2022/02/03

The Eternal Now: Paul Tillich 1963 ch 10. The eternal now -- The challenge to man. Do not be conformed

The Eternal Now: Paul Tillich: Amazon.com: Books


The Eternal Now 1963
by Paul Tillich  (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars    27 ratings
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The eternal nowby Tillich, Paul, 1886-1965


Publication date 1963Topics Sermons, American, Sermons américainsPublisher New York, ScribnerCollection inlibrary; printdisabled; internetarchivebooks; americanaDigitizing sponsor Internet ArchiveContributor Internet ArchiveLanguage English

  1. The human predicament. Loneliness and solitude ; 
  2. Forgetting and being forgotten ; 
  3. The riddle of inequality ; 
  4. The good that I will, I do not ; 
  5. Heal the sick, cast out the demons ; 
  6. Man and earth -- The divine reality. Spiritual presence ; 
  7. The divine name ; 
  8. God's pursuit of man ; 
  9. Salvation ; 
  10. The eternal now -- The challenge to man. Do not be conformed ; 
  11. Be strong ; 
  12. In thinking be mature ; 
  13. On wisdom ; 
  14. In everything given thanks

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Print length
185 pages
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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Scribner (January 1, 1963)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 185 pages
Customer Reviews: 4.6 out of 5 stars    27 ratings
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 4.17  ·   Rating details ·  181 ratings  ·  23 reviews
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These sixteeen sermons, like jewels, contain in brilliant and concentrated form some of Tillich's most familiar themes. 
Discussing among other topics, wisdom, salvation, loneliness and solitude, the author gives free reign to the discreet and compassionate intelligence that everywhere is a hallmark of his thinking. 
'There is not one of these addresses that does not deserve careful scrutiny.' 
Times Literary Supplement
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Paperback, 144 pages
Published February 1st 2010 by SCM Press (first published 1956)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Tillich
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Chris
Jun 18, 2008Chris rated it it was amazing
Startling, terrifying, amazing. Tillich is to Christian theology what a small, ancient Chinese master is to judo. He takes one sentence of Scripture and flexes it, twists it, exerts pressure on its most critical angle, and slams you down on the mat with it, your head spinning and all the stars and blinding rush of pain and wind as the real evidence you've met the master. You can get up of course, dust yourself off and go at him again, but nothing will be the same. Heroic, epic, inspiring. A true master and the intellectual giant of 20th century Christian theology. (less)
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Matt
Jul 24, 2016Matt rated it really liked it
Shelves: philosophish
Forget that this book is religious in nature or was written by a theologist--it is relevant for any person regardless of your religious beliefs. I myself am not a particularly religious person and I found no issue with this book's wisdom or ideas due to its religious basis. The chapter entitled "The Riddle of Inequality" has been one of the most powerful and influential things I have ever read. 
It changed the way I view the world. I was assigned it in high school eight or so years ago, and I still find myself coming back to it every year. (less)
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Eric Harrill
Aug 05, 2010Eric Harrill rated it it was amazing
I was glad to find this at a used book sale so I could read through it fully. This is a spiritual read. Chp. 6 Man and earth is ahead of its time (written in 60's):

 "...man’s relation to the earth and the universe will, for a long time, become the point of primary concern, for sensitive and thoughtful people. Should this be the case, Christianity certainly cannot withdraw into the deceptive security of its earlier questions and answers..." 

Chp. 8 The divine name- humbling.
online - http://www.religion-online.org/showbo... (less)
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Marianna
Mar 18, 2013Marianna rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: christianity, eternal, theology
An excellent example of a honest, daring, compassionate Christian thought. No difficult question is avoided, the language is incisive, analytical and rich without being ornate. People no longer think with such brilliance nowadays...
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John
Mar 27, 2008John rated it liked it
Think that the "eternal" might not just mean "forever and ever?" This guy really means it. (less)
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Brandt
Feb 25, 2017Brandt rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Ontological Inquisitors and Metaphysical Skeptics

In The Eternal Now, Paul Tillich's intent is to answer a variety of questions that are concomitant with Ontology and Theology. It is written in a direct style that is free of the characteristic rhetorical frills of many religious works. Make no mistake Tillich is a sincerely religious man who frames his philosophical thinking in the Weltanschauung of Christianity. Nonetheless, in Tillich’s mode of existentialist manifestation, ideation of being-and Being - saturates the mundane milieu of religion.


Throughout the pages, Tillich provides an alternative ontological examination of the necessity in a belief of the Ultimate. The emblematic apologetic approach, as articulated in the works of Anselm of Canterbury, William of Ockham and Duns Scotus is destabilized by Tillich’s radical exposition that: If God is being – viz., the highest being-in-itself – then God cannot be the “Creator”. Consequently, God must be understood as the ground of Being-Itself. This analysis should not be considered all that radical. Many historical theologians expressed analogous views of God as the agennetos [non-original ground] of all Being (Cf. J. N. D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, p. 128).


What this text presents is a culmination of Tillich’s sermons [lectures] delivered to answer explicit questions relating to biblical passages. As an example, Chapter Three, "The Riddle of Inequality" – incidentally, my favorite chapter – starts with the following verse from Mark 4:25:

“For to him who has will more be given; and from him who has not, even what he has will be taken away”

What Tillich then attempts to explicate, is the historical significance of this passage apropos the expression of meaning. Through a cursory trace of self-reflection, Tillich layers the historical meaning onto modernity by exclaiming, “There are many things that we seemed to have, but that we really did not have, and that were therefore taken away from us”. As an example, Tillich uses the widespread belief in childhood innocence as something that cannot be used or increased. “The growth of our lives is made possible only by the sacrifice of the original gift of ignorance”. Hence, there are many things we had [have] that are constantly being taken away because of “taking them too much for granted”.
The real inequalities, according to Tillich, are:

“[T]he inequality of talents in body and mind; the inequality created by freedom and destiny, and the inequality of justice deriving from the fact that all generations before the time of such equality would by nature be excluded from its blessing”

Therefore, Tillich's argument is that we must not confound the imbroglio of inequality with the understanding that each person is a “unique and incomparable self". We should be defending the uniqueness and individuality of humanity, while at the same time, understand that this is not the solution to inequality. Hence, maxims like “The Golden Rule,” and Immanuel Kant’s "Categorical Imperative" have their place, but it is not to help solve the riddle of inequality.
Ultimately, I appreciate Tillich’s style of writing and his exposition of some problems inherent to humanity. Although I must admit, I would prefer to highlight a great portion of the text with a black highlighter, his thoughts are intriguing. As a path forward, I would like to research the connection between Tillich and Martin Heidegger; concentrating on the ways in which their ideas are similar, but find different inspiration and results.


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Bronx
May 23, 2019Bronx rated it really liked it
Full disclosure: Prior to reading this I would’ve boldly declared my disdain for Tillich. Having a BA in Religion, I read Tillich 15 yeas ago when my theology was much more conservative and found him mushy at best.

The Eternal Now did not change my opinion initially. Tillich is verbose and heady, his theology much more in the clouds than it is on the ground. He uses the third person and makes assumptions about the human experience that are not always accurate, nor does he justify or cite them. In essence, it seems he is projecting his experience onto the rest of us.

At some points, in spite of his headiness, he touches on some truths in a new and enlivening way. For example, in one sermon Tillich expounds on the word sin. He discusses how sin in its current understanding is a distortion from the original intent to the word. Rather than sin being something humans do, sin was originally intended as a force that drives humans. He draws on Paul’s experience when Paul wrote “I do what I don’t want to do and I don’t do what I want to do.” In the context of my experience, this insight brought hope and clarity to some theological questions I’ve been asking for the last few years.

I still do not consider myself a Paul Tillich fan; however after giving The Eternal Now an honest chance I can say it’s given me access to some serenity and wisdom I did not formerly have. (less)
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Karen Berlin
Aug 15, 2021Karen Berlin rated it liked it
Sixteen of Paul Tillich sermons cover a wide variety of topics, (the riddle of inequality, "the good that I will, I do not," salvation, loneliness, solitude, wisdom, gratitude and more) providing thought-provoking and spirit inspiring material. A thin book for heavy contemplation, the collection is likely best read one message at a time, allowing ample for reflection and pondering before moving onto the next. (less)
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Daniel Pardieck
Nov 25, 2021Daniel Pardieck rated it it was amazing
An inspirational and deep series of sermons by the great 20th century theologian, Paul Tillich. Careful and meditative reading will bring out the depth of this collection. Both Christians and non-Christians can find much of value, here.
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David
Jun 15, 2013David rated it really liked it
The great thing about reading Paul Tillich is that one can choose between two very distinct types of material. There is first the dense technical writing one can find in his Systematic Theology. In these volumes, the reader is treated to a comprehensive review of the development of existential philosophy and then is guided masterfully through how those ideas relate to the Christian faith. These volumes are challenging, and much is demanded in terms of exertion on the reader's part. Then on the other hand, there are his sermon collections such as The New Being and this book, The Eternal Now. The density and structure gives way to a much more relaxed type of reading. The change of pace is very welcome to someone who has wrestled through his systematic theology. It's nice to put the notebook away and just read...but I think most people will end up jotting down quotes. The insightful gems keep coming one after the other in this book.

Tillich behind the pulpit is considerably different from Tillich at his study desk, but that doesn't mean this is watered down material. The major tenets of his system still shine through. What I like about his style of sermon writing is that he constantly pushes for a dynamic faith which challenges boundaries. Too many times, faith is thought of as a passive quality, one that is based almost solely on trust. It certainly has that element as well, but the active phase cannot be left out. Tillich surely recognizes this potential problem, and it shows again and again in his work. His sermons focus a glaring spotlight on traditional tenets of Christianity, and he makes the reader challenge his own concepts of sin, wisdom, and faith.

Only people of a certain level of dedication will commit themselves to Tillich's systematic theology. I think most Christians and curious non-believers can enjoy his sermon collections.

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Sarah
May 22, 2011Sarah rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Paul Tillich is one of those theologians I've seen mentioned and quoted here and there by other theologians I respect, and now I know why. While I don't think they're all equally successful, this book of sermons is a wonderful picture of, well, I don't know what to call it, really. Deep Christianity? The one on "The Riddle of Inequality" was especially moving, telling me something about the Cross I'd never heard before: "It is the greatness and heart of the Christian message that God, as manifest in the Christ on the Cross, totally participates in the dying of a child, in the condemnation of the criminal, in the disintegration of a mind, in starvation and famine, and even in the human rejection of Himself. There is no human condition into which the divine presence does not penetrate" (p. 46). He speaks to Christians and non-Christians, and in no way defines what he calls "the Christian message" as the only message. He wants to go deeper than superstitions and rituals, and I respect that. I like that I could figure out that he's Protestant but nothing more about his particular denomination from this book, only that he believes that God is the eternal Ground of being from which we all spring naked, to which we all return, and in which we may rest. (less)
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Steven Bullmer
Oct 27, 2014Steven Bullmer rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: theology, sermons
These sermons won't preach now; way too much deep theology for post-moderns. But I sure appreciated them when I was in seminary!
Read this book again. Still love everything Tillich has written that I've read. His Christian existentialist approach to life speaks to my soul; and there were many times I thought of Job, the book of the Bible I'm currently reading, and how God helped Job find "the courage to be" in the face of a life of pain and absurdity.
Actually, I think these sermons could preach now; because they address tensions people still experience and mysteries of life people are still trying to solve. But they would have to be preached in the hands of a "translator" who knew how to take these eternal questions and communicate them for today. (less)
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Josh
Dec 30, 2015Josh rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
A re-read following Christmas last year. I thought a sermon a day would be a good way to close out 2020 and begin 2021. Little did I know how relevant Tillich's ideas concerning power (and its overreach), wisdom (and foolishness), and dignity (or complete lack thereof) would be. Reading these meditations on the problems faced by humankind and the way the divine seeks to lead us in the context of Trump's despicable phone call to Brad Raffensperger and the ensuing Capitol insurrection was chilling. It's almost as if Tillich looked into a crystal ball in the early 1960's and sent a message in a bottle to us. Too bad we didn't read and heed the warnings sooner. (less)
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Helene
Jul 12, 2016Helene rated it really liked it
A friend told me that this is a very accessible work by Tillich and I agree. You don't need to know much about existentialist philosophy to enjoy this book. I think the three main divisions of the book are a very helpful way to organize the chapters (sermons) on various topics. I especially liked his chapters on Solitude versus Loneliness and The Presence of God. The parts that I liked least were the ones dealing with the future, since his views were influenced by political events of the day and are less relevant today. All in all, I loved his insights and new perspectives of God and His ways. (less)
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John
Jul 03, 2012John added it  ·  review of another edition
A wonderful companion to moments of solitude and loneliness, Tillich's sermons resonate in the 21st century. Only one or two sermons in this collection were dated. The remainder take you to psychological applications of Tillich's method of correlation (philosophy poses the questions, religion provides the answers, and not always answers one would expect). (less)
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Evan Kostelka
Dec 20, 2015Evan Kostelka rated it liked it
Shelves: 2015
I had heard a lot of good things about Tillich and he had good things to say but for me I had a tough time following his points. ultimately I felt he left things too esoteric for me. Words cannot come close to describing the Ground of our Being as he calls it yet other theologians speak to me more than Tillich.
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Charles Bell
Aug 08, 2009Charles Bell rated it really liked it
A series of lectures and sermons. Great thoughts.
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Donovick
Aug 19, 2012Donovick rated it it was amazing
Import, especially during times of introspection.
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Michael Chrobak
Sep 03, 2014Michael Chrobak rated it it was amazing
I absolutely loved this book and am looking forward to reading more of his work.
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Rick
Jan 25, 2017Rick added it
Reading Tillich is like scrubbing your mind and letting it absorb more light. I was fascinated with the 'eternal now' and 'stronger' discussions. It touched my intellect and my.heart. (less)
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Kent Raymond
Nov 19, 2017Kent Raymond rated it it was amazing
Very profound. In spite of being written in the 50's most is very relevant and timeless.

They are a collection of sermons so you get a complete thought in reading one chapter. The Eternal Now is both the title and one of the chapters. The other chapters are not connected in an overarching theme but stand alone.

You need to be reflective and philosophical to get the most from this book. I often read a page or two as part of my personal devotions, then going to the scripture or scriptures highlighted in the chapter for further consideration. This is why it took me 3 weeks to read.

I suspect I will re-read chapters again in the future. (less)


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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
Ross James Browne
5.0 out of 5 stars A very important but readable book from Paul Tillich
Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2010
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This is another excellent volume of live sermons from Tillich. Easier than Systematic Theology, this book is recommended for seminarians and theologians wishing to prepare to read Systematic Theology. Very important in its own right for Tillich;s distinctive style of blending ontology, theology, and even the psychology of the unconscious. Very enlightening on the subject of Spirit, Christ, and pantheism. Unconditionally recommended.
7 people found this helpful
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romano pagliarani
5.0 out of 5 stars Professor Tillich, in his book the Eternal Now, ...
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2015
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Professor Tillich, in his book the Eternal Now, expressed an interesting Anthology of human mind, in state of mind, in his personality, in his will.
Tillich state that human mind, can be in a state of assertiveness with God, but consequently from is personality state of mind, and the psychological factor that human my find at that moment, The mental capacity the serenity of the spirit to seek a connection not Idolatry with
God, humans can have a sincere and peaceful approach, spiritually and harmoniously to create question of modern man and women,
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Steven H Propp
TOP 100 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars THE THIRD VOLUME OF TILLICH’S PUBLISHED SERMONS
Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2017
Paul Tillich (1886-1965) was a German-American theologian and Christian philosopher, who was dismissed from his teaching position in Germany after Hitler came to power in 1933. He came to America, where he taught at Union Theological Seminary and the Harvard Divinity School. Tillich's major work was his three-volume  Systematic Theology, vol. 1 , Systematic Theology, vol. 2: Existence and the Christ , and  Systematic Theology, vol. 3: Life and the Spirit: History and the Kingdom of God , but he also published books such as  A History of Christian Thought , The Courage to Be , Dynamics of Faith , etc. The other volumes of his sermons (many given during chapel at Union Theological Seminary) are:  The Shaking of The Foundations  and  The New Being .

The psychologist Rollo May [a close friend of Tillich’s] wrote a sympathetic biography of him ( Paulus ) and Tillich’s wife Hannah wrote a much less-friendly account ( From Time to Time ). [NOTE: page numbers below refer to the 179-page paperback edition.]
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He wrote in the Preface to this 1963 book, “Most of these sermons were delivered in university and college chapels… The present collection dates from 1955 to 1963. The title … indicates that the presence of the Eternal in the midst of the temporal is a decisive emphasis in most of the sermons. I could have chosen ‘The Spiritual Presence’ as the general title, but the many unfavorable connotations with which the word ‘Spiritual’ is burdened excluded this possibility. Only for a particular sermon in which every sentence interpreted the meaning of ‘Spiritual,’ could the word be used. It is my hope that this collection… will show that the Christian message… is relevant for our time if it uses the language of our time.”

In the first sermon, he points out, “man and woman remain alone even in the most intimate union. They cannot penetrate each other’s innermost center. And if this were not so, they could not be helpers to each other; they could not have human community. This is why God Himself cannot liberate man from his aloneness: it is man’s greatness that he is centered within himself. Separated from his world, he is thus able to look AT it. Only because he can look at it can he know and love and transform it. God, in creating him the ruler of the earth, had to separate him and thrust him into aloneness. Man is also therefore able to be spoken to by God and by man. He can ask questions and give answers and make decisions. He has the freedom for good and evil. Only he who has an impenetrable center in himself is free. Only he who is alone can claim to be a man. This is the greatness and this is the burden of man.” (Pg. 17)

He observes, “there is a forgetting, to which Paul witnesses, that liberates us not from the memory of past guilt but from the pain it brings. The grand old name for this kind of forgetting is repentance. Today, repentance is associated with a half-painful, half-voluptuous emotional concentration on one’s guilt, and not with a liberating forgetfulness. But originally it meant a ‘turning around,’ leaving behind the wrong way and turning towards the light. It means pushing the consciousness and pain of guilt into the past, not by repressing it, but by acknowledging it, and receiving the word of acceptance in spite of it. If we are able to repent, we are able to forget, not because the forgotten act was unimportant… but because we have acknowledged our guilt and can now live with it. For it is ETERNALLY forgotten.” (Pg. 31-32)

He states, “we cannot applaud every act of moral self-restraint, knowing that its cause may be cowardice preventing a revolution against inherited, though already questioned, rules of behavior. Nor can we praise every act of daring non-conformism, knowing that its reason may be the inability of an individual to resist the persuasive irresponsibility of a group of noncomformists. In these and countless other cases, we experience a power that dwells in us and directs our will against itself. The name of this power is sin.” (Pg. 50)

He notes, “Evil in the divine order is not only mystery; it is also revelation. It reveals the greatness and danger of life. He who can become sick is greater than he who cannot, than that which is bound to remain what it is, unable to be split in itself. He alone who is free is able to surrender to the demonic forces that turn his freedom into bondage. The gift of freedom implies the danger of servitude; and the abundance of life implies the danger of sickness. Man’s life is abundant life, infinitely complex, inexhaustible in its possibilities, even in the vitally poorest human beings. Man’s life is most open to disease.” (Pg. 61)

He argues, “We therefore have to deal with an astonishing fact: the same events that pushed man from his place in the center of the world, and reduced him to insignificance, also elevated him to a God-like position both on earth and beyond! Is there an answer to this contradiction?... Man is rooted in the same Ground in which the universe with all its galaxies is rooted. It is this Ground that gives greatness to everything, however small it may be… and it is this that makes all things small, however great---the stars as well as man. It gives significance to each individual man, and to mankind as a whole. This answer quiets our anxiety about our smallness, and it quells the pride of our greatness.” (Pg. 72)

He points out, “What the Christian message does tell us is that the meaning of history lies above history, and that, therefore, its length is irrelevant to its ultimate meaning. But it is not irrelevant with respect to the innumerable opportunities time affords for creation of life and spirit, and it is for these that we must right with all our strength. Furthermore, if history should end tomorrow, though mankind’s self-annihilation, the appearance of this planet and of man upon it will NOT have been in vain. For a being shall have appeared at least once, in the billions of years of the universe, towards whose creation all the forces of life on earth worked together, and in whom the image of the divine Ground of all life was present. At least once, a living being shall have come into existence, in whom life achieved its highest possibility---spirit. This is the ultimate source of man’s greatness… the depth of all things became manifest in ONE being, and the name of that being is MAN, and you and I are man!” (Pg. 76)

He says, “For this is what the Divine Spirit means: God present to our spirit. Spirit is not a mysterious substance; it is not a part of God. It is God Himself; but not God as the creative ground of all things and not God directing history and manifesting Himself in its central event, but God as present in communities and personalities, grasping them, inspiring them, and transforming them.” (Pg. 84)

He admits, “Doubt, and not certitude, is our human situation, whether we affirm or deny God. And perhaps the difference between them is not so great as one usually thinks. They are probably very similar in their mixture of faith and doubt. Therefore, the denial of God, if serious, should not shake us. What should trouble everyone who takes life seriously is the existence of indifference. For he who is indifferent, when hearing the name of God, and feels, at the same time, that the meaning of his life is being questioned, denies his true humanity.” (Pg. 97-98)

The Eternal Now 1963
by Paul Tillich  
He observes, “The New Testamen speaks of eternal life, and eternal life is not continuation of life after death. eternal  life if beyond past, present, and future: we come from it, we live in its presence, we return to it. It is never absent---it is the divine life in which we are rooted and in which we are destined to participate in freedom---for God alone has eternity. Man should not boast of having an immortal soul as his possession for, as the letter to Timothy says, God alone has immortality.’ [1 Tim 6:16] We are mortal like every creature, mortal with our whole being---body and soul---but we are also kept in the eternal  life BEFORE we lived on earth, WHILE we are living in time, and AFTER our time has come to an end.” (Pg. 114-115)

He advises, “‘Stand firm in your faith’ means---don’t give up that faith that alone can make you ultimately strong, because it gives you the ultimate Ground on which to stand. Standing firm in one’s faith does not mean adhering to a set of beliefs; it does not require us to suppress doubts about Christian of other doctrines, but points to something which lies beyond doubt in the depth in which man’s being and all being is rooted. To be aware of this Ground, to live in it and out of it is ultimate strength.” (Pg. 151)

Tillich’s sermons are a much more accessible and “personal” side of his theology/philosophy, and will be of great interest to anyone seriously studying modern theology.
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Tsila
5.0 out of 5 stars The best of his 3 sermon books
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 29, 2018
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I guess if you are considering buying this book you might already be a Paul Tillich devotee. I found this and his other two sermon books some time after I had read the first two volumes of his systematic theology books. Many folks think you should read the sermons first before systematic theology, though I don't think this is necessarily so.
Anyway, this book (like his others) has gradually transformed the way I view Christianity, and for the better. I am not a Christian, yet I almost could feel like one now after reading his books. Bear in mind this book was written in the 60's, and is he not trying to make it easy for you like a modern day self help book. He is honest and direct and in his language yet encourages you towards overcoming all that baggage you may have over the not- so -attractive characteristics of dogmatic religion.
Paul Tillich has become for me a very essential writer and I thank him for what he has done in writing these books. Of the 3 sermon books, this one is my favourite and I would recommend it wholeheartedly. Each sermon is a few pages long and can be read at the start or end of the day; In my opinion it is best to read this book this way and not in one run. Give it time, read it often if you can.
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Paulx
5.0 out of 5 stars Dad likes it - easier than Courage to Be
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 8, 2022
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I heard of Paul Tillich thrpugh the Courage to Be which I found heavy going.
I bought this book for myself but ended up giving it to my Dad so now I'm going to buy it again.
I'm sure it will be much easier because of being Bitesize sermons.
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Carlos Faria
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully clear and inspirational
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 13, 2013
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Each chapter deals with a different subject and each subject is explored in a unique and enlightened way. What is beautiful about Paul Tillich is that he explores the Christian faith within a very spiritual context. He is a mystical Christian.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars i am very pleased with it
Reviewed in Canada on March 8, 2015
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Finally i have recieved the book. i am very pleased with it. excellent reading with many great ideas.
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