Showing posts with label Thomas Merton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Merton. Show all posts

2021/10/17

Breathing Under Water물 밑에서 숨 쉬기 Rohr, Richard

Breathing Under Water: Spirituality And The Twelve Steps: Rohr, Richard: 8580001051727: Amazon.com: Books

Breathing Under Water: Spirituality And The Twelve Steps Paperback – September 1, 2011
by Richard Rohr  (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars    1,830 ratings

 
Kindle(1)
Audible Audiobook, Unabridged(2)





Editorial Reviews

Review
Richard Rohr continues to guide us to greater wholeness. The latest example is his new book, Breathing Under Water. A prolific writer, his books have helped countless souls, especially those who struggle with issues of brokenness and seek transformation. -- NCR (read full review: ncronline.org/node/26677)
About the Author

Fr. Richard Rohr is a globally recognized ecumenical teacher bearing witness to the universal awakening within Christian mysticism and the Perennial Tradition. He is a Franciscan priest of the New Mexico Province and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation (CAC) in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Fr. Richard's teaching is grounded in the Franciscan alternative orthodoxy—practices of contemplation and lived kenosis (self-emptying), expressing itself in radical compassion, particularly for the socially marginalized. Fr. Richard is the author of numerous books, including Everything Belongs, Adam’s Return, The Naked Now, Breathing Under Water, Falling Upward, Immortal Diamond, and Eager to Love: The Alternative Way of Francis of Assisi. Fr. Richard is academic Dean of the Living School for Action and Contemplation. Drawing upon Christianity's place within the Perennial Tradition, the mission of the Living School is to produce compassionate and powerfully learned individuals who will work for positive change in the world based on awareness of our common union with God and all beings. Visit cac.org for more information.
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Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Franciscan Media; 1st edition (September 1, 2011)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 176 pages

Customer Reviews: 4.7 out of 5 stars    1,830 ratings

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Richard Rohr
Fr. Richard Rohr is a globally recognized ecumenical teacher bearing witness to the universal awakening within Christian mysticism and the Perennial Tradition. He is a Franciscan priest of the New Mexico Province and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation (www.cac.org) in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he also serves as Academic Dean of the Living School for Action and Contemplation. Fr. Richard's teaching is grounded in the Franciscan alternative orthodoxy--practices of contemplation and self-emptying, expressing itself in radical compassion, particularly for the socially marginalized.

Fr. Richard is author of numerous books, including Everything Belongs, Adam's Return, The Naked Now, Breathing Under Water, Falling Upward, Immortal Diamond, and Eager to Love.

He has been a featured essayist on NPR's "This I Believe," a guest of Mehmet Oz on the Oprah and Friends radio show, and a guest of Oprah Winfrey on Super Soul Sunday. Fr. Richard was one of several spiritual leaders featured in the 2006 documentary film ONE: The Movie and was included in Watkins' Spiritual 100 List for 2013. He has given presentations with spiritual leaders such as Rob Bell, Cynthia Bourgeault, Joan Chittister, Shane Claiborne, James Finley, Laurence Freeman, Thomas Keating, Ronald Rolheiser, Jim Wallis, and the Dalai Lama.

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Top reviews from the United States
Paul Davis
5.0 out of 5 stars This is not a book for alcoholics and drug addicts alone. It is a book for all who are looking for the essence of humanity, what
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2015
Verified Purchase
Being a physician and currently suffering the pain of a close family member who struggles with lifelong loss of esteem that has presented itself in later years seeking comfort through alcohol, I find this book to be of enormous insight and comfort in my own lostness, woundedness and healing. Having grown up in a hyper religious environment dedicated to validation through performance, I find relief in the simplicity of breathing in, breathing out, even under water, knowing there is a very present God who suffers with me and my family. Richard paints a rich and tangible picture of One who is unconditionally loving in all our brokenness. One who desires nothing more than the simple submission of my soul to sit on his lap and have him wrap arms around me. When I hold my own grandchildren on my lap and do nothing but squeeze them tightly and whisper "I love you no matter what" in their childish ears, I finally understand who I am as a child and what I am here to do for my family and all those with whom I come in contact.

I heartily recommend this book to anyone who has been disappointed by religion, by their false image of God, and by their false image of themselves. It is a book for anyone who is suffering from the addiction to busyness and performance that I've personally endured, to "other pleasing", and of course to those who search for their self meaning in substances that give only temporary relief from the reality of their personal loss of esteem and purpose.

Powerful, personal, genuine in its message of hope! I hope this gentle healer named Richard never puts down his pen!
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191 people found this helpful
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D. Hamer
5.0 out of 5 stars Exposing the emptiness we all share
Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2017
Verified Purchase
Anyone who thinks this is a book about addiction has missed the point -- or just finds it easier to fix other people's addictions than confront their own brokenness. Richard Rohr has brilliantly introduced 12-step spirituality as a lens through which we can identify our "holes in the soul" and move into more authentic relationships with ourselves and with our Lord.
44 people found this helpful
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AZN8TV
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book for 12 steppers, their families and everyone else
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2015
Verified Purchase
It's long been my belief that if the rest of the world lived by the 12 Steps of AA and other Anonymous groups, the world would be a much better place.

Father Richard Rohr offers the concept that everyone suffers from some form of addiction...the internet, FB, cell phones, control...the list is endless. In this book, he addresses the larger issues that stem from these addictions.

One of the main caveats of all 12 Step groups is that one must embrace a Higher Power, thus allowing for a true Spiritual transformation. As a lifelong Catholic, I can attest to the truth of this concept. My spirituality and relationship with my Higher Power, whom I call God, has only deepened in my own personal journey in Recovery.

This is the book that everyone should read. It offers many fresh ideas and offers growth in one's own spirituality.

I have taken to using this book with Sponsees who have a strong spiritual bond while early in their recovery from addiction. It certainly helps me to be a better sponsor.
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70 people found this helpful
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Carrie Schultz
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant theologian makes Christian spirituality accessible
Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2016
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This is an amazing book for those on a spiritual path, particularly through the Twelve Steps, who struggle to find the God of Their Understanding"/Higher Power in the religious teachings and experiences they've encountered in life. Rohr helps bring reconciliation by humbly but clearly calling the church and "Christians" out when they have lost sight of or just plain missed the point of what Jesus was trying to teach. A fascinating read that helped me see the beauty of the forest and pity the ugliness of some very visible trees. I think any lapsed Christian who has resentments towards religion would find healing in these pages. And any die hard atheists and agnostics can see the words of Jesus in a way that he can be appreciated as a brilliant philosopher. Jesus without Christianity! Awesome and helpful.
39 people found this helpful
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Pastshelfdate
1.0 out of 5 stars Sentences and Key Words Missing
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2018
Verified Purchase
This is a great book, when it's all there. The people who transferred this print book over to a digital edition didn't make any mistakes that I noticed in the first two chapters, but this morning, in Sunday School, I noticed everyone else had a sentence in their print editions that was missing in my Kindle edition. A paragraph or two later, a quote attributed to Jesus of Nazareth is missing its verb: "Jesus had taught two thousand years ago in a most shocking and incomprehensible line: the wicked man no resistance”" (Matthew 5:39).

Rohr, Richard. Breathing Under Water: Spirituality and the Twelve Steps (p. 19). St. Anthony Messenger Press. Kindle Edition.

I don't know what else is missing. And I only read in this book once each week, during a 1-hour meeting. So I didn't find these defects until I was past Amazpn/Kindle's crappy 7-day return period.

Do not buy this buok from them in an eText edition. It's broken. And chances are, you won't notice until you can't get your money back.
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18 people found this helpful
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Laura Stephenson
4.0 out of 5 stars A Meditation On The 12 Steps
Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2017
Verified Purchase
Tbis is a beautiful treatise on rhe theology of the 12 Steps from the point of view of a Christian minister. I certainly don't agree with all of his premises, but he points out how the Steps are very similar to the poinrs made in both the Old and New Testaments. He talks about a transformative, compassionate ministry based on compassion and giving to others. This transformative ministry goes beyond piety and religious fervor and points out that compassion for others, not judgemental harangues and finger~pointing, is truly Christian. Suffering brimgs people together to help others because one sufferer truly understands and can help another one. This book can help church members transform themselves and their churches to be more in line with the truly radical idea of loving one another.
9 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries
Mrs. Mac
5.0 out of 5 stars what an amazing book. For a Christian who is familiar with ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 17, 2016
Verified Purchase
what an amazing book. For a Christian who is familiar with the 12 step programme ,it fills in all the missing pieces in recovery. We are ALL addicts, because we're human and are addicted to our willful way of life, ruled and dominated by our ego and will. This book demonstrates how Jesus came to set us free from ourselves and our ruinous lying and destructive will by offering an alternative way of living.. our addiction to the misery brought about by a false belief system means we live with depression ,anxiety eating disorders, alcoholism etc etc etc and somehow accept it as manageable pain .God isn't interested in managing our pain, he wants to set us free and sent Jesus to show us how. die to self, surrender our will totally to one who loves us beyond imagination and understand that God needs us to love him. craves us , is desperate for us, knows us and our faults and loves us anyway. we come to see that it is our addiction to the lie of being unlovable and un forgiven that keeps us from God,WE are our own worst enemies .We are the problem and therefore cannot fix ourselves, we need a power greater than ourselves.The ego will do anything to keep us from God because God is a threat to it's existence. The ego is the source of all pain, it is death it's how the world works.
16 people found this helpful
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DEBRA JANE WALES
3.0 out of 5 stars I couldn't decide....
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 13, 2020
Verified Purchase
This book stumped me....I love the 12 steps and believe its one of the most effective programmes out there that can be applied to any part of life. I'm also spiritual and an Enneagram coach which Rohr also ascribes to. As much as I don't follow any religious man made dogma I was a little shocked at just how much Rohr made every attempt to bad mouth the church. So much so, sometimes I couldn't decide if it was about the 12 steps or taking a stab at Christianity. Shame really....so much for forgiveness and judgment. The bible was right..'Why do you see the speck in your brothers eye when you don't notice the log in your own.'
One person found this helpful
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Yippity
5.0 out of 5 stars Great help to those with Addictions, everyone if we are honest
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 13, 2015
Verified Purchase
This is a fabulous book as all of Richard Rohrs book are. If you are struggling with any addiction, and there are so many types not just alcohol, this book is powerful. I think once you have read this book you will want to read more of his books and they will for sure help you on in your journey.
3 people found this helpful
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Polly
5.0 out of 5 stars Spirituality & AA's 12 steps
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 6, 2015
Verified Purchase
Great title - from a previously unpublished poem which he quotes at the start of his book - Father Richard Rohr explains how AA's 12 steps is a programme that achieves the impossible. Through following these simple steps -if you're in despair, floundering around - healing & liberation of spirit (breathing under water) will come. An American Franciscan priest who founded the Centre for Action & Contemplation in New Mexico, Richard Rohr comes from the mystical tradition of Christianity - Julian of Norwich, Thomas Merton etc but, like Eckart Tolle, he assimilates many traditions to lead us away from ego & duality to the wholeness of spiritual living & breathing.
9 people found this helpful
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foxy237
5.0 out of 5 stars ... of traditional 12 Step fellowships and a bright and useful companion to anyone who has taken such steps upon ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 12, 2014
Verified Purchase
A very insightful appreciation of the spiritual principles underpinning the recovery program of traditional 12 Step fellowships and a bright and useful companion to anyone who has taken such steps upon their own road of healing and growth. Especially helpful to others who might seek to understand.
3 people found this helpful
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Jan 29, 2021Fergus rated it really liked it
8 notes & 10 highlights
Don't misunderstand Rohr's shock tactics. Heaven and Hell are not just here and now, for they're eternal. And if you can take the pain of the Fire here, you can take the pain in the beyond. Otherwise, this book is simply Eckhart Tolle garbed in a Franciscan habit.

Richard Rohr is an iconoclast, so be forewarned! A Christian who doesn’t believe in an Afterlife? A Liberationist? Perhaps - it’s hard to nail him down. But one thing is for sure: he lives ENTIRELY in the present moment. Which I try to do as well. And mostly fail.

But Rohr seems to put the word Heaven within inverted commas, as if it’s not a substantial transcendent truth at all. I have great difficulties with that, and it’s as if he’s also denying God’s transcendence. I would really appreciate some ingenuous clarifications from him! He’s an Artful Dodger.

So none of my anticipated superlatives for this one, folks. Remember when Alexander Pope archly said, “A little knowledge is a dangerous thing?”

He meant it’s a dangerous thing for the nut cases among us: for it’s like “giving a gun to a melancholic bore” - as Auden admonished, in The Quest. Those living in their sublunary worlds are bound to misconstrue Rohr.

OK, OK, I’ve been one-upped on my earlier high estimate. And yet his clarity within, and love for the absolute present tense of life is redoubtable.

But I’ll add a caveat: “A LOT of knowledge is the Road to Hell.” - my own bow shot at my knowing critics. Because I know it from experience. And give a questioning man like Rohr - or myself in the old days - an inch and he'll take a mile.

Well, has Richard Rohr gone that well-rutted road?

To answer that, think back to T.S. Eliot’s irreverently puckish “Mr. Eliot’s Sunday Morning Service:”

In the beginning was the Word:
Superfetation of “TO ‘EN [Being]”
And at the mensual turn of time
Produced enervate Origen.

Why does he use the name Origen - an early Father of the Church - as being enervate? Simple.

Too much partying can do a guy in! You see, a guy’s nerve endings become dull after too mucha that sorta thing!

So why does he says superfetation? Too easy...

Superfetation produces Giants, and it is no accident that the same Church Council that disciplined the giant, Origen, suppressed the Jewish quasi-Kabbalistic Book of Enoch, in which the ancient and arcane explanation of the the word Giant is freely given.

A Giant is megalomania incarnate.

You know, one would almost think it was Origen’s Gnostic leanings that nearly caused him to be Anathematized. And one bright Christian wag recently gave a one-star rating to Rohr on Audible. His reason?

‘NO HEAVEN + NO HELL = HERESY.’

More exactly, the same heresy that another Church Father, Irenaeus, once mercilessly gutted and hung out to dry (see my review under his name).

Things fall apart: the Centre will not hold -
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.

Nuff said?

There’s tons of good reading out there, but may I recommend Irenaeus?

Were he here today, he’d skewer Richard Rohr quite handily and nail him down fair and square against traditional thinking.

I just don’t know how to do that in a palatable enough way for his many followers in our free and easy postmodern age. (less)
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Pete
Mar 08, 2014Pete rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
i'm finally getting around to typing up some of my notes from books i read in 2014 and i'm not sure how i wound up giving this book four stars instead of five. as always disclaimer: what follows may not be of interest if you're not in recovery and at least somewhat positively disposed toward mr christ.

this is basically just a guy putting each of the classic twelve steps in a deep, smart, and soulful christian context, but not the fast-food version of christian context -- jesus is magic, we love magic jesus, that's all we know -- but the gnarly complex christian context, the kind that understands we are all sinners. anyway if you find yourself in the same size and shape of rowboat as me, you will dig this book. even if your boat situation is wildly divergent, let me just share rohr's four assumptions about addiction
1) we are all addicts
2) "stinking thinking"/our way way of doing anything-our own defenses-our patterned ways of thinking is the universal addiction
3) all societies are addicted to themselves
4) some form of alternative consciouness (prayer, meditation, therapy, just not behaving exactly the same way forever) is the only freedom from addiction

if that doesn't zing you a little then this book probably doesn't have a lot to offer you (less)
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Nate
Jan 19, 2012Nate rated it really liked it
Shelves: spirituality, recovery-addiction
This was less of an explanation of the Twelve Steps and more of a commentary on them. Good insights, as always, from Richard Rohr. I especially appreciated his point that all of us are addicted, especially to our own way of thinking. We all are powerless and in need of trusting a higher power. Easy to read and simple message.
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Diane
May 02, 2012Diane rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
found myself quibbling a bit with his spirituality (from a Lutheran point of view), and I am tired of the "Do you worship Jesus or follow him?" dichotomy (to me, it's a both/and). But the 12th chapter, on the 12th step, was worth it all.

from the "Big Book": "so our troubles are basically of our own making. They arise out of ourselves; and the alcoholic is an extreme example of self-well run riot, though he or she does not think so. Above everything, we alcoholics must be rid of this selfishness. We must, or it kills us!"

So, we are called to serve others. If we receive, we also give. (less)
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Edward
Sep 10, 2016Edward rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
"What religion would Jesus belong to?" was the title of a recent NY Times article about contemporary Christianity. You don't generally think of AA as a "religion" and while it's technically not one, Rohr finds that its approach to helping individuals overcome their addictions is a spiritual one with many parallels to the teachings of Christ.

Rohr makes four assumptions about addictions. First, we are all "addicts", being addictive by nature, subject to illusions and entrapments. The Biblical tradition calls them "sins", and in the New Testament they are often objectified as "demons" and are driven out.

Second, the universal addiction is "thinking", that is our habitual way of doing anything, our thought patterns, usually ones we're not even aware of.

Third, all societies agree, to some extent, to be compulsive about the same things and blind to the same problems. He gives as American examples, "our addiction to oil, war, empire, the church's addiction [and some patriotic ones] to its own absolute exceptionalism, the poor person's addiction to victim- hood, the white person's addiction to superiority, the wealthy person's addiction to entitlement."

Fourth, "Some form of alternative consciousness is the only freedom from this self and from cultural ties." Rohr finds that this means some kind of contemplative practice, or in Christian terms, "praying." Otherwise, you never break out of your rutted existence.

What AA does then, Rohr contends, is to take an extreme example of addiction, a dependence on alcohol, and try through its twelve step program to break this slavery. Does it work? He thinks it is a powerful and valid approach. . In breaking out of a terribly addictive habit, the addict must first admit that he is powerless to do it on his own. The ego has to let go and seek help, through others, through a "power greater than ourselves." Among many things that means acceptance of ourselves - the past, our mistakes, imperfections, openness. Our first inclination, though, is to become aggressive, fight, take control, think we can improve ourselves on our own. Here is where he thinks AA differs from much organized religion which promotes individual merit and sacrifice, with the payoff being some kind of "heaven." AA works more on the basis of what has been called "grace," undeserved and gratuitous goodness emerging in the humble individual.

Goodness always comes through failure. The addict has already been in a personal hell, and while it wouldn't be wished on anyone, without it, nothing makes any sense. We have to fall before we can rise. With the fall comes repentance and then, apology, healing, and forgiveness. At this point, the shackles of the past are broken.

There is a paradox in all of this, though, summed up in the aphorism, "No one catches the wild ass by running after him, yet only those who run after the wild ass ever catch him." It's the same paradox as the title of the book, "Breathing Under Water." Going to AA meetings is obviously a matter or trying to improve yourself, all the while realizing that it is impossible to improve yourself. It's a kind of preparation, and whether a change occurs, depends on, again using spiritual language, metaphors for the spirit (Holy), living water, blowing wind, descending flames, alighting doves. As I understand it, the change might not occur at all, or it might occur when least expected. It's an ongoing process, as is life itself. Joys and disappointments for anyone cannot be predicted; all that one can ask for is an openness to a mysterious future.

Back to the beginning which was one of those glib "what would Jesus do?" questions, I think Richard Rohr would agree that it would not be surprising to find Jesus at an AA meeting.
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Dan Bonner
Aug 16, 2012Dan Bonner rated it it was amazing
I thought this was an excellent book that I will reference over and over again. It forced me to think differently about certain things I spent my life time believing.
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Ellie
Jun 20, 2014Ellie rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: spiritual, 2014indchalnge, non-fiction, addict-mental-illness
Breathing Under Water: Spirituality and the 12 Steps, a small and wonderful book by one of my most favorite priests, Father Richard Rohr, is a reminder of, as a friend of mine says, "who we are and what we are"-beings founded in love who struggle to find that love which we are. Fr. Rohr looks at the 12 Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous in the light of the Gospel and Catholic faith and find a deeply spiritual path.

I was touched, refreshed, and challenged by this work. I started to list it on my "self-help" shelf but realized this book is anything but. It is how we ground ourselves in the otherness of God and love of others that we discover ourselves. We must work hard to achieve this but in the end, it is only achieved by letting go and an act of God. Luckily, I like paradox. (less)
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Bank
Nov 10, 2011Bank rated it it was ok
All students of the Twelve Steps know that God and spirituality are the foundation of a successful program of recovery . In this book, Fr. Rohr is making the valid case that many people in our society today are much like the unrecovered addict ( sans the drugs ) in their emotional and spiritual makeup. He makes the further point that many adherents of the Christian church ( I believe he is singling out Catholicism ) have not addressed their spiritual issues and emotional makeup with anything approaching the intensity of the 12 Step Program . In fact, I would agree .
The book may further convince believers , but I doubt it will sway any skeptics. There are none so blind as those who will not see. (less)
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Alison 
Mar 22, 2015Alison rated it really liked it
This is a great book to grab when you find yourself in the grips of any sort of desire, addiction, or affliction, be it in the form of substance, compulsive behavior, or addictive thoughts. Those who, however, are still offended or wounded by dualistic religious or biblical experiences, will likely be turned off and stop after the first chapter (or page - each chapter begins with several quotes from scripture that correspond to the step the chapter is about). Those who choose to open themselves to the deeper meaning of these scriptural references and the wisdom with which Father Richard Rohr uses to extrapolate meanings and messages, will find riches here. Rohr calls the 12 Steps "America's most significant contribution to spirituality". I am intrigued by Bill Wilson's relationship and correspondence with Catholic priest Father Ed Dowling at the time of his evolutionary work on the 12 steps and his own personal journey (and the connections between the 12 steps and the 12 Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius). In Breathing Under Water, Fr. Richard is able to go into the depths to draw upon the connectivity between the 12 steps and the archetypal human journey of struggle and growth. I consider this a First Aid kit or "go to" book when I find myself in the grips of my very human self, helping to refresh my perspective and find the inspiration needed to get back on the path of my higher self. (less)
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Drew
Jan 07, 2017Drew rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Excellent book n the twelve steps for alcoholics and non-alcoholics alike. The last two chapters deserve to be re-read and re-read.
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Benjamin Shurance
May 14, 2021Benjamin Shurance rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I started reading this out of some ministerial curiosity about the 12 Steps. It ended up speaking a lot of words I needed to hear.
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Milt Jacobs
Oct 09, 2019Milt Jacobs rated it it was amazing
Good
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Andrew Doohan
Jan 29, 2013Andrew Doohan rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
In his usual easily accessible style, Richard Rohr provides a study of the underlying spiritual dimension of the Twelve Step program used by organisations such as Alcoholics Anonymous and other similar groups.

The beauty of Rohr's exploration is that his exposition of the spiritual side of the Twelve Steps has much to offer those who wouldn't normally be exposed to the Twelve Steps, those who simply seek to live out their Christian journey with some degree of integrity.

For anyone who fits that category I would highly recommend this little book by Richard Rohr. (less)
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Joe Skillen
Jul 04, 2020Joe Skillen rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Powerful

I will read this book again. As many times as it might take. It puts the whole of life together for me.
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Christy Robeson
Jan 24, 2021Christy Robeson rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: 2021
A book I didn't know I needed to read. (less)
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Patricia
Apr 05, 2021Patricia rated it it was amazing
Breathing Underwater was my choice for a Lenten discipline. Does it count as a discipline if you enjoyed it too much? I love Richard Rohr's down-to-earth explanations of who Christ was, how we are meant to FOLLOW Christ, to imitate him, not so much as cultic worshiping, with all sorts of "this is how you are supposed to do it."

In this book, Richard Rohr looks at the 12 Step Program for alcoholics, and draws lines between the steps and Jesus' example and the way the earliest Christians practiced following Christ.

Reading this book is, for me, like breathing underwater. It lifts burdensome constrictions which keep us from being fully who we are created to be, and urges us on in our discipleship of the living Christ. It revels in the humility of being humanly incapable of being without sin, while choosing to ask God to help us to do his will. I've already loaned this book out, and told the person I will need it back, both so I can loan it out again and so I can remind myself of who we are following, and how we are to follow, by being love, and giving love, including to ourselves. (less)
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Kailee Lelli
Mar 09, 2020Kailee Lelli rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Breathing Underwater had me hooked right away. It goes into detail about how your spiritual mindset will get you places you haven't been, especially with the twelve steps. Richard Rohr goes on about how the twelve steps are used in people's lives, and how whoever is reading this book can use it. It is a lovely book. I recommend this book to anyone (even if they do not need the 12 step study guide) who is looking for a closer relationship to God or want to know about how and why God loves each of us. (less)
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Kathleen
Mar 20, 2018Kathleen rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: faith, nonfiction, catholic, personal-development, recovery
Richard Rohr is definitely not orthodox Catholic, but he sure does have a lot of good things to say. I especially appreciate his views on recovery, as it really is a spiritual process and one that lines up perfectly with the Gospel. I didn't agree with everything in this book and there were a view times where he lost me a bit, but overall I underlined a lot of passages and it had a very positive impact on me. (less)
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Alison
Sep 12, 2021Alison rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I'm a fan of Rohr and find most of his work inspiring, though some of his books are more approachable than others. Rooting this one in the familiar twelve step program makes it very approachable and creates a highly readable structure. I've always been fascinated with how the process of faith weaves through the 12 steps and have often contemplated its alignment with the gospel, so having Rohr put it all together into a package was a great experience that affirmed many of my existing thoughts but also challenged me to look inward in ways I hadn't expected. (less)
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Sarah
Nov 27, 2020Sarah rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I already need to go back and re-read it! Rohr describes the 12 Steps as a technology for the sort of deep transformational work described by theologians from many world religions, although his primary focus is the Christian scriptures. Since he is a Franciscan, his take is really groovy and inclusive, though, so it is inspiring even of you're not a Christian. (less)
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Jim Keating
Apr 12, 2021Jim Keating rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Richard Rohr is brilliant, deep, a real authority on the Twelve Steps. Being new to the 12 Step world, particularly examining the challenging aspects of the spirituality undergirding it, and the wisdom in the simplicity of each step, has left me wanting more...so I'll read it again. A good friend has read it 5 times so I've got some catching up to do. It's a small book but not a quick read. Soak up every sentence and let it challenge you. (less)
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Mary Lynn Elker
Nov 20, 2020Mary Lynn Elker rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Very thought provoking. Will read again.
flag1 like · Like  · see review
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Chris
Jul 20, 2020Chris rated it really liked it
Let's just start with my bias. I love Richie Rohr!

A highlight from this book for me was on the topic of self acceptance and surrender. I have often struggled with my own ability to communicate God's unconditional love and grace to others while holding to a different standard for myself (I was raised very much as a performance-based legalistic kind of Christian). So reading this book led me to a new kind of "conversion" experience as my eyes were opened a bit to how loving and trustworthy God is to me.

Another great section for me was about prayer. It's not about getting God to do stuff for me but "opting in" to the divine...participating in what God is up to.

Although his writing leans progressive and makes some conservative Christians nervous, I think it goes along way to helping people of faith realize some of the ways in which we idealize the Christian life but often fail to actually love God and others well.

Thanks for helping me learn to breathe some fresh air, Richie! (less)
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review
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Jackie St Hilaire
Nov 27, 2016Jackie St Hilaire rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
One step at a time.

A few weeks ago I visited a man who has been following the 12 step program for over 20 years. On one of my visits I asked if we could go through the steps together and he picked up his book and began to read the steps one by one, flipping over the pages so fast that I didn't have a chance to dialogue with him. He read them, put the book down and that was it. This is a very depressed individual and full of guilt and shame, I was hoping to bring about a more shameless and guiltless approach.

During this time, I came across Richard Rohr's book "Breathing Under Water: Spirituality and the Twelve Steps and this is exactly what I needed to pursue my conversation with the man.

In visiting I always try to bring my own experience into the conversation and that is that most of us have some form of addiction going on and we are struggling to free ourselves from the guilt that has caused relationships to break down etc.

Richard Rohr, has given us direction on how to proceed, how to leave behind our negative, false self and move beyond and start living again.

It's not "been there done that", it's there 365 days a year and the motto "one day at a time" sometimes brings you to "one minute at a time".

For many of us it's why should I even get out of bed in the morning? We all need a purpose for living, meaning in our life, someone to care for and sometimes someone to care for us. It's a balancing act and it's not easy, many times we take one step forward and two steps backwards but the most important thing is not to give up,even if we are walking on our tiptoes. (less)
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review
ms.petra
Jan 07, 2019ms.petra rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
This book was the focus a small book club I was invited to join last fall. We meet once a week schedules and health permitting. We read out loud and discuss our thoughts and experiences honestly and profoundly. It is what I dreamed a book club would be and this book has helped me tremendously not only in my sobriety journey, but more importantly my spiritual journey. Fr. Rohr reminds us what Jesus taught. It is profoundly simple even though the big business of religion has made it otherwise. I highly recommend the accompanying workbook/journal to make the most of this powerful work. (less)
flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review
===
Jim
Feb 29, 2012Jim rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: spirituality-religion, social-issues, jims-reviews, favorites
This was an amazing book - a great way to look at Christian spirituality and the 12 steps. It's an amazing paradigm shift from how we look at our spiritual lives today. The way Rohr delves into the 12 steps leaves the reader with a lasting impression. I borrowed this book from a priest friend on Kindle - but I think I'm going to have to purchase a physical copy for myself to re-read it. Highly recommended. (less)
===
[eBook] 물 밑에서 숨 쉬기 
리처드 로어 (지은이),이현주 (옮긴이)한국기독교연구소2020-02-03 
원제 : Breathing Under Water: Spirituality and the Twelve Steps


책소개

저자는 먼저 우리 모두가 무엇에 중독되어 있는지를 밝힌다. 신자유주의의 치열한 경쟁과 부실한 종교가 초래한 “육신의 중독과 영혼 없는 사회” 속에서 알코올 중독자들처럼 난파당한 사람들만이 아니라, 우리 모두가 석유와 전쟁, 제국주의, 온갖 사회적 통념, 교회의 문화에 중독되어 있고, 무엇보다 우리 자신이 남과 비교하고 판단하고 힘을 행사하려는 에고중심적이며 이분법적인 사고방식에 중독되어 있다는 지적이다.

이처럼 우리 자신이 미처 의식하지도 못한 채 물에 빠져 익사당하는 인간의 조건과 문화 속에서 저자는 우리가 어떻게 물 밑에서 숨 쉬면서 견딜 수 있는지, 어떻게 구출될 수 있는지를 가르쳐준다. 이 책은 번뇌의 근원인 거짓 자아를 깨트리고 우주의 신비와 생명의 환희 속에 뛰어들 큰 꿈을 불러일으켜 준다. 날이 갈수록 더욱 척박해지는 현실에서 어떻게 자기를 살펴서 내적인 자유를 찾고 사회변혁을 위해 스스로 평화가 될 수 있는지를 일깨운다.

목차

머리말 __ 7
1장 힘없음 __ 25
2장 간절한 바람 __ 33
3장 달콤한 굴복 __ 45
4장 좋은 등불 __ 59
5장 자백하기와 용서받기 __ 67
6장 닭과 달걀, 누가 먼저인가? __ 81
7장 우리가 왜 구해야 하는가? __ 89
8장 빚 갚기 __ 99
9장 세련된 방식의 보상(報償) __ 109
10장 이것은 과잉 아닌가? __ 117
11장 새 마음, 새 사람 __ 129
12장 돌아온 것은 마땅히 돌려보내고 __ 143
후기 고통 받는 하느님만이 구원하실 수 있다 __ 159
참고문헌 __ 171
Study Guide __ 173


책속에서

알코올 중독자들의 무능함은 우리가 그것을 눈으로 쉽게 볼 수 있을 뿐이다. 나머지 우리들은 그것을 여러 다른 모양으로 위장하고 자기의 교묘하게 감춰둔 중독과 집착, 특히 자기의 사고방식(에고 중심적인 主體-客體라는 이분법적 사고방식 ? 역자주)에 대한 집착을 과잉보상하고 있는 것이다.(15쪽)

진실은 우리가 우리 자신의 가장 고약한 원수이고, 구원이란 근본적으로 자기 자신한테서 해방되는 것이다. 사람들은 자기 잘못을 인정하고 고치려 하기보다는 차라리 죽으려 하는 것처럼 보인다.(15-16쪽)

그리스도인들은 보통 진지하고 선의를 지닌 사람들이다. 에고, 통제, 권력, 돈, 쾌락 그리고 안전이라는 진짜 문제를 만나기 전까지는 그렇다. 다른 모든 사람들과 마찬가지로 그들은 우아하게 살려고 한다. 그동안 우리는 그들에게 자아의 깊은 변화 없는 가짜 복음을, 패스트푸드 종교를 제공하였다.(19쪽)

그래서 나는 네 가지 가설 아래 이 책을 쓴다.
우리 모두 중독자다. 인간 존재는 그 본성이 중독자다. 중독은 성경이 전통적으로 “죄”라 부르고 중세기 그리스도인들이 “정욕” 또는 “집착”이라고 부른 것을 정직하게 서술한 현대적 명칭이다. 우리가 이 착각과 올가미를 부수고 나오려면 진지한 대책 또는 수련이 필요하다는 것을 그들은 알았다. 실제로 신약성경은 그것을 “축귀(逐鬼)”라고 지칭하였다. 자기네가 비(非)이성적인 악 또는 “악마들”을 상대하고 있다고 생각했던 것이다.(21쪽)

밝은 깨달음은 많은 종교가 ‘믿음’이라고 가르치는 닫혀 있는 머리, 죽어 있는 가슴, 육체부정에 정반대다. 당신도 분명 이런 말을 들었을 것이다. “지옥을 겁내는 자들에 의해 종교가 살고, 지옥을 통과한 이들에 의해 영성이 산다.”
오늘날 세계에 무신론이 존재하는 가장 큰 이유는 아마도 대부분 종교들의 무해무독한 믿음체계 때문이지 싶다. 믿음체계는 신자가 아닌 사람들보다 더욱 강하고 자상하고 창조적인 사람들을 별로 만들어내지 못했으며, 흔히 훨씬 더 나쁜 사람들을 만들어냈기 때문이다.(34-35쪽)

솔직히 말해서 사람의 머리, 가슴, 몸을 열고 습관적 방어기제와 잘못된 행복 프로그램 그리고 눈앞의 분명한 현실을 외면하는 여러 형태의 저항들을 제거하는 일은 생명을 담보로 할 만큼 위험한 대수술이다. 하지만 그게 옹근 회심(回心)의 살과 뼈다.
(35쪽)

참 영성은 두 가지 큰 일을 동시에 이룬다. 하나는 하느님을 절대 자유로우신 분으로, 인간들이 무슨 짓을 해도 거기에 전혀 구애되지 않는 분으로 모시는 것이다. 다른 하나는 우리를 철저하게 자유로운 존재로, 어떤 환경에서도, 인간의 법과 죄와 한계와 실패 따위에도 강제되거나 억압당하지 않는 존재로 거듭나게 하는 것이다. “그리스도께서 우리를 해방시켜주셔서 우리는 자유의 몸이 되었습니다. 그러니 마음을 굳게 먹고 다시는 종의 멍에를 메지 마십시오”(갈라디아 5:1). 참 종교는 인간을 위하여 하느님을 자유롭게 해드리고, 하느님을 위하여 인간을 자유롭게 해준다.(150쪽)  접기


저자 및 역자소개
리처드 로어 (Richard Rohr) (지은이) 

프란치스코회 신부로서 1986년에 “행동과 관상 센터”를 설립했으며, 초창기에는 몇 년 동안 미국과 독일에서 애니어그램을 가르치는 한편, 오랜 영적 지도와 상담, 특히 카톨릭 신부들을 위한 피정을 17년 넘게 인도하고, 앨버커키 교도소 지도신부로 14년 넘게 사목한 경험을 바탕으로 『불멸의 다이아몬드』, 『물밑에서 숨쉬기』, 『위쪽으로 떨어지다』 등 20여 권의 주옥같은 책을 발표하여, 많은 독자들에게 회심을 경험하도록 만들고 있다. 그의 삶과 글 속에는 “아름다움이 구원한다”는 동방교회 신학방법론과 성인 프란체스코의 적극적 평화주의가 배어 있어서, 세상과 교회 안에서 상처받은 모든 영혼들을 치유하며 온전한 성숙함으로 안내하기 때문이다. 그는 짐 월리스, 토머스 키팅, 랍 벨 등과 함께 미국의 대표적인 영적 지도자 가운데 한 사람이다. 그리스도교는 예수의 영향보다 플라톤의 영향을 더 많이 받아서 화육(성육신) 종교가 탈육신 종교로 둔갑했다고 보는 그는 토머스 머튼을 이어 관상 전통을 되살려내는 과업에 헌신했으며, 짐 월리스, 토머스 키팅, 랍 벨 등과 함께 미국의 대표적인 영적 지도자 가운데 한 사람으로 인정받고 있다. 접기
최근작 : <오직 사랑으로>,<보편적 그리스도>,<성경의 숨겨진 지혜들> … 총 224종 (모두보기)

==
이현주 (옮긴이) 

관옥觀玉이라고도 부르며, ‘이 아무개’ 혹은 같은 뜻의 한자 ‘무무无無’라는 필명을 쓰고 있다. 1944년 충주에서 태어나 감리교신학대학교를 졸업했다. 목사이자 동화작가이자 번역가이며, 교회와 대학 등에서 말씀도 나눈다. 동서양의 고전을 넘나드는 글들을 쓰고 있으며, 무위당无爲堂 장일순 선생과 함께 『노자 이야기』를 펴냈다. 옮긴 책으로 『지금 이 순간이 나의 집입니다』, 『너는 이미 기적이다』, 『틱낫한 기도의 힘』, 『그리스도의 계시들』 등이 있다.
최근작 : <관옥 이현주의 신약 읽기>,<관옥 이현주의 신약 읽기 (양장)>,<부모 되기, 사람 되기> … 총 269종 (모두보기)
출판사 제공 책소개
프란체스코의 평화주의 전통에서 교육을 받고 특히 카를 융의 분석심리학을 공부하여 40년 넘게 영적 지도와 상담을 해온 저자는 이 책에서 예수의 복음을 통한 치유, 자아의 변화, 내적 자유에 이르는 길을 단계별로 가르쳐준다. 예수의 복음이 어떻게 우리의 고통스러운 번뇌의 화살을 뽑아낼 깨달음에 이르게 하는지를 보여준다. 과거의 악몽과 현재의 불안, 불확실한 미래에 대한 끈질긴 염려에서 단지 벗어나는 길만이 아니라, 온전한 자유와 충만한 기쁨에 이르는 길을 “열두 단계”에 따라 보여주며, 장애물과 극복 방법을 제시한다. 저자는 먼저 우리 모두가 무엇에 중독되어 있는지를 밝힌다. 신자유주의의 치열한 경쟁과 부실한 종교가 초래한 “육신의 중독과 영혼 없는 사회” 속에서 알코올 중독자들처럼 난파당한 사람들만이 아니라, 우리 모두가 석유와 전쟁, 제국주의, 온갖 사회적 통념, 교회의 문화에 중독되어 있고, 무엇보다 우리 자신이 남과 비교하고 판단하고 힘을 행사하려는 에고중심적이며 이분법적인 사고방식에 중독되어 있다는 지적이다. 이처럼 우리 자신이 미처 의식하지도 못한 채 물에 빠져 익사당하는 인간의 조건과 문화 속에서 저자는 우리가 어떻게 물 밑에서 숨 쉬면서 견딜 수 있는지, 어떻게 구출될 수 있는지를 가르쳐준다. 이 책은 번뇌의 근원인 거짓 자아를 깨트리고 우주의 신비와 생명의 환희 속에 뛰어들 큰 꿈을 불러일으켜 준다. 날이 갈수록 더욱 척박해지는 현실에서 어떻게 자기를 살펴서 내적인 자유를 찾고 사회변혁을 위해 스스로 평화가 될 수 있는지를 일깨운다.
===

2021/10/10

Paul Tillich - Wikipedia

Paul Tillich - Wikipedia

Paul Tillich

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Paul Tillich
Paul Tillich.jpg
Born
Paul Johannes Tillich

August 20, 1886
DiedOctober 22, 1965 (aged 79)
ChicagoIllinois, United States
NationalityGerman American
OccupationTheologian and philosopher
Notable work
  • 1951–63  Systematic Theology
  • 1952  The Courage to Be
Spouse(s)Hannah
ChildrenRené (b. 1935), Mutie (b. 1926)
Theological work
Language
  • English
  • German
Tradition or movementChristian existentialism
Main interests
Notable ideas
  • Method of correlation
  • Protestant principle
    and Catholic substance[1]
  • Ground of being[2]
  • New Being[3]
  • Kairos
  • Theonomy[4]

Paul Johannes Tillich (August 20, 1886 – October 22, 1965) was a German-American Christian existentialist philosopher and Lutheran Protestant theologian who is widely regarded as one of the most influential theologians of the twentieth century.[5] Tillich taught at a number of universities in Germany before immigrating to the United States in 1933, where he taught at Union Theological SeminaryHarvard Divinity School, and the University of Chicago.

Among the general public, Tillich is best known for his works The Courage to Be (1952) and Dynamics of Faith (1957), which introduced issues of theology and culture to a general readership. 


In academic theology, he is best known for his major three-volume work Systematic Theology (1951–63), in which he developed his "method of correlation", an approach that explores the symbols of Christian revelation as answers to the problems of human existence raised by contemporary existential analysis.[6][7] 

Unlike mainstream interpretations of existentialism which emphasized the priority of existence over essence, Tillich considered existentialism "possible only as an element in a larger whole, as an element in a vision of the structure of being in its created goodness, and then as a description of man's existence within that framework."[8]

Tillich's unique integration of essentialism and existentialism, as well as his sustained engagement with ontology in the Systematic Theology and other works, has attracted scholarship from a variety of influential thinkers including Karl BarthReinhold NiebuhrH. Richard NiebuhrGeorge LindbeckErich PrzywaraLangdon GilkeyJames Luther AdamsAvery Cardinal DullesDietrich BonhoefferSallie McFagueRichard John NeuhausDavid NovakJohn D. CaputoThomas MertonRobert W. Jenson, Thomas F. O'Meara, and Martin Luther King Jr. 

According to H. Richard Niebuhr, "[t]he reading of Systematic Theology can be a great voyage of discovery into a rich and deep, and inclusive and yet elaborated, vision and understanding of human life in the presence of the mystery of God."[9] John Herman Randall Jr. lauded the Systematic Theology as "beyond doubt the richest, most suggestive, and most challenging philosophical theology our day has produced."[10]

In addition to Tillich's work in theology, he also authored many works in ethics, the philosophy of history, and comparative religion. Tillich's work continues to be studied and discussed around the world, and the North American Paul Tillich Society, Deutsche Paul-Tillich-Gesellschaft, and l'Association Paul Tillich d'expression française regularly host international conferences and seminars on his thought and its possibilities.

Biography[edit]

Tillich was born on August 20, 1886, in the small village of Starzeddel (Starosiedle), Province of Brandenburg, which was then part of Germany. He was the oldest of three children, with two sisters: Johanna (born 1888, died 1920) and Elisabeth (born 1893). Tillich's Prussian father Johannes Tillich was a conservative Lutheran pastor of the Evangelical State Church of Prussia's older Provinces; his mother Mathilde Dürselen was from the Rhineland and more liberal.

When Tillich was four, his father became superintendent of a diocese in Bad Schönfliess (now Trzcińsko-Zdrój, Poland), a town of three thousand, where Tillich began primary school (Elementarschule). In 1898, Tillich was sent to Königsberg in der Neumark (now Chojna, Poland) to begin his gymnasium schooling. He was billeted in a boarding house and experienced a loneliness that he sought to overcome by reading the Bible while encountering humanistic ideas at school.[7]

In 1900, Tillich's father was transferred to Berlin, resulting in Tillich's switching in 1901 to a Berlin school, from which he graduated in 1904. Before his graduation, however, his mother died of cancer in September 1903, when Tillich was 17. Tillich attended several universities — the University of Berlin beginning in 1904, the University of Tübingen in 1905, and the University of Halle-Wittenberg from 1905 to 1907. He received his Doctor of Philosophy degree at the University of Breslau in 1911 and his Licentiate of Theology degree at Halle-Wittenberg in 1912.[7] His PhD dissertation at Breslau was The Conception of the History of Religion in Schelling's Positive Philosophy: Its Presuppositions and Principles.[11]

During his time at university, he became a member of the Wingolf Christian fraternity in Berlin, Tübingen and Halle.[12]

That same year, 1912, Tillich was ordained as a Lutheran minister in the Province of Brandenburg. On 28 September 1914 he married Margarethe ("Grethi") Wever (1888–1968), and in October he joined the Imperial German Army as a chaplain during World War I. Grethi deserted Tillich in 1919 after an affair that produced a child not fathered by Tillich; the two then divorced.[13] During the war, Tillich served as a chaplain in the trenches, burying his closest friend and numerous soldiers in the mud of France. He was hospitalized three times for combat trauma, and was awarded the Iron Cross for bravery under fire. He came home from the war shattered.[14] Tillich's academic career began after the war; he became a Privatdozent of Theology at the University of Berlin, a post he held from 1919 to 1924. On his return from the war he had met Hannah Werner-Gottschow, then married and pregnant.[15] In March 1924 they married; it was the second marriage for both. She later wrote a book entitled From Time to Time about their life together, which included their commitment to open marriage, upsetting to some; despite this, they remained together into old age.[16]

From 1924 to 1925, Tillich served as a Professor of Theology at the University of Marburg, where he began to develop his systematic theology, teaching a course on it during the last of his three terms. While at Marburg, Tillich met and developed a relationship with Martin Heidegger.[17] From 1925 until 1929, Tillich was a Professor of Theology at the Dresden University of Technology and the University of Leipzig. He held the same post at the University of Frankfurt from 1929 to 1933. Paul Tillich was in conversation with Erich Przywara.[18]

While at the University of Frankfurt, Tillich traveled throughout Germany giving public lectures and speeches that brought him into conflict with the Nazi movement. When Adolf Hitler became German Chancellor in 1933, Tillich was dismissed from his position. Reinhold Niebuhr visited Germany in the summer of 1933 and, already impressed with Tillich's writings, contacted Tillich upon learning of his dismissal. Niebuhr urged Tillich to join the faculty at New York City's Union Theological Seminary; Tillich accepted.[19][20]

At the age of 47, Tillich moved with his family to the United States. This meant learning English, the language in which he would eventually publish works such as the Systematic Theology. From 1933 until 1955 he taught at Union Theological Seminary in New York, where he began as a Visiting Professor of Philosophy of Religion. During 1933–34 he was also a Visiting Lecturer in Philosophy at Columbia University.[7]

The Fellowship of Socialist Christians was organized in the early 1930s by Reinhold Niebuhr and others with similar views. Later it changed its name to Frontier Fellowship and then to Christian Action. The main supporters of the Fellowship in the early days included Tillich, Eduard HeimannSherwood Eddy and Rose Terlin. In its early days the group thought capitalist individualism was incompatible with Christian ethics. Although not Communist, the group acknowledged Karl Marx's social philosophy.[21]

Tillich's gravestone in Paul Tillich Park, New Harmony, Indiana

Tillich acquired tenure at the Union Theological Seminary in 1937, and in 1940 he was promoted to Professor of Philosophical Theology and became an American citizen.[7] At Union, Tillich earned his reputation, publishing a series of books that outlined his particular synthesis of Protestant Christian theology and existential philosophy. He published On the Boundary in 1936; The Protestant Era, a collection of his essays, in 1948; and The Shaking of the Foundations, the first of three volumes of his sermons, also in 1948. His collections of sermons gave him a broader audience than he had yet experienced.

Tillich's most heralded achievements, though, were the 1951 publication of volume one of the Systematic Theology (University of Chicago Press), and the 1952 publication of The Courage to Be (Yale University Press).[22] The first volume of the systematic theology examines the inner tensions in the structure of reason and being, primarily through a study in ontology. These tensions, Tillich contends, show that the quest for revelation is implied in finite reason, and that the quest for the ground of being is implied in finite being. The publication of Systematic Theology, Vol. 1 brought Tillich international academic acclaim, prompting an invitation to give the prestigious Gifford Lectures in 1953–54 at the University of AberdeenThe Courage to Be, which examines ontic, moral, and spiritual anxieties across history and in modernity, was based on Tillich's 1950 Dwight H. Terry Lectureship and reached a wide general readership.[7]

These works led to an appointment at Harvard Divinity School in 1955, where he was University Professor,[23] among the five highest ranking professors at Harvard. He was primarily a professor of undergraduates, because Harvard did not have a department of religion for them, but was thereby more exposed to the wider university and "most fully embodied the ideal of a University Professor."[24] In 1959, Tillich was featured on the cover of Time magazine.[25]

In 1961, Tillich became one of the founding members of the Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture, an organization with which he maintained ties for the remainder of his life.[26] During this period, he published volume two of the Systematic Theology, as well as the popular book Dynamics of Faith, both in 1957. Tillich's career at Harvard lasted until 1962, when he was appointed John Nuveen Professor of Theology at the University of Chicago. He remained at Chicago until his death in 1965.

Volume three of Tillich's Systematic Theology was published in 1963. In 1964, Tillich became the first theologian to be honored in Kegley and Bretall's Library of Living Theology: "The adjective 'great,' in our opinion, can be applied to very few thinkers of our time, but Tillich, we are far from alone in believing, stands unquestionably amongst these few."[27] A widely quoted critical assessment of his importance was Georgia Harkness' comment: "What Whitehead was to American philosophy, Tillich has been to American theology."[28][29]

Tillich died on October 22, 1965, ten days after having a heart attack. In 1966, his ashes were interred in the Paul Tillich Park in New HarmonyIndiana. His gravestone inscription reads: "And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit for his season, his leaf also shall not wither. And whatsoever he doeth shall prosper." (Psalm 1:3)

Philosophy and theology[edit]

Being[edit]

Tillich used the concept of being (Sein) throughout his philosophical and theological work. Some of his work engaged with the fundamental ontology of Martin Heidegger.[30]

For "being" remains the content, the mystery, and the eternal aporia of thinking. No theology can suppress the notion of being as the power of being. One cannot separate them. In the moment in which one says that God is or that he has being, the question arises as to how his relation to being is understood. The only possible answer seems to be that God is being-itself, in the sense of the power of being or the power to conquer nonbeing.

— Tillich[31]

Tillich's preliminary analysis of being ascends from the human subject's asking of the ontological question ("What is being itself?"), upwards to the highest categories of metaphysics.[32] He distinguishes among four levels of ontological analysis: self-world;[33] dynamics and form, freedom and destiny, and individualization and participation;[34] essential being and existential being;[35] and timespacecausality, and substance.[36]

Being plays a key role throughout Tillich's Systematic Theology. In the opening to the second volume, Tillich writes:

When a doctrine of God is initiated by defining God as being-itself, the philosophical concept of being is introduced into systematic theology ... It appears in the present system in three places: in the doctrine of God, where God is called the being as being or the ground and the power of being; in the doctrine of man, where the distinction is carried through between man's essential and his existential being; and finally, in the doctrine of the Christ, where he is called the manifestation of the New Being, the actualization of which is the work of the divine Spirit.

— Tillich[37]

God as the ground of being[edit]

Bust of Tillich by James Rosati in New Harmony, Indiana

Throughout most of his work Tillich provides an ontological view of God as being-itself, the ground of being, and the power of being, one in which God is beyond essence and existence.[38] He was critical of conceptions of God as a being (e.g., the highest being), as well as of pantheistic conceptions of God as universal essence. Traditional medieval philosophical theology in the work of figures such as St. AnselmDuns Scotus, and William of Ockham tended to understand God as the highest existing being[citation needed], to which predicates such as omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence, goodness, righteousness, holiness, etc. may be ascribed. Arguments for and against the existence of God presuppose such an understanding of God. Tillich is critical of this mode of discourse, which he refers to as "theological theism," and argues that if God is a being, even if the highest being, God cannot be properly called the source of all being. With respect to both God's existence and essence, moreover, Tillich shows how difficulties beset Thomas Aquinas' attempt to "maintain the truth that God is beyond essence and existence while simultaneously arguing for the existence of God."[39]

Though Tillich is critical of propositional arguments for the existence of God as found in natural theology, as he considers them objectifying of God, he nonetheless affirms the reality of God as the ground of being. A similar line of thought is found in the work of Eric Voegelin.[40] Tillich's concept of God can be drawn out from his analysis of being. In Tillich's analysis of being, all of being experiences the threat of nonbeing. Yet, following Heidegger, Tillich claims that it is human beings alone who can raise the question of being and therefore of being-itself.[41] This is because, he contends, human beings' "infinite self-transcendence is an expression of [their] belonging to that which is beyond nonbeing, namely, to being-itself ... Being-itself manifests itself to finite being in the infinite drive of the finite beyond itself."[42]

Tillich addresses questions both ontological and personalist concerning God. One issue deals with whether and in what way personal language about the nature of God and humanity's relationship to God is appropriate. In distinction to "theological theism", Tillich refers to another kind of theism as that of the "divine-human encounter". Such is the theism of the encounter with the "Wholly Other" ("Das ganz Andere"), as in the work of Karl Barth and Rudolf Otto. It implies a personalism with regard to God's self-revelation. Tillich is quite clear that this is both appropriate and necessary, as it is the basis of the personalism of biblical religion altogether and of the concept of the "Word of God",[43] but can become falsified if the theologian tries to turn such encounters with God as the Wholly Other into an understanding of God as a being.[44] In other words, God is both personal and transpersonal.[45]

Tillich's ontological view of God has precedent in Christian theology. In addition to affinities with the concept of God as being-itself in classical theism, it shares similarities with Hellenistic and Patristic conceptions of God as the "unoriginate source" (agennetos) of all being.[46] This view was espoused in particular by Origen, one of a number of early theologians whose thought influenced Tillich's. Their views in turn had pre-Christian precedents in middle Platonism. Aside from classical and Christian influences in Tillich's concept of God, there is a dynamism in Tillich's notion of "the living God," reflecting some influence from Spinoza.[47]

Tillich combines his ontological conception of God with a largely existential and phenomenological understanding of faith in God, remarking that God is "the answer to the question implied in man's finitude ... the name for that which concerns man ultimately."[48] This is notably manifest in his understanding of faith as ultimate concern. Following his existential analysis, Tillich further argues that theological theism is not only logically problematic, but is unable to speak into the situation of radical doubt and despair about meaning in life. This issue, he said, was of primary concern in the modern age, as opposed to anxiety about fate, guilt, death and condemnation.[49] This is because the state of finitude entails by necessity anxiety, and that it is our finitude as human beings, our being a mixture of being and nonbeing, that is at the ultimate basis of anxiety. If God is not the ground of being, then God cannot provide an answer to the question of finitude; God would also be finite in some sense. The term "God Above God," then, means to indicate the God who appears, who is the ground of being, when the "God" of theological theism has disappeared in the anxiety of doubt.[50] While on the one hand this God goes beyond the God of theism as usually defined, it finds expression in many religious symbols of the Christian faith, particularly that of the crucified Christ. The possibility thus exists, says Tillich, that religious symbols may be recovered which would otherwise have been rendered ineffective by contemporary society.

Tillich argues that the God of theological theism is at the root of much revolt against theism and religious faith in the modern period. Tillich states, sympathetically, that the God of theological theism

deprives me of my subjectivity because he is all-powerful and all-knowing. I revolt and make him into an object, but the revolt fails and becomes desperate. God appears as the invincible tyrant, the being in contrast with whom all other beings are without freedom and subjectivity. He is equated with the recent tyrants who with the help of terror try to transform everything into a mere object, a thing among things, a cog in a machine they control. He becomes the model of everything against which Existentialism revolted. This is the God Nietzsche said had to be killed because nobody can tolerate being made into a mere object of absolute knowledge and absolute control. This is the deepest root of atheism. It is an atheism which is justified as the reaction against theological theism and its disturbing implications.[51]

Another reason Tillich criticized theological theism was because it placed God into the subject-object dichotomy. The subject-object dichotomy is the basic distinction made in epistemology. Epistemologically, God cannot be made into an object, that is, an object of the knowing subject. Tillich deals with this question under the rubric of the relationality of God. The question is "whether there are external relations between God and the creature".[52] Traditionally Christian theology has always understood the doctrine of creation to mean precisely this external relationality between God, the Creator, and the creature as separate and not identical realities. Tillich reminds us of the point, which can be found in Luther, that "there is no place to which man can withdraw from the divine thou, because it includes the ego and is nearer to the ego than the ego to itself".[52]

Tillich goes further to say that the desire to draw God into the subject–object dichotomy is an "insult" to the divine holiness.[53] Similarly, if God were made into the subject rather than the object of knowledge (The Ultimate Subject), then the rest of existing entities then become subjected to the absolute knowledge and scrutiny of God, and the human being is "reified," or made into a mere object. It would deprive the person of his or her own subjectivity and creativity. According to Tillich, theological theism has provoked the rebellions found in atheism and Existentialism, although other social factors such as the industrial revolution have also contributed to the "reification" of the human being. The modern man could no longer tolerate the idea of being an "object" completely subjected to the absolute knowledge of God. Tillich argued, as mentioned, that theological theism is "bad theology".

The God of the theological theism is a being besides others and as such a part of the whole reality. He is certainly considered its most important part, but as a part and therefore as subjected to the structure of the whole. He is supposed to be beyond the ontological elements and categories which constitute reality. But every statement subjects him to them. He is seen as a self which has a world, as an ego which relates to a thought, as a cause which is separated from its effect, as having a definite space and endless time. He is a being, not being-itself[49]

Alternatively, Tillich presents the above-mentioned ontological view of God as Being-Itself, Ground of Being, Power of Being, and occasionally as Abyss or God's "Abysmal Being". What makes Tillich's ontological view of God different from theological theism is that it transcends it by being the foundation or ultimate reality that "precedes" all beings. Just as Being for Heidegger is ontologically prior to conception, Tillich views God to be beyond being.[54] God is not a supernatural entity among other entities. Instead, God is the inexhaustible ground which empowers the existence of beings. We cannot perceive God as an object which is related to a subject because God precedes the subject–object dichotomy.[54]

Thus Tillich dismisses a literalistic Biblicism. Instead of rejecting the notion of personal God, however, Tillich sees it as a symbol that points directly to the Ground of Being.[55] Since the Ground of Being ontologically precedes reason, it cannot be comprehended since comprehension presupposes the subject–object dichotomy. Tillich disagreed with any literal philosophical and religious statements that can be made about God. Such literal statements attempt to define God and lead not only to anthropomorphism but also to a philosophical mistake that Immanuel Kant warned against, that setting limits against the transcendent inevitably leads to contradictions. Any statements about God are simply symbolic, but these symbols are sacred in the sense that they function to participate or point to the Ground of Being.

Tillich also further elaborated the thesis of the God above the God of theism in his Systematic Theology.

... (the God above the God of theism) This has been misunderstood as a dogmatic statement of a pantheistic or mystical character. First of all, it is not a dogmatic, but an apologetic, statement. It takes seriously the radical doubt experienced by many people. It gives one the courage of self-affirmation even in the extreme state of radical doubt.

— Tillich, Systematic Theology Vol. 2 , p. 12

... In such a state the God of both religious and theological language disappears. But something remains, namely, the seriousness of that doubt in which meaning within meaninglessness is affirmed. The source of this affirmation of meaning within meaninglessness, of certitude within doubt, is not the God of traditional theism but the "God above God," the power of being, which works through those who have no name for it, not even the name God.

— Tillich, Systematic Theology Vol. 2 , p. 12

... This is the answer to those who ask for a message in the nothingness of their situation and at the end of their courage to be. But such an extreme point is not a space with which one can live. The dialectics of an extreme situation are a criterion of truth but not the basis on which a whole structure of truth can be built.

— Tillich, Systematic Theology Vol. 2 , p.12

Method of correlation[edit]

The key to understanding Tillich's theology is what he calls the "method of correlation." It is an approach that correlates insights from Christian revelation with the issues raised by existential, psychological, and philosophical analyses.[6]

Tillich states in the introduction to the Systematic Theology:

Theology formulates the questions implied in human existence, and theology formulates the answers implied in divine self-manifestation under the guidance of the questions implied in human existence. This is a circle which drives man to a point where question and answer are not separated. This point, however, is not a moment in time.[56]

The Christian message provides the answers to the questions implied in human existence. These answers are contained in the revelatory events on which Christianity is based and are taken by systematic theology from the sources, through the medium, under the norm. Their content cannot be derived from questions that would come from an analysis of human existence. They are 'spoken' to human existence from beyond it, in a sense. Otherwise, they would not be answers, for the question is human existence itself.[57]

For Tillich, the existential questions of human existence are associated with the field of philosophy and, more specifically, ontology (the study of being). This is because, according to Tillich, a lifelong pursuit of philosophy reveals that the central question of every philosophical inquiry always comes back to the question of being, or what it means to be, and, consequently, what it means to be a finite human being within being.[58] To be correlated with existential questions are theological answers, themselves derived from Christian revelation. The task of the philosopher primarily involves developing the questions, whereas the task of the theologian primarily involves developing the answers to these questions. However, it should be remembered that the two tasks overlap and include one another: the theologian must be somewhat of a philosopher and vice versa, for Tillich's notion of faith as "ultimate concern" necessitates that the theological answer be correlated with, compatible with, and in response to the general ontological question which must be developed independently from the answers.[59][60] Thus, on one side of the correlation lies an ontological analysis of the human situation, whereas on the other is a presentation of the Christian message as a response to this existential dilemma. 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.[61]

In addition to the intimate relationship between philosophy and theology, another important aspect of the method of correlation is Tillich's distinction between form and content in the theological answers. While the nature of revelation determines the actual content of the theological answers, the character of the questions determines the form of these answers. This is because, for Tillich, theology must be an answering theology, or apologetic theology. God is called the "ground of being" in part because God is the answer to the ontological threat of non-being, and this characterization of the theological answer in philosophical terms means that the answer has been conditioned (insofar as its form is considered) by the question. [57] Throughout the Systematic Theology, Tillich is careful to maintain this distinction between form and content without allowing one to be inadvertently conditioned by the other. Many criticisms of Tillich's methodology revolve around this issue of whether the integrity of the Christian message is really maintained when its form is conditioned by philosophy.[62]

The theological answer is also determined by the sources of theology, our experience, and the norm of theology. Though the form of the theological answers are determined by the character of the question, these answers (which "are contained in the revelatory events on which Christianity is based") are also "taken by systematic theology from the sources, through the medium, under the norm."[57] There are three main sources of systematic theology: the Bible, Church history, and the history of religion and culture. Experience is not a source but a medium through which the sources speak. And the norm of theology is that by which both sources and experience are judged with regard to the content of the Christian faith.[63] Thus, we have the following as elements of the method and structure of systematic theology:

  • Sources of theology[64]
    • Bible[65]
    • Church history
    • History of religion and culture
  • Medium of the sources
    • Collective experience of the Church
  • Norm of theology (determines use of sources)
    • Content of which is the biblical message itself, for example:
      • Justification through faith
      • New Being in Jesus as the Christ
      • The Protestant principle
      • The criterion of the cross

As McKelway explains, the sources of theology contribute to the formation of the norm, which then becomes the criterion through which the sources and experience are judged.[66] The relationship is circular, as it is the present situation which conditions the norm in the interaction between church and biblical message. The norm is then subject to change, but Tillich insists that its basic content remains the same: that of the biblical message.[67] It is tempting to conflate revelation with the norm, but we must keep in mind that revelation (whether original or dependent) is not an element of the structure of systematic theology per se, but an event.[68] For Tillich, the present-day norm is the "New Being in Jesus as the Christ as our Ultimate Concern".[69] This is because the present question is one of estrangement, and the overcoming of this estrangement is what Tillich calls the "New Being". But since Christianity answers the question of estrangement with "Jesus as the Christ", the norm tells us that we find the New Being in Jesus as the Christ.

There is also the question of the validity of the method of correlation. Certainly one could reject the method on the grounds that there is no a priori reason for its adoption. But Tillich claims that the method of any theology and its system are interdependent. That is, an absolute methodological approach cannot be adopted because the method is continually being determined by the system and the objects of theology.[70]

Life and the Spirit[edit]

This is part four of Tillich's Systematic Theology. In this part, Tillich talks about life and the divine Spirit.

Life remains ambiguous as long as there is life. The question implied in the ambiguities of life derives to a new question, namely, that of the direction in which life moves. This is the question of history. Systematically speaking, history, characterized as it is by its direction toward the future, is the dynamic quality of life. Therefore, the "riddle of history" is a part of the problem of life.[71]

Absolute faith[edit]

Tillich stated the courage to take meaninglessness into oneself presupposes a relation to the ground of being: absolute faith.[72] Absolute faith can transcend the theistic idea of God, and has three elements.

... The first element is the experience of the power of being which is present even in the face of the most radical manifestation of non being. If one says that in this experience vitality resists despair, one must add that vitality in man is proportional to intentionality.

The vitality that can stand the abyss of meaninglessness is aware of a hidden meaning within the destruction of meaning.

— Tillich, The Courage to Be, p.177

The second element in absolute faith is the dependence of the experience of nonbeing on the experience of being and the dependence of the experience of meaninglessness on the experience of meaning. Even in the state of despair one has enough being to make despair possible.

— Tillich, The Courage to Be, p.177

There is a third element in absolute faith, the acceptance of being accepted. Of course, in the state of despair there is nobody and nothing that accepts. But there is the power of acceptance itself which is experienced. Meaninglessness, as long as it is experienced, includes an experience of the "power of acceptance". To accept this power of acceptance consciously is the religious answer of absolute faith, of a faith which has been deprived by doubt of any concrete content, which nevertheless is faith and the source of the most paradoxical manifestation of the courage to be.

— Tillich, The Courage to Be, p.177

Faith as ultimate concern[edit]

According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Tillich believes the essence of religious attitudes is what he calls "ultimate concern". Separate from all profane and ordinary realities, the object of the concern is understood as sacred, numinous or holy. The perception of its reality is felt as so overwhelming and valuable that all else seems insignificant, and for this reason requires total surrender.[73] In 1957, Tillich defined his conception of faith more explicitly in his work, Dynamics of Faith.

Man, like every living being, is concerned about many things, above all about those which condition his very existence ... If [a situation or concern] claims ultimacy it demands the total surrender of him who accepts this claim ... it demands that all other concerns ... be sacrificed.[74]

Tillich further refined his conception of faith by stating that, "Faith as ultimate concern is an act of the total personality. It is the most centered act of the human mind ... it participates in the dynamics of personal life."[75]

An arguably central component of Tillich's concept of faith is his notion that faith is "ecstatic". That is to say:

It transcends both the drives of the nonrational unconsciousness and the structures of the rational conscious ... the ecstatic character of faith does not exclude its rational character although it is not identical with it, and it includes nonrational strivings without being identical with them. 'Ecstasy' means 'standing outside of oneself' – without ceasing to be oneself – with all the elements which are united in the personal center.[76]

In short, for Tillich, faith does not stand opposed to rational or nonrational elements (reason and emotion respectively), as some philosophers would maintain. Rather, it transcends them in an ecstatic passion for the ultimate.[77]

It should also be noted that Tillich does not exclude atheists in his exposition of faith. Everyone has an ultimate concern, and this concern can be in an act of faith, "even if the act of faith includes the denial of God. Where there is ultimate concern, God can be denied only in the name of God"[78]

Tillich's ontology of courage[edit]

In Paul Tillich's work The Courage to Be he defines courage as the self-affirmation of one's being in spite of a threat of nonbeing. He relates courage to anxiety, anxiety being the threat of non-being and the courage to be what we use to combat that threat. For Tillich, he outlines three types of anxiety and thus three ways to display the courage to be.

1) The Anxiety of Fate and Death a. The Anxiety of Fate and Death is the most basic and universal form of anxiety for Tillich. It relates quite simply to the recognition of our mortality. This troubles us humans. We become anxious when we are unsure whether our actions create a causal damnation which leads to a very real and quite unavoidable death (42-44). "Nonbeing threatens man's ontic self-affirmation, relatively in terms of fate, absolutely in terms of death" (41). b. We display courage when we cease to rely on others to tell us what will come of us, (what will happen when we die etc.) and begin seeking those answers out for ourselves. Called the "courage of confidence" (162-63).

2) The Anxiety of Guilt and Condemnation a. This anxiety afflicts our moral self-affirmation. We as humans are responsible for our moral being, and when asked by our judge (whomever that may be) what we have made of ourselves we must answer. The anxiety is produced when we realize our being is unsatisfactory. "It [Nonbeing] threatens man's moral self-affirmation, relatively in terms of guilt, absolutely in terms of condemnation" (41). b. We display courage when we first identify our sin; despair or whatever is causing us guilt or afflicting condemnation. We then rely on the idea that we are accepted regardless. "The courage to be is the courage to accept oneself as accepted in spite of being unacceptable" (164).

3) The Anxiety of Meaninglessness and Emptiness a. The Anxiety of Meaninglessness and Emptiness attacks our being as a whole. We worry about the loss of an ultimate concern or goal. This anxiety is also brought on by a loss of spirituality. We as beings feel the threat of non-being when we feel we have no place or purpose in the world. "It [Nonbeing] threatens man's spiritual self-affirmation, relatively in terms of emptiness, absolutely in terms of meaninglessness" (41). b. We display the courage to be when facing this anxiety by displaying true faith, and by again, self-affirming oneself. We draw from the "power of being" which is God for Tillich and use that faith to in turn affirm ourselves and negate the non-being. We can find our meaning and purpose through the "power of being" (172-73).

Tillich writes that the ultimate source of the courage to be is the "God above God," which transcends the theistic idea of God and is the content of absolute faith (defined as "the accepting of the acceptance without somebody or something that accepts") (185).

Popular works[edit]

Two of Tillich's works, The Courage to Be (1952) and Dynamics of Faith (1957), were read widely, including by people who would not normally read religious books. In The Courage to Be, he lists three basic anxieties: anxiety about our biological finitude, i.e. that arising from the knowledge that we will eventually die; anxiety about our moral finitude, linked to guilt; and anxiety about our existential finitude, a sense of aimlessness in life. Tillich related these to three different historical eras: the early centuries of the Christian era; the Reformation; and the 20th century. Tillich's popular works have influenced psychology as well as theology, having had an influence on Rollo May, whose "The Courage to Create" was inspired by "The Courage to Be".

Reception[edit]

Today, Tillich's most observable legacy may well be that of a spiritually-oriented public intellectual and teacher with a broad and continuing range of influence. Tillich's chapel sermons (especially at Union) were enthusiastically received[79] (Tillich was known as the only faculty member of his day at Union willing to attend the revivals of Billy Graham).[80] Tillich's students have commented on Tillich's approachability as a lecturer and his need for interaction with his audience.[81] When Tillich was University Professor at Harvard, he was chosen as keynote speaker from among an auspicious gathering of many who had appeared on the cover of Time Magazine during its first four decades. Tillich along with his student, psychologist Rollo May, was an early leader at the Esalen Institute.[82] Contemporary New Age catchphrases describing God (spatially) as the "Ground of Being" and (temporally) as the "Eternal Now,"[83] in tandem with the view that God is not an entity among entities but rather is "Being-Itself"—notions which Eckhart Tolle, for example, has invoked repeatedly throughout his career[84]—were paradigmatically renovated by Tillich, although of course these ideas derive from Christian mystical sources as well as from ancient and medieval theologians such as St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas.[85][86]

The introductory philosophy course taught by the person Tillich considered to be his best student, John Edwin Smith, "probably turned more undergraduates to the study of philosophy at Yale than all the other philosophy courses put together. His courses in philosophy of religion and American philosophy defined those fields for many years. Perhaps most important of all, he has educated a younger generation in the importance of the public life in philosophy and in how to practice philosophy publicly."[87] In the 1980s and 1990s the Boston University Institute for Philosophy and Religion, a leading forum dedicated to the revival of the American public tradition of philosophy and religion, flourished under the leadership of Tillich's student and expositor Leroy S. Rouner. A consideration of Tillich's own traumatic experiences as an active duty chaplain during World War I have recently led some to view his theology as "Post-traumatic." The book Post-Traumatic God: How the Church Cares for People Who Have Been to Hell and Back explores Tillich's experiences and theology in order to offer people afflicted with post-traumatic stress an understanding of God aimed at helping them heal.[88]

Criticism[edit]

Martin Buber's disciple Malcolm Diamond claims Tillich's approach indicates a "transtheistic position that Buber seeks to avoid", reducing God to the impersonal "necessary being" of Thomas Aquinas.[89]

Tillich has been criticized from the Barthian wing of Protestantism for what is alleged to be correlation theory's tendency to reduce God and his relationship to man to anthropocentric terms. Tillich counters that Barth's approach to theology denies the "possibility of understanding God's relation to man in any other way than heteronomously or extrinsically".[90] Defenders of Tillich claim that critics misunderstand the distinction Tillich makes between God's essence as the unconditional ("das unbedingte") "Ground of Being" which is unknowable, and how God reveals himself to mankind in existence.[91] Tillich establishes the distinction in the first chapter of his Systematic Theology Volume One: "But though God in his abysmal nature [footnote: 'Calvin: in his essence' ] is in no way dependent on man, God in his self manifestation to man is dependent on the way man receives his manifestation."[56]

Some conservative strains of Evangelical Christianity believe Tillich's thought is too unorthodox to qualify as Christianity at all, but rather as a form of pantheism or atheism.[92] The Evangelical Dictionary of Theology states, "At best Tillich was a pantheist, but his thought borders on atheism."[93] Defenders of Tillich counter such claims by pointing to clear monotheistic articulations, from a classical Christian viewpoint, of the relationship between God and man, such as his description of the experience of grace in his sermon "You Are Accepted".[94]

Works[edit]

A set of Paul Tillich's Main Works – Hauptwerke.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Paul Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 3, University of Chicago Press, 1963, p. 245
  2. ^ Paul Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, University of Chicago Press, 1951, p. 235
  3. ^ Paul Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 2, University of Chicago Press, 1957, p. 92, 120
  4. ^ "Autonomy and heteronomy are rooted in theonomy, and each goes astray when their theonomous unity is broken. Theonomy does not mean the acceptance of a divine law imposed on reason by a highest authority; it means autonomous reason united with its own depth. In a theonomous situation reason actualizes itself in obedience to its structural laws and in the power of its own inexhaustible ground." Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 85
  5. ^ Peters, Ted (1995), Braaten, Carl E (ed.), A map of twentieth-century theology: readings from Karl Barth to radical pluralism (review), Fortress Press, backjacket, ISBN 9781451404814, retrieved 2011-01-01The current generation of students has heard only the names of Barth, Brunner, Bultmann, Bonhoeffer, Tillich, and the Niebuhrs.
  6. Jump up to:a b Bowker, John, ed. (2000), "Tillich, Paul Johannes Oskar", The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions, Oxford Reference Online, Oxford University Press.
  7. Jump up to:a b c d e f "Tillich, Paul", Encyclopædia Britannica (online ed.), 2008, retrieved 17 February 2008.
  8. ^ Tillich, My Search for Absolutes, 245
  9. ^ H. Richard Niebuhr, Union Seminary Quarterly Review, review included on back cover of Systematic Theology, Vol. 3
  10. ^ John H. Randall Jr., Union Seminary Quarterly Review, review included on back cover of Systematic Theology, Vol. 1
  11. ^ "Paul Tillich Resources"people.bu.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
  12. ^ Gesamtverzeichnis des Wingolf, Lichtenberg, 1991.
  13. ^ Pauck et al.
  14. ^ Pauck
  15. ^ "Paul Tillich, Lover"Time, October 8, 1973, archived from the original on March 30, 2008.
  16. ^ Wolfgang Saxon (October 30, 1988), "Hannah Tillich, 92, Christian Theologian's Widow", New York Times
  17. ^ Woodson, Hue (2018), Heideggerian Theologies: The Pathmarks of John Macquarrie, Rudolf Bultmann, Paul Tillich, and Karl Rahner, Eugene: Wipf and Stock, pp. 94–107, ISBN 978-1-53264775-8
  18. ^ O'Meara, Thomas (2006), "Paul Tillich and Erich Przywara at Davos", Gregorianum87: 227–38.
  19. ^ Pauck, Wilhelm & Marion 1976.
  20. ^ Tillich 1964, p. 16.
  21. ^ Stone, Ronald H. (1992-01-01), Professor Reinhold Niebuhr: A Mentor to the Twentieth Century, Westminster John Knox Press, p. 115, ISBN 978-0-664-25390-5, retrieved 2016-03-14
  22. ^ Pauck, Wilhelm & Marion 1976, p. 225.
  23. ^ "University Professorships." About the Faculty. Harvard University
  24. ^ Williams, George Hunston, Divinings: Religion At Harvard2, pp. 424 f
  25. ^ "TIME Magazine Cover: Paul Tillich - Mar. 16, 1959".
  26. ^ Meyer, Betty H. (2003). The ARC story: a narrative account of the Society for the Arts, Religion, and Contemporary Culture. New York: Association for Religion and Intellectual Life. ISBN 978-0-97470130-1.
  27. ^ Kegley & Bretall 1964, pp. ix–x.
  28. ^ "Dr. Paul Tillich, Outstanding Protestant Theologian", The Times, 25 Oct 1965
  29. ^ Thomas, John Heywood (2002), Tillich, Continuum, ISBN 0-8264-5082-2.
  30. ^ The development of Tillich's intellectual profile happened in a context in which the fundamental ontology of Martin Heidegger was also taking shape. The relation of Tillich's understanding of being to Heidegger's reflection on the question of being (Seinsfrage) in Sein und Zeit (Being and Time) has received little scholarly attention. A recent account has been published in Nader El-Bizri, 'Ontological Meditations on Tillich and Heidegger', Iris: Annales de Philosophie Volume 36 (2015), pp. 109-114 (a peer-reviewed journal published by the Faculté des lettres et des sciences humaines, Université Saint-Joseph, Beirut)
  31. ^ Tillich 1957, p. 11. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFTillich1957 (help)
  32. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 163
  33. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 164
  34. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 164-186
  35. ^ Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 165
  36. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 165
  37. ^ Tillich 1957, p. 10. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFTillich1957 (help)
  38. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, pp. 235–6
  39. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 236
  40. ^ Voegelin, Eric, Conversations with Eric Voegelin, p. 51
  41. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, pp. 168, 189
  42. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 191
  43. ^ Biblical Religion and the Search for Ultimate Reality, University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 1955, 21-62.
  44. ^ The Courage to Be, Yale: New Haven, 2000, 184.
  45. ^ The Courage to Be, Yale: New Haven, 2000, 187.
  46. ^ J. N. D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, HarperCollins: New York, 1978, 128.
  47. ^ Lamm, Julia, "'Catholic Substance' Revisited: Reversals of Expectation in Tillich's Doctrine of God", in Raymond F. Bulman; Frederick J. Parrella (eds.), Paul Tillich: A New Catholic Assessment, p. 54
  48. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 1, p. 211
  49. Jump up to:a b Tillich, Courage To Be, p 184.
  50. ^ The Courage to Be, Yale: New Haven, 2000, 190.
  51. ^ Tillich, Courage To Be, p 185.
  52. Jump up to:a b Tillich, Systematic Theology vol. 1, p. 271
  53. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology vol. 1, p. 272
  54. Jump up to:a b Tillich, Theology of Culture, p 15.
  55. ^ Tillich, Theology of Culture, p 127-132.
  56. Jump up to:a b Tillich 1951, p. 61.
  57. Jump up to:a b c Tillich 1951, p. 64.
  58. ^ Tillich 1955, pp. 11–20.
  59. ^ Tillich 1957, p. 23. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFTillich1957 (help)
  60. ^ Tillich 1952, pp. 58ff.
  61. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 28.
  62. ^ McKelway 1964, p. 47.
  63. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 47.
  64. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 40.
  65. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 35.
  66. ^ McKelway 1964, pp. 55–56.
  67. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 52.
  68. ^ McKelway 1964, p. 80.
  69. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 50.
  70. ^ Tillich 1951, p. 60.
  71. ^ Tillich, Systematic Theology, Vol. 2, p. 4
  72. ^ The Courage to Be, page 182
  73. ^ Wainwright, William (2010-09-29), "Concepts of God"Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyStanford University, retrieved 2011-01-01
  74. ^ Tillich, Dynamics of Faith, pp. 1–2
  75. ^ Tillich, Dynamics of Faith, p. 5
  76. ^ Tillich, Dynamics of Faith, pp. 8–9
  77. ^ Tillich Interview part 12 on YouTube
  78. ^ Tillich, Dynamics of Faith, p. 52
  79. ^ Grenz, Stanley J. and Roger E. Olson (1993). 20th-Century Theology: God & the World in a Transitional Age. Downers Grove IL: InterVarsity Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0830815258.
  80. ^ According to Leroy Rouner, in conversation, 1981.
  81. ^ Bunge, Nancy. "From Hume to Tillich: Teaching Faith & Benevolence"Philosophy Now. Philosophy Now. Retrieved 30 December 2012As a former student, I can attest that he invited students to leave questions on the podium and he would invariably open the lecture by responding to them, often in a way that startled the student by revealing what a profound question he or she had asked.
  82. ^ Anderson, Walter Truett (2004). The Upstart Spring: Esalen and the Human Potential Movement: The First Twenty Years. Lincoln NE: iUniverse. p. 104. ISBN 978-0595307357.
  83. ^ "There is no present in the mere stream of time; but the present is real, as our experience witnesses. And it is real because eternity breaks into time and gives it a real present. We could not even say now, if eternity did not elevate that moment above the ever-passing time. Eternity is always present; and its presence is the cause of our having the present at all. When the psalmist looks at God, for Whom a thousand years are like one day, he is looking at that eternity which alone gives him a place on which he can stand, a now which has infinite reality and infinite significance. In every moment that we say now, something temporal and something eternal are united. Whenever a human being says, 'Now I am living; now I am really present,' resisting the stream which drives the future into the past, eternity is. In each such Now eternity is made manifest; in every real now, eternity is present." (Tillich, "The Mystery of Time," in The Shaking of the Foundations).
  84. ^ In his September 2010 Live Meditation (https://www.eckharttolletv.com/), e.g., Tolle expounds at length on "the dimension of depth".
  85. ^ Cary, Phillip (2012). "Augustinian Compatibilism and the Doctrine of Election", in Augustine and Philosophy, ed. by Phillip Cary, John Doody and Kim Paffenroth. Lanham MD: Lexington Books. p. 91. ISBN 978-0739145388.
  86. ^ Both Augustine and later Boethius used the concept of the "eternal now" to investigate the relationship between divine omnipotence and omniscience and the temporality of human free will; and Thomas Aquinas' synthesis of Platonic and Aristotelian ontologies with Christian theology included the concepts of God as the "ground of being" and "being-itself" (ipsum esse).
  87. ^ The Chronicle of Higher Education (Jan. 24, 2010)
  88. ^ Peters, David Post-Traumatic God: How the Church Cares for People Who Have Been to Hell and Back, Church Publishing. https://www.churchpublishing.org/posttraumaticgod
  89. ^ Novak, David (Spring 1992), "Buber and Tillich"Journal of Ecumenical Studies29 (2): 159–74, ISBN 9780802828422, as reprinted in Novak, David (2005), Talking With Christians: Musings of A Jewish Theologian, Wm. B. Eerdmans, p. 101.
  90. ^ Dourley, John P. (1975), Paul Tillich and Bonaventure: An Evaluation of Tillich's Claim to Stand in the Augustinian-Franciscan Tradition, Brill Archive, p. 12, ISBN 978-900404266-7
  91. ^ Boozer, Jack Stewart (1952), The place of reason in Paul Tillich's concept of God (dissertation), Boston University, p. 269
  92. ^ Tillich held an equally low opinion of biblical literalism. See (Tillich 1951, p. 3): 'When fundamentalism is combined with an antitheological bias, as it is, for instance, in its biblicistic-evangelical form, the theological truth of yesterday is defended as an unchangeable message against the theological truth of today and tomorrow. Fundamentalism fails to make contact with the present situation, not because it speaks from beyond every situation, but because it speaks from a situation from the past. It elevates something finite and transitory to infinite and eternal validity. In this respect fundamentalism has demonic traits.'
  93. ^ Gundry, SN (May 2001), "Death of God Theology", in Elwell, Walter A (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of TheologyISBN 978-0-8010-2075-9, retrieved 2011-01-01
  94. ^ Paul Tillich. "You Are Accepted" (PDF).

Further reading[edit]

  • Adams, James Luther. 1965. Paul Tillich's Philosophy of Culture, Science, and Religion. New York: New York University Press
  • Armbruster, Carl J. 1967. The Vision of Paul Tillich. New York: Sheed and Ward
  • Breisach, Ernst. 1962. Introduction to Modern Existentialism. New York: Grove Press
  • Bruns, Katja (2011), "Anthropologie zwischen Theologie und Naturwissenschaft bei Paul Tillich und Kurt Goldstein. Historische Grundlagen und systematische Perspektiven", Kontexte. Neue Beiträge zur historischen und systematischen Theologie (in German), Goettingen: Ruprecht, 41ISBN 978-3-7675-7143-3.
  • Bulman, Raymond F. and Frederick J. Parrella, eds. 1994. Paul Tillich: A New Catholic Assessment. Collegeville: The Liturgical Press
  • Carey, Patrick W., and Lienhard, Joseph. 2002. "Biographical Dictionary of Christian Theologians". Mass: Hendrickson
  • Chul-Ho Youn, God's Relation to the World and Human Existence in the Theologies of Paul Tillich and John B. Cobb, Jr (1990)
  • Dourley, John P. 2008. Paul Tillich, Carl Jung, and the Recovery of Religion. London: Routledge
  • Ford, Lewis S. 1966. "Tillich and Thomas: The Analogy of Being." Journal of Religion 46:2 (April)
  • Freeman, David H. 1962. Tillich. Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co.
  • Gilkey, Langdon. 1990. Gilkey on Tillich. New York: Crossroad
  • Grenz, Stanley, and Olson, Roger E. 1997. 20th Century Theology God & the World in a Transitional Age
  • Hamilton, Kenneth. 1963. The System and the Gospel: A Critique of Paul Tillich. New York: Macmillan
  • Hammond, Guyton B. 1965. Estrangement: A Comparison of the Thought of Paul Tillich and Erich Fromm. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
  • Hegel, G. W. F. 1967. The Phenomenology of Mind, trans. With intro. J. B. Baillie, Torchbook intro. by George Lichtheim. New York: Harper Torchbooks
  • Hook, Sidney, ed. 1961 Religious Experience and Truth: A Symposium (New York: New York University Press)
  • Hopper, David. 1968. Tillich: A Theological Portrait. Philadelphia: Lippincott
  • Howlett, Duncan. 1964. The Fourth American Faith. New York: Harper & Row
  • Kaufman, Walter (1961a), The Faith of a Heretic, New York: Doubleday.
  • ——— (1961b), Critique of Religion and Philosophy, Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, Doubleday.
  • Kegley, Charles W; Bretall, Robert W, eds. (1964), The Theology of Paul Tillich, New York: Macmillan.
  • Keefe, Donald J., S.J. 1971. Thomism and the Ontological Theology of Paul Tillich. Leiden: E.J. Brill
  • Kelsey, David H. 1967 The Fabric of Paul Tillich's Theology. New Haven: Yale University Press
  • Łata, Jan Adrian (1995), Odpowiadająca teologia Paula Tillicha (in Polish), Signum, Oleśnica: Oficyna Wydaw, ISBN 83-85631-38-0.
  • MacIntyre, Alasdair. 1963. "God and the Theologians," Encounter 21:3 (September)
  • Martin, Bernard. 1963. The Existentialist Theology of Paul Tillich. New Haven: College and University Press
  • Marx, Karl. n.d. Capital. Ed. Frederick Engels. trans. from 3rd German ed. by Samuel Moore and Edward Aveling. New York: The Modern Library
  • May, Rollo. 1973. Paulus: Reminiscences of a Friendship. New York: Harper & Row
  • McKelway, Alexander J (1964), The Systematic Theology of Paul Tillich: A Review and Analysis, Richmond: John Knox Press.
  • Modras, Ronald. 1976. Paul Tillich 's Theology of the Church: A Catholic Appraisal. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1976.
  • O'Meara, Thomas F., O.P. and Donald M. Weisser, O.P., eds. 1969. Paul Tillich in Catholic Thought. Garden City: Image Books
  • Palmer, Michael. 1984. Paul Tillich's Philosophy of Art. New York: Walter de Gruyter
  • Pauck; Wilhelm; Marion (1976), Paul Tillich: His Life & Thought, 1: Life, New York: Harper & Row.
  • Re Manning, Russell, ed. 2009. The Cambridge Companion to Paul Tillich. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Re Manning, Russell, ed. 2015. Retrieving the Radical Tillich. His Legacy and Contemporary Importance. New York: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Rowe, William L. 1968. Religious Symbols and God: A Philosophical Study of Tillich's Theology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  • Scharlemann, Robert P. 1969. Reflection and Doubt in the Thought of Paul Tillich. New Haven: Yale University Press
  • Schweitzer, Albert. 1961. The Quest of the Historical Jesus, trans. W. Montgomery. New York: Macmillan
  • Soper, David Wesley. 1952. Major Voices in American Theology: Six Contemporary Leaders Philadelphia: Westminster
  • Tavard, George H. 1962. Paul Tillich and the Christian Message. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons
  • Taylor, Mark Kline, ed. (1991), Paul Tillich: Theologian of the Boundaries, Minneapolis: Fortress Press, ISBN 978-1-45141386-1
  • Thomas, George F (1965), Religious Philosophies of the West, New York: Scribner's.
  • Thomas, J. Heywood (1963), Paul Tillich: An Appraisal, Philadelphia: Westminster.
  • Tillich, Hannah. 1973. From Time to Time. New York: Stein and Day
  • Vîrtop Sorin-Avram: “Integrating the symbol approach in education “ in Conference Proceedings 2, Economic, Social and Administrative Approaches to the knowledge based organisation, « Nicolae Bălcescu » Land Forces Academy Publishing House, Sibiu, Romania, 2013. ISSN 1843-6722 pp. 454–459, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/318724749_1_Virtop_Sorin-Avram_Integrating_the_symbol_approach_in_education_in_Conference_Procedings_2_Economic_Social_and_Administrative_Approaches_to_the_knowledge_based_organisation_Nicolae_Balcescu_Land_Forces
  • Tucker, Robert. 1961. Philosophy and Myth in Karl Marx. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Wheat, Leonard F. 1970. Paul Tillich's Dialectical Humanism: Unmasking the God above God. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press
  • Woodson, Hue. 2018. Heideggerian Theologies: The Pathmarks of John Macquarrie, Rudolf Bultmann, Paul Tillich, and Karl Rahner. Eugene: Wipf and Stock

External links[edit]