Theology on Trial

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Absolute Paradox
Aesthetic Stage
Biblical Religion
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Christian doctrine analysis
comparative theological methodology
Effective Symbol
Eidetic Intuition
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Ethical Stage
Existential Analyses
Existential Engagement
Existential Estrangement
Existential Finitude
existential philosophy
faith and reason debate
Held
Kierkegaard
Protestant Principle
religious epistemology
Semantic Rationality
Subject Object Structure
Systematic Theology
systematic theology critique
Theological Answers
Theological Circle
Tillich
Tillich's System
Tillich's Theological System
Tillich's View
Tillich’s System
Tillich’s Theological System
Tillich’s View
Ultimate Concern
Vice Versa
Violates

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412854894
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Soren Kierkegaard sought to clarify what it means to be a Christian. He concluded that a one-on-one relationship with God is required, to encounter the "Absolute Paradox," defined as an immutable being entering into and transforming human history. Kierkegaard's dim view of a systematic Christian theology includes a preoccupation with theological exposition that distracts from the essential task of achieving a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.

Alternatively, Paul Tillich's theology is based on a triadic relationship of being, nonbeing and Being-Itself (God), a doctrine of symbols, and a reinterpretation of the Incarnation. It correlates a culture's questions and concerns with the Christian message to certain criteria of acceptability that, to Tillich, must satisfy the "Protestant Principle," stipulating that a theological system both restates the present-time Christian message and acknowledges that this restatement cannot be the definitive, ultimate expression of that message.

Theology on Trial presents and assesses whether, and to what degree, Tillich's theology satisfies his own criteria of acceptability. An acceptable theology must be logically consistent and free of equivocation. The concluding section of the book examines the views of each author from the standpoint of the other.

John Losee is James Renwick Hogg Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Lafayette College, USA. The best known of his publications is A Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Science, which was translated into twelve languages, and Theories of Causality.