Unlikely Sources in the Fight Against Cynicism
I am going to go out on a limb here and say that I am immensely enjoying Paul Tillich's writings. Consistency is always held in tension with dynamism. Knowing is met with doing. Belief never makes a day without unbelief. For someone who aspires to be a more orthodox Anabaptist, I must say that Tillich is nevertheless fascinating. Perhaps it is because I usually read his work immediately after reading the news, for Tillich is quite applicable after I read the news and before I watch John Stewart.
Bird flu, Supreme Court candidates, disasters, indictments, and Oklahoma football have all piled on to make my cynical side fluorish. And then it is Tillich, the man who describes faith as "ultimate concern", who reminds me that cynicism is the weakest response imagineable. Feeling cynical yourself? Have a sip, but beware the aftertaste:
"We may try to dismiss all concerns and create a cynical unconcern. We determine that nothing shall concern us any more, except perhaps casually, but certainly not seriously. We try to be unconcerned about ourselves and others, about our work and our pleasures, about necessities and luxuries, about social and political matters, about knowledge and beauty. We may even feel that this unconcern has something heroic about it. And one thing is true: It is the only alternative to having an ultimate concern. Unconcern or ultimate concern- those are the only alternatives. The cynic is concerned, passionately concerned, about one thing, namely, his unconcern. This is the inner contradiction of all concern. Therefore, there is only one alternative, which is ultimate concern."
There you have it, folks. I hereby disavow that brand of cynicism, which I shall name "insulatory cynicism". If Tillich gets anything right he definitely knows how to describe the human predicament. You crazy cynics are really concerned, too. Just admit it.
Bird flu, Supreme Court candidates, disasters, indictments, and Oklahoma football have all piled on to make my cynical side fluorish. And then it is Tillich, the man who describes faith as "ultimate concern", who reminds me that cynicism is the weakest response imagineable. Feeling cynical yourself? Have a sip, but beware the aftertaste:
"We may try to dismiss all concerns and create a cynical unconcern. We determine that nothing shall concern us any more, except perhaps casually, but certainly not seriously. We try to be unconcerned about ourselves and others, about our work and our pleasures, about necessities and luxuries, about social and political matters, about knowledge and beauty. We may even feel that this unconcern has something heroic about it. And one thing is true: It is the only alternative to having an ultimate concern. Unconcern or ultimate concern- those are the only alternatives. The cynic is concerned, passionately concerned, about one thing, namely, his unconcern. This is the inner contradiction of all concern. Therefore, there is only one alternative, which is ultimate concern."
There you have it, folks. I hereby disavow that brand of cynicism, which I shall name "insulatory cynicism". If Tillich gets anything right he definitely knows how to describe the human predicament. You crazy cynics are really concerned, too. Just admit it.