TALES FROM THE CARIBBEAN
Friday, May 18 2012
Aura's plane landed at Miami International Airport where she called Enzo as it taxied towards her gate. Before she could retrieve her luggage Enzo was there and their reunion bordered on being a public spectacle. One elderly lady was heard to say,... Read more...
NEWS FROM THE HILLS : TROUT SEASON
Friday, May 18 2012
The waters of William's River still run swift and cold. It swirls around huge boulders, cresting white and foaming, as it rushes onward. The immense rocks that throng the river's banks and inhabit the river itself look as if they had been thrown... Read more...
AROUND THE FRAME: COLOR SPLASH CREATES DRAMATIC QUILTS
Friday, May 18 2012
In April I journeyed to the Harlan United Methodist Church biennial quilt show where I attended a near standing-room-only lecture by Fran Foskey owner of Bobbin Bear Quilting Designs (www.bobbinbeardesigns.com/) on "Color Confidence". Fran's... Read more...
HOME COUNTRY: MARTIN
Friday, May 18 2012
You know, it isn't always easy being a crossing guard for the kids. It especially isn't easy when you're an old crossing guard, and Martin is old. One of these days we'll find out he discovered fire, I think. This isn't meant as a slight, because... Read more...
TALES FROM THE CARIBBEAN
Friday, May 04 2012
Big Jesse's company plane landed and taxied to the re-fueling area. It was easy to tell his plane from the others because it was painted in the University of Kentucky's blue and white color scheme with 2012, NCAA Champions, boldly displayed on its... Read more...
NEWS FROM THE HILLS : FLOWERS
Friday, May 04 2012
The nostalgic fragrance of lilacs drifts through the house, as the last sprays are salvaged and placed in a vase on the table. This old-fashioned flower brings back long-ago memories of Grandma in her long white apron and sunbonnet. She would break... Read more...
AROUND THE FRAME: HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY TO GRANDMA KAREN
Friday, May 04 2012
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY TO GRANDMA KAREN! This Mother's Day is a very special one for my older sister Karen (Levihn) Leach. She and her husband Tom became first time grandparents when son Nick and his wife Angie welcomed son Cohen Joshua into the world... Read more...
HOME COUNTRY: DEWEY & EMILY
Friday, May 04 2012
The newly-formed love firm of Dewey Decker and Emily Stickles (she of the incredible cheekbones and watchful county eye) began yet another sensation here in the valley. Ever since Dewey told Emily he was actually in the manure business and not just... Read more...
USF PLANETARIUM AND FORT WAYNE ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY ANNOUNCE JOINT VENTURE
Friday, May 04 2012
The Edwin Clark Schouweiler Memorial Planetarium at the University of Saint Francis and the Fort Wayne Astronomical Society (FWAS) are collaborating on community astronomy education efforts. A series of events to provide public information,... Read more...
TALES FROM THE CARIBBEAN
Friday, April 20 2012
Dave's aunt was glad to see them and, of course, the warm feeling was mutual and they continued to chat until the captain changed the subject by asking if she had a moving dolly? She did not, so Dave and his Dad lugged the 5 wooden boxes, one at a... Read more...

The Waynedale News

Serving South & Southwest Fort Wayne


DID YOU KNOW?
Written by Glenn Chesnut   
Friday, October 08 2010

The important thing to note here is that Tillich insists that talk about a personal God is symbolic language (a metaphor) and not a literal description of a being that thinks and acts exactly like a human being, except that he is much bigger and stronger. When we start thinking that way, Tillich says, we have confused the signpost with that to which it was pointing. And he is also correct in saying that in most periods of Christian history, the top ranking theologians have regarded the idea of a personal God as an image which is totally or almost totally metaphorical, not literal.

The supra-personal vs. the sub-personal: Einstein insisted that a humanistic religion had to talk about the “supra-personal,” and cannot get bogged down in myths and fantasies about personal gods drawn from primitive religion. And Tillich agrees with him, and says that this may be the best way of putting the most important issue here. Only we must look harder than Einstein did, at what is necessitated if we look at the issue this way.

We must remember that the supra-personal is not the same thing as the sub-personal. “The depth of being cannot be symbolized by objects taken from a realm which is lower than the personal, from the realm of things or sub-personal living beings. The supra-personal is not an “it.” If we try to avoid using any personal symbolism at all in talking about the ground of being, we will of necessity turn this ground into an It. When the only tool we possess for talking about the ground of being and meaning is construed as only a bare “It,” this always ends up turning our understanding of human existence into a sub-personal one: The “It” element transforms the alleged supra-personal into a sub-personal…And such a neutral sub-personal cannot grasp the center of our personality; it can satisfy our aesthetic feeling or our intellectual needs, but it cannot convert our will, it cannot overcome our loneliness, anxiety, and despair. For as the philosopher Schelling says: “Only a person can heal a person.” This is the reason that the symbol of the personal God is indispensable for a living religion. It is a symbol, not an object, and it never should be interpreted as an object. And it is one symbol besides others indicating that our personal center is grasped by the manifestation of the inaccessible ground and abyss of being.

Let us try putting Tillich’s argument in another form. Human beings, who are being forced to walk through the Dark Night of the Soul, are not being thrown into overpowering feelings of rage, self-pity, anxiety, and despair, because they do not understand a particular mathematical law of physics, or because they misunderstand the precise biological functioning of the gall bladder. They cannot be pulled back into the light by teaching them about physics or biology, or by giving them a mechanical view of the universe.

Instead they have to discover (or be taught) a new source of personal meaning, one to which they can be persuaded to give their total loyalty and commitment. They need to learn about love and compassion for other human beings. They will have to allow themselves to feel all their sorrow for everything in the past that has now been destroyed, and weep tears if necessary, before they will ever discover true acceptance. They will need to come to terms with their own deep inner feelings of guilt, shame, and failure over the things that they did or did not do when their personal worlds were crumbling into ruins, both real guilt and imaginary guilt (That can be even harder to overcome).

 

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