Friday, February 3, 2006
DIETRICH BONHOEFFER AT 100
Religion and Ethics Newsweekly [PBS]
February 3, 2006
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Episode no. 923
BOB
ABERNETHY, anchor: This weekend will be the 100th anniversary of the
birth of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German theologian put to death by the
Nazis, whose writings and life made him a modern martyr. In the U.S.
and Europe there will be observances in his honor, among them a
documentary on Bonhoeffer to run on most PBS stations February 6. We
have some images from that program.
Bonhoeffer was raised in a
distinguished but not particularly religious family said to have been
surprised by his decision to study theology. He was brilliant, getting
his doctorate at age 21. Then he spent a year at Union Theological
Seminary in New York. He studied ethics under Reinhold Niebuhr and also
discovered the fervor and social consciousness of Harlem's Abysssian
Baptist Church, where he taught Sunday school.
Christianity,
Bonhoeffer came to believe, meant not just professing faith but really
putting into practice Jesus' teachings in the Sermon on the Mount. When
Bonhoeffer returned to Germany in the early 1930s, his convictions were
tested dramatically. Adolph Hitler and the Nazis were just coming to
power. What should Bonhoeffer do about them? He spoke out, urging his
fellow Lutherans to reject as idolatry the Nazi claim that the Fuehrer
and the state deserved allegiance above that owed to God.
Bonhoeffer
also condemned Nazi persecution of the Jews, urging the Christian
Church to stand with the Jews and all victims. He also helped some Jews
escape.
By the late 1930s, Bonhoeffer realized that, for him,
even though he respected pacifism and nonviolence in principle,
Hitler's war-making and injustice required resistance. A Christian must
act, he insisted, so he joined a conspiracy to oppose Hitler. It seemed
a lesser evil than doing nothing.
Bonhoeffer became part of a
resistance cell inside German military intelligence. On trips abroad,
he tried to get Allied support for the German resistance, but he was
not successful. In 1943, Bonhoeffer's fellow resisters tried to kill
Hitler but failed. The Gestapo identified Bonhoeffer as part of the
plot, arrested him, and sent him to prison.
Earlier, in a widely
influential book, THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP, Bonhoeffer had condemned
what he called cheap grace -- accepting God's love without cost. At the
same time, he extolled costly grace -- grace that requires radical
obedience, even the willingness to die for one's beliefs, which
Bonhoeffer did.
Less than a month before the war in Europe
ended, the Nazis moved him from prison to a concentration camp and
hanged him on April 9, 1945. He was 39 years old.
Some Christian
pacifists say Bonhoeffer was wrong to resist evil with violence, but
for millions of other Christians, Bonhoffer became an inspiring symbol
of what it can mean, in times of crisis and every day, to practice what
you preach.
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mp
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2006/02/dietrich_bonhoe.html