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Pastor Tillich: The Justification of the Doubter tells the story of Paul Tillich's early theological development from his student days until the end of the First World War, set against the backdrop of church politics in Wilhelmine Germany and with particular reference to his early sermons. The majority of scholarship understands Tillich primarily as a philosophical theologian. But before and during the First World War, Tillich was Pastor Tillich, studying to become a pastor, leading a Christian student group, working periodically as a pastor in Berlin churches, and preaching to soldiers. Arriving in Berlin after the war, Tillich pursued religious socialism and a theology of culture through the 1920s. But the theological basis of these programmes was what Tillich considered his main concern in 1919: the theology of doubt. Using a wealth of untranslated German sources largely unknown to English-language scholarship, Pastor Tillich presents the stations of Tillich's theological development of the notion of the justification of the doubter up to 1919. Distinguishing between Tillich's later autobiographical statements and the witness of archival sources, a significantly original, contextualised account of Tillich's early life in Germany emerges. From his days as the conservative son of a conservative Lutheran pastor to the battle-worn chaplain who could even talk about 'faith without God', Tillich underwent considerable change. The book should therefore speak to any interested in the history of modern theology, as an example of how biography and theology are intertwined.
Dr Samuel Shearn is a researcher and lecturer in Systematic Theology at the University of Rostock, Germany. He studied Physics, Theology, and Philosophy of Religion in England and Germany. He completed his theological doctorate at the University of Oxford.
Pastor Tillich can be warmly recommended to anyone interested in Tillich's early development. The work is a milestone in the research not only of Tillich's early work, but also of his early life.
Kiyokazu Okita, Kyoto University) Okita, Kiyokazu (Assistant Professor at The Hakubi Center for Advanced Research and Department of Indological Studies, Assistant Professor at The Hakubi Center for Advanced Research and Department of Indological Studies, OKITA, Okita
Philip Y. Yoo, The University of Texas at Austin) Yoo, Philip Y. (Jack Miller Postdoctoral Fellow, Thomas Jefferson Center for the Study of Core Texts and Ideas, Jack Miller Postdoctoral Fellow, Thomas Jefferson Center for the Study of Core Texts and Ideas, Philip Y Yoo
S. Min Chun, South Korea) Chun, S. Min (Assistant Professor of Worldview and Biblical Studies, Vancouver Institute for Evangelical Worldview, Langley, BC, CanadaResearch Fellow, Nehemiah Institute for Christian Studies
Shadaab Rahemtulla, University of Jordan) Rahemtulla, Shadaab (Lecturer in Islam and Christian-Muslim RelationsAssistant Professor, Assistant Professor, School of International Studies