DIETRICH BONHOEFFER
1906 - 1945
G'day folks,
This year I will try to post some information on outstanding people; past and present. Today is one of those days. Dietrich
Bonhoeffer (Feb. 4, 1906 - April, 9 1945) was a Protestant Lutheran Pastor,
theologian, and active in the German resistance to the policies of Hitler and
Nazism.
For his
opposition to the Nazi regime, Bonhoeffer was ultimately arrested and executed
at Flossian concentration camp, during the last month of the war. He remains an
important symbol of opposition to Hitler, and his views on Christianity
increasingly influential.
Short Bio of Dietrich Bonhoeffer
In 1927,
he graduated from the University of Berlin. He gained a doctorate in theology
for his influential thesis, Sanctorum Communio (Communion of Saints.)
After graduating, he spent time in Spain and America; these gave him a wider
outlook on life and helped him move from academic study to a more practical
interpretation of the Gospels. He was moved by the concept of the Church's involvement
in social injustice and protection of those who were oppressed. His wide
travels also encouraged a greater interest in ecumenism (outreach to other
churches).
In 1931,
he returned to Berlin and was ordained as a priest, aged 25. The early 1930s
were a period of great upheaval in Germany, with the instability of Weimar
Germany and the mass unemployment of the Great Depression, leading to the
election of Hitler in 1933.
Whilst
the election of Hitler was widely welcomed by the German population, including
significant parts of the Church, Bonhoeffer was a firm opponent of Hitler's
philosophy. Two days after Hitler's election as chancellor in Jan 1930,
Bonhoeffer made a radio broadcast criticising Hitler, and in particular the
danger of an idolatrous cult of the Fuhrer. His radio broadcast was cut off mid
air.
In April
1933, Bonhoeffer raised his opposition to the persecution of Jews, and argued
that the Church had a responsibility to act against this kind of policy.
Bonhoeffer sought to organise the protestant Church to firmly reject Nazi
ideology from infiltrating the church. This led to a breakaway church - The
Confessing Church which Bonhoeffer helped form with Martin Niemoller. The
Confessing church sought to stand in opposition to the Nazi supported, German
Christian movement.
However,
in practise, it was difficult to agree on bold initiatives to oppose the
Nazification of society and the church. Bonhoeffer felt disillusioned by the
weakness of the church and opposition, and in the autumn of 1933, he took a two
year appointment to a German speaking Protestant church in London.
After two
years in London, Bonhoeffer returned to Berlin. He felt a call to return to his
native country and share in its struggles, despite the bleak outlook. Shortly,
after his return, one leader of the Confessing church were arrested and another
fled to Switzerland; Bonhoeffer had his authorization to teach revoke in 1936
after being denounced as a pacifist and enemy of state.
As the
Nazi control intensified, in 1937, the confessing church seminary was closed
down by Himmler. Over the next two years, Bonhoeffer travelled throughout
Eastern Germany, conducting seminaries in private to sympathetic students.
During
this period, Bonhoeffer wrote extensively on subjects of theological interest.
This included 'The Cost of Discipleship' a study on the Sermon on the Mount and
argued for greater spiritual discipline and practise to achieve 'the costly
grace'.
"Cheap
grace is the grace we bestow on ourselves. Cheap grace is the preaching of
forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline,
Communion without confession.... Cheap grace is grace without discipleship,
grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and
incarnate."
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer (The Cost of Discipleship)
— Dietrich Bonhoeffer (The Cost of Discipleship)
Worried
by the fear of being asked to take an oath to Hitler or be arrested, Bonhoeffer
left Germany for United States in June 1939. After less than two years, he
returned to Germany because he felt guilty for seeking sanctuary and not having
the courage to practise what he preached.
"I
have come to the conclusion that I made a mistake in coming to America. ...
Christians in Germany will have to face the terrible alternative of either
willing the defeat of their nation in order that Christian civilization may
survive or willing the victory of their nation and thereby destroying
civilization. I know which of these alternatives I must choose but I cannot
make that choice from security."
On his
return to Germany, Bonhoeffer was denied the right to speak in public or
publish any article. However, he managed to join the Abwehr, the German
military intelligence agency. Before his visit to the US, Bonhoeffer had
already made contacts with some military officers who were opposed to Hitler. It
was within the Abwehr that the strongest opposition to Hitler occurred.
Bonhoeffer was aware of various assassination plots to kill Hitler. It was
during the darkest hours of the Second World War that he began to question his
pacifism, as he saw the need for violent opposition to a regime such as Hitler.
When
Visser't Hooft, the General Secretary of The World Council of Churches, asked
him, "What do you pray for in these days?" Bonhoeffer replied"If
you want to know the truth, I pray for the defeat of my nation."
Within
the cover of the Abwehr, Bonhoeffer, served as a messenger for the small German
resistance movement. He made contact with associates of the British government
- though the feelers of the German resistance were ignored as the Allies
pursued a policy of requiring 'unconditional surrender.'
Within
the Abwehr, efforts were made to help some German Jews escape to neutral
Switzerland. It was Bonhoeffer's involvement in this activity, that led to his
arrest in April 1943. As the Gestapo sought to take over responsibilities of
the Abwehr, they uncovered Bonhoeffer's involvement in escape plans. For a year
and a half, Bonhoeffer was imprisoned at Tegel Military prison. Here he
continued his writings such as 'Ethics' Helped by sympathetic guards his
writings were smuggled out. After the failed bomb plot of July 20 1944,
Bonhoeffer was moved to the Gestapo's high security prison, before being
transferred to Buchenwald concentration camp and finally Flossenburg
concentration camp.
Even
during the privations of the concentration camp, Bonhoeffer retained a deep
spirituality which was evident to other prisoners. Bonhoeffer continued to
minister his fellow prisoners. Payne Best, a fellow inmate and officer of the
British Army, wrote this observation of Bonhoeffer.
"Bonhoeffer
was different, just quite calm and normal, seemingly perfectly at his ease...
his soul really shone in the dark desperation of our prison. He was one of the
very few men I have ever met to whom God was real and ever close to him."
On April
8, 1945, Bonhoeffer was given a cursory court martial and sentenced to death by
hanging. Like many of the conspirators, he was hung by wire, to prolong the
death. He was hung with fellow conspirators such as, Admiral Wilhelm Canaris
and Hans Oster.
Just
before his execution, he asked a fellow inmate to relate a message to the
Bishop George Bell of Chichester 'This is the end - for me the beginning of
life.'
The camp
doctor who witnessed the execution of Bonhoeffer later wrote,
“I saw
Pastor Bonhoeffer ... kneeling on the floor praying fervently to God. I was
most deeply moved by the way this lovable man prayed, so devout and so certain
that God heard his prayer. At the place of execution, he again said a short
prayer and then climbed the few steps to the gallows, brave and composed. His
death ensued after a few seconds. In the almost fifty years that I worked as a
doctor, I have hardly ever seen a man die so entirely submissive to the will of
God.”
Bonhoeffer's
principled resistance to Hitler's regime was a source of inspiration for other
figures such as Dr Martin Luther King Junior and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Bonhoeffer also
shared many ideals with Mahatma Gandhi. (In 1935 he turned down an opportunity
to learn in Gandhi's ashram)
Clancy's comment: I have always admired people with great courage; those who are prepared to put their name, fame and neck on the block for a cause they believe in. Seems to be a great lack of them these days. I wonder why?
I'm ...
Pax vobiscum.
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