Ultimate concern; Tillich in dialogue. [Edited by] D. Mackenzie Brown.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York, Harper & Row [1965]Edition: [1st ed.]Description: xvi, 234 p. 22 cmSubject(s): LOC classification:
  • BX4811 .T5
Contents:
Tillich's theology -- Two concepts of religion -- What is "ultimate concern"? -- Destiny or free will -- Idolatry and demonization distinguished from ultimate concern -- Socialism, communism, nationalism, fascism -- The origin of quasi-religions -- Are the secular religions empty? -- Are the quasi-religions necessary? -- Religion and art -- Reform or retreat -- The term "God" -- Being and existence -- Love and self-love -- Finite and infinite -- Power and vocation -- Rigidity and fragility -- Symbol and reality -- Can socialism replace Christianity? -- Self-criticism in Christianity and communism -- The American way of life -- Can religion be restored when replaced by socialism? -- The restoration of religious symbols -- Are the churches too narrow? -- Are Christian symbols necessary? -- Is a Judeo-Christian dialogue possible? Is Judaism a more tolerant faith? -- Universalism in Christianity and Judaism -- Grace, reconciliation, and forgiveness -- Progress in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam -- The Kairos in Christianity and Hinduism -- The Kairos and the cross -- Sainthood and experience of the Kairos -- Buddha and Christ as historical figures -- Was Jesus Christ unique? -- Can Christ be distinguished from the saints? -- Christ as a symbol -- Which religious symbols are now dead? -- The Kairos and the individual -- Jesus--The image and the reality -- What is a miracle? -- What is providence? -- Can a secular society survive? -- Must ultimate concern be self-conscious? -- Is Paul Tillich a dangerous man? -- "Apostle to the intellectual" -- Monasticism and the priesthood -- Marriage and divorce -- Layman and monk -- Pride and self-affirmation -- Saint and sinner -- More on the uniqueness of Christ -- Christianity and Western civilization.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books (30-Day Checkout) Books (30-Day Checkout) Nash Library General Stacks BX4811.T5 1 Available 33710000750369

Edited from tape recordings made during a seminar held at University of California, Santa Barbara, in the spring of 1964.

Bibliography: p. 221-223.

WAR, NEWBERY,

Tillich's theology -- Two concepts of religion -- What is "ultimate concern"? -- Destiny or free will -- Idolatry and demonization distinguished from ultimate concern -- Socialism, communism, nationalism, fascism -- The origin of quasi-religions -- Are the secular religions empty? -- Are the quasi-religions necessary? -- Religion and art -- Reform or retreat -- The term "God" -- Being and existence -- Love and self-love -- Finite and infinite -- Power and vocation -- Rigidity and fragility -- Symbol and reality -- Can socialism replace Christianity? -- Self-criticism in Christianity and communism -- The American way of life -- Can religion be restored when replaced by socialism? -- The restoration of religious symbols -- Are the churches too narrow? -- Are Christian symbols necessary? -- Is a Judeo-Christian dialogue possible? Is Judaism a more tolerant faith? -- Universalism in Christianity and Judaism -- Grace, reconciliation, and forgiveness -- Progress in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam -- The Kairos in Christianity and Hinduism -- The Kairos and the cross -- Sainthood and experience of the Kairos -- Buddha and Christ as historical figures -- Was Jesus Christ unique? -- Can Christ be distinguished from the saints? -- Christ as a symbol -- Which religious symbols are now dead? -- The Kairos and the individual -- Jesus--The image and the reality -- What is a miracle? -- What is providence? -- Can a secular society survive? -- Must ultimate concern be self-conscious? -- Is Paul Tillich a dangerous man? -- "Apostle to the intellectual" -- Monasticism and the priesthood -- Marriage and divorce -- Layman and monk -- Pride and self-affirmation -- Saint and sinner -- More on the uniqueness of Christ -- Christianity and Western civilization.