theology apologetic, Tillich is doing essentially the same thing as Paul and “John.” He is offering a “theology” of humanism to the Christians he would recruit to humanism by giving the name “God” to his metaphorical god, humanity. Christianity’s God becomes the counterpart of the Hellenists’ logos. Tillich is saying, in effect, “you can become humanists because your God of theism and my ‘God above the God of theism’ are both named God.” —Preceding unsigned comment added by 141.156.51.132 (talk) 00:05, 27 March 2008 (UTC)

Let's put it this way. The theological response (responding to the existential issues of philosophy) is based on revelation and hence based on "the logos become flesh". So the FORM of this theological response can be modified and changed in order that it may ACTUALLY BE a response to the existential issues. When Tillich says that you cannot just throw the Christian message like a stone into a crowd he means that the theologian must mold the theology to the audience, times, and culture. This molding means changing the FORM but not the CONTENT of the Christian message.
The reason why no formulation of the existential issues can contradict the theological response is because this FORM of the theological response is DETERMINED BY the existential issues (philosophy) AND BECAUSE the CONTENT of the response is NOT essentially altered or modified by the existential formulation. So the form is modified while the content is changed, hence the existential analysis can be formulated and re-formulated through various historical epochs along with the FORM of the response without doing "damage" to the CONTENT of the message. The other part (about the logos) explains why the content is not altered).
Now if you want to know PRECISELY in all the gory details EXACTLY why and how the logos issues connects up with this, well, I think we are safe to say that the issue is beyond the scope of this article. We can be content here to say that, in any case, these are Tillich's words. Delirium (talk) 10:38, 30 March 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jonalexdeval (talkcontribs) 23:54, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
Your reply is again nonresponsive – and nonsensical. It fails to address either (1) the nonsensical nature of your article’s false paraphrase that claims Tillich said no QUESTION can contradict its ANSWER and (2) my accurate quotation of what Tillich actually said, specifically, that no PHILOSOPHY based on the Greek logos can (philosophy A) contradict a PHILOSOPHY based on the Bible’s Johannine logos (philosophy B). Your reply (above) asserts that philosophy A can be made consistent with philosophy B by changing the form of philosophy A without changing its substance.
What you say is again nonresponsive because it deals with a Tillich quotation that exists only in your imagination. Tillich said nothing about form; he was talking about a conflict in substance. Your reply is also nonsensical. If the substance of philosophy A conflicts with the substance of philosophy B, changing the form of philosophy A without changing its substance can’t eliminate the conflict. Suppose philosophy A, theism, says in spoken language (form = oral) that a supernatural being is God but philosophy B, pantheism, says in an written language (form = written) that a metaphysical “essence” within everything that exists is God. Changing the form of philosophy A from oral to written, or for that matter from poetry to prose, cannot eliminate the substantive conflict. You still have two different definitions of God (a substantive difference). Your answer is therefore nonsensical.
The real answer reflects what Tillich means by “apologetic theology,” a concept your article fails to grasp. In calling his theology apologetic, Tillich is analogically doing what Paul and John did. He is proselytizing by telling people who worship the God of theism that both their God and his have the same name, “God” (even though the substance of the proselytizer’s God is vastly different). Tillich is offering a “theology” of humanism to the Christians he would recruit to humanism by giving the name “God” to his metaphorical god, humanity. Christianity’s God becomes the counterpart of the Hellenists’ logos. Just as Paul told the Hellenists (falsely) that Christianity’s God was the logos – the two concepts are really entirely different – Tillich is saying, in effect, “you can become humanists because your God of theism and my ‘God above the God of theism’ are both named God.”
I should have commented on what Tillich means in his Systematic Theology’s page 28 quotation when he implies that the “concrete” (Jesus) and the “universal” are identical. He is alluding to a characteristic of Hegel’s metaphysical Spirit, which is also a characteristic of Tillich’s “God above the God of theism.” The Spirit is essentially “one” entity, the invisible essence of everything in the universe, but it is composed of many things – everything specific thing in the universe. Spirit is one composed of many. Both Hegel and Tillich use many variations of the “one composed of many” (or one = many) theme. These variations include (1) one and many, (2) universal (general) and particular, (3) infinite and finite, (4) abstract and concrete, and (5) world and self. Like Hegel’s Spirit, Tillich’s “God above the God of theism” is both one and many, both universal and particular, both infinite and finite, both abstract and concrete, and both world and self – all of which amount to the same thing.
Were there no other information to go on, Tillich’s God could be interpreted as either (1) the God of pantheism or (2) humanity. Both potential gods are one and many, universal and particular. Humanity is the universal, infinite, abstract, or world – one (general). Individual humans constitute the particular, finite, concrete, or self category – many. Tillich therefore asks, “How is it possible that the many are diverse, but nevertheless form the unity of a cosmos, of a world, of a universe?” He answers: “There must be an original unity of the one and the many.” (Tillich, 1967b, p. 144).
But is Tillich’s “God above God” the metaphysical God of pantheism or the figurative God of humanism? Most interpreters call Tillich a pantheist, an interpretation the article unconscionably hides. But Tillich has specifically repudiated pantheism (e.g., ST, v. 1, pp. 276-77; ST, v.2, pp. 6-7) and, in more general language, he has said that supernaturalism (which pantheism is a form of) is alien to “all” of his thinking. So we know Tillich’s one-composed-of-many God isn’t the literal “universal” of Hegel’s pantheism. Then what is the God above God? Tillich’s “norm,” “Jesus as the Christ,” says God must conform to the ruling of the Council of Nicaea. Nicaea held that the Christ was “fully God and fully man,” not half-God and half-man. When humanity is defined as God, God is “fully God and fully man,” because God is man. Tillich’s Hegelian dialectic progresses from God (thesis) to man (antithesis, the opposite of the thesis) to God = man (synthesis).
Why haven’t you at least revised the article to eliminate the false, nonsensical paraphrase that says a question can contradict its answer? Tillich never said what you say he said, namely, that “no formulation of the question can contradict the theological answer.” He said, “No philosophy which is obedient to the universal logos can contradict the concrete logos , the Logos ‘who became flesh’.” Saul Tillich (talk) 02:10, 14 April 2008 (UTC)

While this is all very interesting, Misplaced Pages isn't really the place to debate Tillich's theology. The article should have a simple summary of the various opinions scholars have put forth in the literature, and not take sides. --Delirium (talk) 10:37, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

I agree that the article should summarize "the various opinions scholars have put forth in the literature, and not take sides." I am criticizing the article for (1) taking sides and (2) presenting only one of the several interpretations. Roughly 3/4 of the scholars take Tillich at his word when he says the God of theism doesn't exist and when he calls for allegiance to "the God above the God of theism." All but one of the 3/4 who offer nontheistic interpretations of Tillich regard him as an atheist; one regards him as a panENtheist, which combines pantheism with theism. Most of the other interpreters consider Tillich a pantheist (pantheism is a form of atheism), but one -- the only one that is consistent with Tillich's repeated disavowals of supernaturalism -- holds that the "God above God" is humanity. Jonalexdeval's article ignores, indeed hides, these other interpretations, pretending that all but a "tiny minority" of interpreters regard Tillich as a theist. Saul Tillich (talk) 02:10, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
Pardon a nitpick, but "is a form of atheism" seems notably absent from the Pantheism article. 86.133.141.52 (talk) 03:28, 14 April 2008 (UTC)
Your nitpick is reasonable but it depends on how you define atheism. Atheism has both a narrow, or literal, meaning and a broad meaning. The narrow meaning, which I use, is disbelief in monotheism's Supreme Being -- the personal, caring, intervening, concerned-about-man God of theism. The broad meaning is disbelief in any supernatural entity (this includes impersonal metaphysical entities like pantheism's impersonal "essence" of nature) that is "God" to the believer. An intermediate definition would exclude polytheism, with its many personal gods, from the definition of atheism.
Those pantheists who have weighed in on the linguistic issue typically regard themselves as atheists, because pantheism is a form of rebellion against belief in the personal, self-conscious God of theism. A pantheism website, www.pantheism.net, has this to say: "Atheism simply makes the statement that there is no creator God, no personal God, no judging God. Beyond that atheists can be nature-lovers or nature-haters, they can see life and the Universe as joyful - or absurd. . . . World Pantheism has many members who would also describe themselves as atheists and/or humanists, but to these they add an emotional and aesthetic dimension in their connection with nature, the universe, and their fellow humans."Saul Tillich (talk) 23:03, 20 April 2008 (UTC)

Ground of Being

I have no idea what is meant by "Ground of Being". That sentence is vague, and since it's apparently one of his big contributions, can we get a better description? Mrsastrochicken (talk) 15:38, 1 November 2008 (UTC)

God above God section

It seems that this section is slightly anachronistic. It is reading Tillich's definition of God as the "Ground of Being" through Marion's "God without Being." Tillich still reads "God" as an ontological designation (not just a semiotic one) . Further the many different definitions listed of God ("Ground of Being", "Abyss", etc) are all pointing to one reality, they are not different attempts at a definition but different attempts at description because God is infinite and different--which is why he says that the analogia entis (analogy of being) is what gives us our only justification for speaking about God (Sys Theo 1, 266). Also, I'm not sure that one can really say Tillich rejects the personal God. For instance, the providence of God is "God directing creativity creating through the freedom of man" (Sys Theo 1, 296). Further, the principle of participation (sys Theo 1, 300) is one that is "personal" by its very nature. Man is "saved" by reuniting with the divine, not in a pantheistic or panentheistic way, but in communion and participation (Sys Theo 3, 48 and 222). He also says that participation only works as love (Sys Theo 3, 48). Reading him as pantheistic or panentheistic turns him into an Eastern mystic, something which did not really interact with Christianity until well after Tillich died. Impleri (talk) 16:03, 4 November 2009 (UTC)

Impleri, I concur with this assessment, and I have made some modifications to the beginning of this section. I am still working on this section, and welcome comments and criticism. I have authored the first 3 paragraphs almost exclusively. I should like to point out, however, that the analogia entis has a different meaning for Tillich than its medieval employment, and thus in a way does not exactly correlate to what Barth criticizes, in my view. Tillich states in the same place that he does not mean by analogia entis "the property of a questionable natural theology which attempts to gain knowledge of God by drawing conclusions about the infinite from the finite" . Instead, he means to say that, once we understand that God is not a being but is the ground of being itself and constitutes its structures, this then means that a description of "a finite segment being" can become the basis of an assertion about the infinite "because that which is infinite is being-itself and because everything participates in being-itself" . T's understanding of the symbol, in this way, is more classical than modern: the symbol is a finite reality which participates in the infinite, and thus mediates its reality. Likewise, everything can become a symbol of God in some way, and his understanding of revelation is related. T then does have this in common with Barth's analogia fidei: that the circle of faith or of theology cannot be entered into by means of an analysis of being, but only that in the apologetic moment, such ontological common ground can be found because God is the ground of being, of all being, inside and outside the circle of faith. This is why T's method is a method of correlation: we do not derive Christian symbols from the contemporary situation, but we correlate them. The older meaning of the analogia entis meant that the doctrine of God could be derived from an analysis of the world and then predicating it of God. In my view, this is not what Tillich means (and if he did then I suspect he really would be a pantheist, which would then render impossible the divine-human encounter...), and so I find the statement that T views the analogia entis as the only justification for theology to be in need of clarification. I only say this since this topic might be interesting to include in the article in some fashion, as his relationship to Barth and to traditional Lutheran theology is currently an open debate. -Gamorgan10

The section on "God Above God" refers to God as "Being" but later refers to God as Being and uses a lower-case B. Why is this?Vorbee (talk) 08:30, 28 December 2018 (UTC)

Criticism

I would like to see someone who has broad theological knowledge contrast the theological ideas of Paul Tillich with the ideas of other well-known theologians (e.g. Thomas Aquinas, Augustine, Luther, Calvin, etc.). For example, although I have read three books by Paul Tillich it is not clear to me where or how he differs from the theology of my own religion (i.e. Roman Catholicism.) I think this because he seldom, if ever, states clearly how he differs from other positions. Perhaps if I read his "Systematic Theology" I'll understand him better? Aletheia (talk) 17:41, 15 February 2011 (UTC) In his auto-biography, "On the Boundary" he says he could not sit on the boundary between Protestantism and Roman Catholicism. He does talk about other boundaries. Vorbee (talk) 09:22, 24 November 2018 (UTC)

Why a one-dimensional Tillich?

I'm no expert in Tillich's theology (I only have an M.Div), although I greatly appreciate the aspects of his thought that I do understand. That's why, when I read the Wiki article (as it is today, 15/06/11), I didn't have the same objections that many others have on this talk page. I'll leave all that to those who really know what they're talking about.

My only objection is this article presents a sort of one-dimensional view of Tillich. The Paul Tillich of the Misplaced Pages article comes across as barely human; as an almost disembodied Super Mind. But the greatest thinkers in history (in all disciplines) are also real humans, and Hannah Tillich's memoir fills in the human side of the man. Years ago I was appalled by the sexist ranting of Rollo May, when he fumed against the book (From Time to Time). He claimed she had no right to say any of that, and that had she not been married to Tillich in the first place, she never could have published a book, because who gives a rip about some old German woman anyway? It was as if Hannah had committed some horrible act of blasphemy.

Hannah's book is not a polemic, not an argumentum ad hominem at all. She and Paul were both products of Weimar-era Germany, and sexuality was normal, open, non-taboo (that is, until the Right Wingers took over in 1933). For everything sexual she states about her husband, she states as many or more about herself. E.g., after the first 60 pages or so it's crystal clear to the reader that she was fully bi-sexual, and had no shame or angst about it.

So...why (at the bottom/end) of the article, can't there be a mention of her book; of Paulus the real, living, flesh & blood human? I'm not proposing a salacious cut & paste from only the sexy parts of the book. Nor, a long drawn out portrait that would end up looking like Tillich-trivia. Rather, just a mention of the book's subject matter, a cited reference to Rolo May's objections to it, and a reference to Martin Marty's Christian Century review of the book (from the 26 SEP 1973 edition).

But, if (and it's only an if ; I'm not accusing anyone) this page is dominated by hagiographers--if most of the editors are trying to project a "Saint Paul Tillich,"--then I won't even waste my time, cuz I know it will get deleted a few minutes after posting. (Similar crap has happened before on Wikipdedia; e.g. when Hindu nationalists hijacked the Jeffry J. Kripal article about six years ago).

But I doubt it's that bad on this page; after all From Time to Time is used as an endnote on this article.

Any thoughts on this?

Mahamaya1 (talk) 14:46, 15 June 2011 (UTC)

Well I think the main objection is that the book depicts Tillich has having a fondness for pornography featuring females depicted in crucifixion. For you non-believers out there the crucifixion is central to Christian Theology, featuring the ritual torture and execution of the deity. There's a large psychological component to sexual "deviance" of a transgressive nature, so I figure a discussion of this belongs in the abnormal psychology section.

Microphage (talk) 04:08, 10 November 2011 (UTC)

Thank you for this. I read "From Time to Time" (on loan from a library) many year ago. I remember a review in a paper said that with the exception of Augustine of Hippo, we know little of the sex lives of theologians. It described the book as a "wounded and wounding account" of Hannah's life with Paul, and noted how, according to the book, Tillich was hopelessly devoted to pornography. However, the review did point out that at times, Hannah appeared to give grounds for her own execution (the review's words, not mine). It also mentioned how Rollo May interpreted Tillich's love affairs as looking for his lost mother. Tillich's mother actually died when Tillich was seventeen, not as young as Tillich liked to make out. If any one has read "From Time to Time" by Hannah Tillich, or "Paulus" by Rollo May more recently than I have done, s/he is welcome to put this information in the article. ACEOREVIVED (talk) 15:17, 28 September 2011 (UTC)

If there is to be a section about Tillich's personal and family life, then it should take into account the latest scholarship, including the articles written which rather contextualize Hannah Tillich's character assassination book. In particular the essay by René Tillich called "My father, Paul Tillich" in the volume "Spurensuche. Lebens- und Denkwege Paul Tillichs" (2001), sheds important light. 192.76.8.35 (talk) 13:41, 13 June 2014 (UTC)

Yes, I agree that there needs to be some mention of the Tillich the man. At the moment the article tends to be almost all about his theology. And the treatment does not need to be salacious nor should it be malicious; but it relevant to know more about his attitudes to sex and sexuality. Research17 (talk) 16:57, 19 September 2017 (UTC)

Influenced By

I have been a big fan of Tillich since high school, and I also just completed Tillich's "A History of Christian Thought". I came to this article because I was curious about how it was written, and I was immediately struck by the "influenced by" section on the right hand column. Tillich's thought was so rich and comprehensive that we really could include any philosopher or thinker in that list (like Descartes and Fichte are currently), but he himself admits to being most influenced by Augustine and Origen of ancient Christianity, Martin Luther of the Reformation, and Schelling and Martin Kahler in the more modern period. I am slightly correcting this list to recognize the thinkers who Tillich holds close to his heart in "A History of Christian Thought". Fichte and Descartes cannot be considered amongst the several most important philosophical and theological influences in his thought. And while he does mention in his works his respect for many, many thinkers, only the ones he attaches himself to should be mentioned. Uriah is Boss (talk) 02:22, 29 August 2012 (UTC)

Martin Luther King Jr.

I understand that King wrote his doctoral dissertation on Tillich's work. If true, I believe that point is worth mention here. --Christofurio (talk) 13:35, 17 January 2016 (UTC)

Yes, I concur. Research17 (talk) 16:50, 19 September 2017 (UTC)

Second spouse

In the top right corner, there is a table saying spouse/s which is followed by Hannah. In fact, Paul divorced from his first wife and then married Hannah, so the table requires the necessary modification.Vorbee (talk) 21:28, 20 June 2016 (UTC) In fact, if you read this article carefully it does say that Tillich had been married to Margarethe Wever before he met Hannah (and in From Time to Time, Hannah does that Tillich's spouse was leaving him for his best friend) so this rather reinforces the previous suggestion. Vorbee (talk) 19:19, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

This sounds like a contradiction

This article says that Tillich taught undergraduates after becoming Professor at Harvard because Harvard did not have a Department of Religious Studies for them. Wording it in this way makes it sound contradictory, and if what this article really means is that Tillich was the first Professor of Religious Studies at Harvard, this could be pointed out. Vorbee (talk) 15:57, 12 October 2017 (UTC)

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Was Tillich a pantheist?

I am sure I have read that Tillich's reliance on idealism implies pantheism. If this is so, he could be put in the category "pantheism". Vorbee (talk) 19:16, 8 January 2018 (UTC)

Not a pantheist, but, with a slight change of spelling, a panentheist. Pantheists believe that God and the universe are identical; God is not separate from the universe. Panentheists believe that God is separate from the universe, but is in all things. God suffuses all things. Bookman1968 (talk) 17:31, 9 June 2020 (UTC)

Method of correlation

The box in the top-right-corner of this article mentions "Notable ideas" of Tillich. I wonder whether this list should include the method of correlation. Vorbee (talk) 19:24, 8 January 2018 (UTC)

Systematic theology and the Courage to Be

This article has a paragraph in which "Systematic Theology" is in italics, then "The Courage to Be" is in italics, and then says the latter is his masterpiece. I have always thought that it was "Systematic Theology" that was seen as his masterpiece. Vorbee (talk) 19:36, 8 January 2018 (UTC)

The Protestant Era

This article mentions "The Protestant Era". Was this book about the Reformation? If so, this could go in the article. Vorbee (talk) 09:15, 24 November 2018 (UTC)

Criticisms of Tillich

I am sure that I once read in a dictionary of Christianity that the strongest criticism of Tillich are his reliance on idealism that implies pantheism and belief in a personal God, and his failure to grasp the sola Scriptura principle of the Protestant tradition in which he stood.Vorbee (talk) 09:32, 10 January 2019 (UTC)

Allied Propagandist

Paul Tillich was in the service of the Allies against his own country during world war two as a propagandist. I think this is notable: https://archive.org/details/WarTimeRadioAddressesAgainstNaziGermanyPaulTillich/page/n20 --105.0.7.221 (talk) 00:46, 2 February 2019 (UTC)

I propose revising the opening description of Tillich

The opening characterization of Tillich as a “German-American Christian existentialist philosopher and Lutheran Protestant theologian” misrepresents him. He was, in his defining years, first a theologian and then, in a secondary way, a philosopher. His list of published works demonstrates that "theologian" should go first.

Also, while he had a Lutheran upbringing and ordination, none of his books expound Lutheran confessional theology except as an item in A History of Christian Thought. He rather vigorously did claim the mantle of Protestant.

I propose revising the description thus: “…was a German-American Protestant theologian and Christian existentialist philosopher."

His Lutheran background is well-explained in the biography section. Bookman1968 (talk) 12:34, 6 June 2020 (UTC)

Agreed, YTKJ (talk) 20:43, 5 October 2022 (UTC)

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