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Jacob Boehme and Paul Tillich on Trinity and God: Similarities and Differences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

John P. Dourley
Affiliation:
Department of Religion, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, CanadaK1S 5B6

Abstract

Paul Tillich borrows central motifs in his trinitarian theology from Jacob Boehme, the seventeenth-century German mystic. Tillich draws a picture of divine life as embroiled in a conflict of opposites between the abyss and the light of the Logos. Boehme also depicted divine life as engaged in inner turmoil. But, unlike Tillich, Boehme's experience and imagery suggest that the eternal divine self-contradiction could only be solved in human consciousness and history. The paper suggests that trinitarian thinkers such as Tillich cannot give to creation and its processes the same seriousness as does Boehme who implicates humanity in the redemption of divinity through the task imposed on it as the sole locus in which the divine opposites can be differentiated and consciously integrated.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

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