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  1. Vor 5 Tagen · Transformative Voids. The German theologian Paul Tillich served as a soldier in the trenches of the First World War. During his final furlough, amongst the insanity of battle, he turned to magazines and books about art in an effort to find some sanity, some beauty, perhaps even some hope. He was taken by Botticelli’s Madonna with Singing ...

  2. Vor 6 Tagen · The theologian Paul Tillich said that religion might be best defined as the human attempt to venerate and gesture to things of “ultimate concern.” Religion derives from our belief in, sense of, and hunger for the certainty and perfection that doesn’t exist in our lives, but which we can imagine and which we hope for. Tillich says that ...

  3. 9. Mai 2024 · The balance between fear and courage is well-developed in the animal realm. Animals are warned by fear, but under special conditions. They disregard Their Fear and risk pain and Annihilation for the sake of those who are part of their own self-affirmation, EG, their descendants. Or I'll be coming back to tillich.

  4. 11. Mai 2024 · Through the writings of Paul Tillich (1886-1965), a lack of belief in the Resurrection had permeated Protestant theology. He was an existentialist who believed nothing is real unless someone makes it real. “Tillich didn’t believe that Jesus existed. We all thought he (Tillich) was a great theologian, but actually it was all ...

  5. 13. Mai 2024 · Credited with being the birthplace of liberation theology, Union has been a leading institution for progressive Christian activism for decades. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German pastor executed by the Nazi regime, was briefly resident at Union, and the influential theologian Paul Tillich taught there for two decades. The controversial academic and ...

  6. 13. Mai 2024 · For Mother's Day and to conclude our series on the elements, Pastor Kaye Glennon explored Paul Tillich's description of God as the "Ground of All Being."Sacr...

  7. 13. Mai 2024 · Cooper (1996), in his book Paul Tillich and Psychology, makes assertions very much in line with this proposition. In this book, Cooper traces the theological lineage of Tillich and his influence on existential psychology, even going as far as noting how Tillich’s Lutheran beliefs influenced the development of many ideas in existential psychology.