Paul Tillich was a prominent public theologian of the 1950s and 1960s who immigrated to the US following Nazi expulsion from his post at a German university. In this collection his better-known Cold War–era works rightly share the stage with his 1933 work The Socialist Decision and his wartime broadcasts which offered Germany a stark alternative to Nazi theorist Carl Schmitt’s Political Theology (1922). These essays by senior, mid-career, and rising scholars will enrich both newcomers to Tillich and seasoned readers. Essays in section 1 contextualize Tillich’s early work: his traumatic WW I experience, Weimar-era political theologizing, and its continuity with his Systematic Theology (1951). The middle section brings Tillich’s work into dialogue with varied liberationist theologians—James H. Cone, Delores S. Williams, Óscar Romero. Section 3 demonstrates the enduring relevance of Tillich’s work for contemporary issues in political theology—as Sámi reindeer herders in the Artic face "ultimate ecological concern"; as his sermons inform issues of disability; as his critiques of nationalism, Fascism, and the "demonic" address issues surrounding migration, religious violence, and the current American political scene. All told, this volume makes a compelling case for retaining Tillich in the canon of essential theological reading and for giving greater attention to his earlier work and the political "demonic." Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty.