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Wilhelm Pauck

Forfatter af Melanchthon and Bucer

8+ Works 367 Members 2 Reviews

Om forfatteren

The Editor: Wilhelm Pauck has taught as professor at the University of Chicago; Union Theological Seminary, New York; the Faculty of Theology, Vanderbilt University; and as guest professor at many other seminaries and universities. He is also editor of Luther: Lectures on Romans.

Omfatter også følgende navne: Pauck Wilhelm, Editor Wilhelm Pauck

Værker af Wilhelm Pauck

Melanchthon and Bucer (1969) — Redaktør — 178 eksemplarer
Paul Tillich: His Life & Thought (1976) 87 eksemplarer
The heritage of the Reformation (1950) 45 eksemplarer
The Church Against the World (1935) — Forfatter — 11 eksemplarer

Associated Works

Lectures on Romans (1961) — Redaktør, nogle udgaver179 eksemplarer

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Putting Into Words The Life Of A Man Of Thought

This book delivers on its implied promise, setting forth a straightforward and factually accurate account of the life of the renowned thinker it features. Though its sea of data maintains its calm surface throughout, devoid of any stormy scenes, psychologically delineated islands and inlets, and even outright sensationalistic tidal influxes -- as found in Rollo May's affectionate portrait Paulus, or in Hannah Tillich's From Time To Time (often as and sometimes even more revealing of her life than that of her famous husband's) -- the record it leaves us with is remarkable and well worth having. It turns into a handbook of sorts on how the increasingly rare life of a philosopher, which seems an endangered if not vanishing species, can actually be lived in modern times in the world as we know it today. For Tillich's whole being, after all, was that of a man totally given from his youth on to ideas and matters of thought. This never wavered or changed once throughout his entire life.

Though Paul Tillich personally lived through the cataclysmic events and earth-shaking cultural upheaval of fin de siècle Europe, as the 19th Century ended and the 20th Century muscled its way mightily, and not at all gradually, into human history -- with his serving as a young chaplain in the German army's trenches during World War I, while engaged in his own fledgling studies and emerging professorial career in the full turbulence and tumult of the 1920s, with the ensuing collapse of the Weimar Republic and Hitler's ominous rise to power -- and the staggering intellectual foment in all of the arts, sciences, literature, and socio-political revolutions of the time -- which Tillich experienced first, last, and always, for the most part, as real events in the arena of ideas. Who else but a person such as this would choose to characterize the front-line horrors of war that he experienced first hand and face-to-face by saying, "Overnight I became an Existentialist."?

What might be called the "novelistic dimension" of Tillich's rich and eventful existence is by no means missing from either Tillich's life or Pauck's treatment of it. It's just that it isn't told straight out, nor could it ever be, in the way a writer would lay it out in a novel. Pauck, a died-in-the-wool intellectual of this kind himself, who also lived by ideas and took great pains to describe them as the full-fledged creatures they are, showed Tillich's life as an unfolding of those ideas and key notions that made it up. The building blocks, discoveries, abrupt cave-ins, breakthroughs, reversals, sudden vivid illuminations and so on, are all in there still, but dressed up now in the finery of thoughts instead of presented as actions and feelings of characters shown as a passing parade of scenes and situations. Pauk knew Tillich long enough and in the very way required to do this fully as well as accurately, from the beginning of Tillich's life clear up to its end. Would anyone else have been able to do this? I, for one at least, honestly do not see how.

People no longer live this way today -- not within the particular belief-systems and academically seasoned theological and philosophical traditions Tillich and Pauck once did, nor do people any longer inhabit the institutionally religious organizations and occupations of the kind Tillich and Pauck both lived and worked in. Even the discourse they were so accustomed to is by now all but impossible to reconstruct. This is why what the Pauck's have given us counts for so much. Though neither an "entertaining" nor ever an "engrossing" book, it assuredly takes its place as an important one, and also one as rare as it is eminently worth reading.

Those who do that, and who keep on with it to the end, will be rewarded by picking up on those difficult-to-discern strands which, when woven all together, make up the very kind of life Paul Tillich lived.
… (mere)
 
Markeret
GeneRuyle | Sep 20, 2012 |
From the publisher:

"This carefully translated and edited volume in the Library of Christian Classics contains Philip Melanchthon's famous Loci Communes and Martin Bucer's De Rengo Christi.

Presents in the English language, and in convenient-size soft cover volumes, a selection of the most indispensable Christian treatises written before the end of the sixteenth century. These books meet the need of lay people and libraries, students and pastors, for a single set of books containing the great literature of the Christian heritage. The texts are heightened in usefulness by a wealth of introductory material, explanatory notes, bibliographies, and indexes. The contents of each volume are exactly the same as in the original hardbound edition."… (mere)
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
 
Markeret
St-Johns-Episcopal | Jun 14, 2017 |

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8
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1
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367
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ISBN
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