Homebrewed Christianity

Paul Tillich's Socialist Decision and the Crisis of American Christianity

Jan 13, 2026
Explore Paul Tillich's insightful 1933 work as it reflects the current crisis in American Christianity. Discover Tillich's idea of 'powers of origin' and 'prophetic demand' and how their imbalance leads to tribalism or rootlessness. Dive into the dangers of Christian nationalism and the symbolic failures within progressive Christianity. Tillich's concept of 'theonomy' offers a third way, blending tradition and critique. The discussion emphasizes the urgent need for cognitive empathy and practical actions for churches today.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Heteronomy Versus Empty Autonomy

  • Tillich names the collapse toward roots 'heteronomy' and toward pure critique 'empty autonomy'.
  • Both are dangerous because they either absolutize the finite or leave the soul hungry.
INSIGHT

Why Progressivism Left A Spiritual Vacuum

  • Progressive movements and liberal Christianity often failed by discarding symbols, ritual, and embodied practices.
  • That left people spiritually hungry and opened space for toxic symbolic movements.
INSIGHT

Christian Nationalism As Political Romanticism

  • Christian nationalism functions as political romanticism by sacralizing national identity and a particular cultural Christianity.
  • It meets real needs for belonging while absolutizing the tribe and demonizing outsiders.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app