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Probe Ministries
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Todd Kappelman
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Man and His Mission
Since his death in 1945, and especially in the
last ten years, Bonhoeffer's writings have been stirring remarkable
interest among Christians, old and young alike. Thus, we are going
to examine the merits of reading the works of Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
We will do this by examining the man and his particular place in
the canon of Christian writers, his background and historical
setting, and finally three of his most important and influential
works.
Bonhoeffer's importance begins with his opposition to the Nazi
party and its influence in the German church during the rise of
Hitler. This interest led him into areas of Christian ecumenical
concerns that would later be important to the foundation of our
contemporary ecumenical movements. Many denominational factions and
various groups claim him as their spokesman, but it's his
remarkable personal life, and his authorship of difficult
devotional and academic works, which have gained him a place in the
history of twentieth century theology.
Bonhoeffer was born on February 4, 1906 in Breslau, Germany (now
part of Poland) and had a twin sister named Sabine. In 1933, before
Hitler came to power, Bonhoeffer, a minister in the Lutheran
church, was already attacking the Nazis in radio broadcasts. Two
years later he was the leader of an underground seminary with over
twenty young seminarians. That seminary is often seen as a kind of
Protestant monastery, and is responsible for many of his
considerations about the Christian life as it pertains to
community. Later the seminary was closed by the Secret Police. In
1939, through arrangements made by Reinhold Niebuhr, he fled to the
United States, but returned to Germany after a short stay. He
believed it was necessary to suffer with his people if he was to be
an effective minister after the war. The last two years of his life
were spent in a Berlin prison. In 1945 he was executed for
complicity in a plot on Hitler's life.
During the time that Bonhoeffer was in prison he wrote a book
titled Letters and Papers from Prison. The manuscript was
smuggled from jail and published. These letters contain
Bonhoeffer's consideration of the secularization of the world and
the departure from religion in the twentieth century. In
Bonhoeffer's estimation, the dependence on organized religion had
undermined genuine faith. Bonhoeffer would call for a new
religionless Christianity free from individualism and metaphysical
supernaturalism. God, argued Bonhoeffer, must be known in this
world as he operates and interacts with man in daily life. The
abstract God of philosophical and theological speculation is
useless to the average man on the street, and they are the majority
who needs to hear the gospel.
We will examine three of Bonhoeffer's most influential and
important works in the following four sections. The first work to
be considered will be The Cost of Discipleship, written in
1939. This work is an interpretation of The Sermon on the Mount. It
calls for radical living, if the Christian is to be an authentic
disciple of Christ. The Ethics, written from 1940-1943, is
Bonhoeffer's most technical theological exposition. It details the
problems in attempting to build an ethical foundation on
philosophical or theoretical grounds. Then we will examine more
thoroughly Letters and Papers from Prison, one of
Bonhoeffer's most personal and moving achievements.
The Cost of Discipleship
Bonhoeffer's most famous work is The Cost of
Discipleship, first published in 1939. This book is a rigorous
exposition and interpretation of the Sermon on the Mount, and
Matthew 9:35-10:42. Bonhoeffer's major concern is cheap
grace. This is grace that has become so watered down that it no
longer resembles the grace of the New Testament, the costly
grace of the Gospels.
By the phrase cheap grace, Bonhoeffer means the grace
which has brought chaos and destruction; it is the intellectual
assent to a doctrine without a real transformation in the sinner's
life. It is the justification of the sinner without the works that
should accompany the new birth. Bonhoeffer says of cheap grace:
[It] is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring
repentance, baptism without church discipline, Communion without
confession, absolution without personal confession. Cheap grace is
grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without
Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.{1}
Real grace, in Bonhoeffer's estimation, is a grace that will
cost a man his life. It is the grace made dear by the life of
Christ that was sacrificed to purchase man's redemption. Cheap
grace arose out of man's desire to be saved, but to do so without
becoming a disciple. The doctrinal system of the church with its
lists of behavioral codes becomes a substitute for the Living
Christ, and this cheapens the meaning of discipleship. The true
believer must resist cheap grace and enter the life of active
discipleship. Faith can no longer mean sitting still and waiting;
the Christian must rise and follow Christ.{2}
It is here that Bonhoeffer makes one of his most enduring claims
on the life of the true Christian. He writes that "only he who
believes is obedient, and only he who is obedient believes."{3} Men have become soft and complacent in cheap
grace and are thus cut off from the discovery of the more costly
grace of self-sacrifice and personal debasement. Bonhoeffer
believed that the teaching of cheap grace was the ruin of more
Christians than any commandment of works.{4}
Discipleship, for Bonhoeffer, means strict adherence to Christ
and His commandments. It is also a strict adherence to Christ as
the object of our faith. Bonhoeffer discusses this single-minded
obedience in chapter three of The Cost of Discipleship. In
this chapter, the call of Levi and Peter are used to illustrate the
believer's proper response to the call of Christ and the Gospel.{5} The only requirement these men understood was
that in each case the call was to rely on Christ's word, and cling
to it as offering greater security than all the securities in the
world.{6}
In the nineteenth chapter of Matthew's Gospel we have the story
of the rich young man who is inquiring about salvation and is told
by Christ that he must sell all of his possessions, take up his
cross, and follow. Bonhoeffer emphasizes the bewilderment of the
disciples who ask the question, "Who then can be saved?"{7} The answer they are given is that it is
extremely hard to be saved, but with God all things are possible.
Bonhoeffer and the Sermon on the Mount
The exposition of the Sermon on the Mount is another important
element of The Cost of Discipleship. In it, Bonhoeffer
places special emphasis on the beatitudes for understanding the
incarnate and crucified Christ. It is here that the disciples are
called "blessed" for an extraordinary list of qualities.
The poor in spirit have accepted the loss of all things,
most importantly the loss of self, so that they may follow Christ.
Those who mourn are the people who do without the peace and
prosperity of this world.{8} Mourning is the
conscious rejection of rejoicing in what the world rejoices in, and
finding one's happiness and fulfillment only in the person of
Christ. The meek, says Bonhoeffer, are those who do
not speak up for their own rights. They continually subordinate
their rights and themselves to the will of Christ first, and in
consequence to the service of others. Likewise, those who hunger
and thirst after righteousness also renounce the expectation
that man can eventually make the world into paradise. Their hope is
in the righteousness that only the reign of Christ can bring.
The merciful have given up their own dignity and become
devoted to others, helping the needy, the infirm, and the outcasts.
The pure in heart are no longer troubled by the call of this
world, they have resigned themselves to the call of Christ and His
desires for their lives. The peacemakers abhor the violence
that is so often used to solve problems. This point would be of
special significance for Bonhoeffer, who was writing on the eve of
World War II. The peacemakers maintain fellowship where
others would find a reason to break off a relationship. These
individuals always see another option.{9}
Those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake are
willing to suffer for the cause of Christ. Any and every just cause
becomes their cause because it is part of the overall work of
Christ. Suffering becomes the way to communion with God.{10} To this list is added the final blessing
pronounced on those who are persecuted for righteousness sake.
These will receive a great reward in heaven and be likened to the
prophets who also suffered.
Bonhoeffer's emphasis on suffering is directly connected to the
suffering of Christ. The church is called to bear the whole burden
of Christ, especially as it pertains to suffering, or it must
collapse under the weight of the burden.{11}
Christ has suffered, says Bonhoeffer, but His suffering is efficacious for
the remission of sins. We may also suffer, but our suffering is not
for redemptive purposes. We suffer, says Bonhoeffer, not only
because it is the church's lot, but so that the world may see us
suffering and understand that there is a way that men can bear the
burdens of life, and that way is through Christ alone.
Discipleship for Bonhoeffer was not limited to what we can
comprehend--it must transcend all comprehension. The believer must
plunge into the deep waters beyond the comprehension and everyday
teaching of the church, and this must be done individually and
collectively.
Bonhoeffer's Ethics
Dietrich Bonhoeffer's work Ethics was written from
1940-1943. Intended as lectures, this is his most mature work and
is considered to be his major contribution to theology.{12} Christian ethics, he says, must be
considered with reference to the regenerated man whose chief desire
should be to please God, not with the man who is concerned with an
airtight philosophical system. Man is not, and cannot, be the final
arbitrator of good and evil. This is reserved for God alone. When
man tries to decide what is right and wrong his efforts are doomed
to failure. Bonhoeffer wrote that "instead of knowing only the God
who is good to him and instead of knowing all things in Him, [man]
knows only himself as the origin of good and evil."{13} With this statement, Bonhoeffer entered one
of the most difficult philosophical and theological problems in the
history of the church: the problem of evil. Bonhoeffer
believed that the problem of evil could only be understood in light
of the Fall of mankind. The Fall caused the disunion of man and God
with the result that man is incapable of discerning right and
wrong.{14} Modern men have a vague uneasiness about
their ability to know right and wrong. Bonhoeffer asserted this is
in part due to the desire for philosophical certainty. However,
Bonhoeffer urged the Christian to be concerned with living the will
of God rather than finding a set of rules one may follow.{15} And while Bonhoeffer was not advocating a
direct and individual revelation in every ethical dilemma, he did
believe that man can have knowledge of the will of God. He said
that "if a man asks God humbly God will give him certain knowledge
of His will; and then, after all this earnest proving there will be
the freedom to make real decisions, and [this] with the confidence
that it is not man but God Himself who through this proving gives
effect to His will."{16}
Perhaps our first response to Bonhoeffer is that he appears to
be some sort of mystic. However, it is imperative to understand the
time in which he was writing, and some of the specific problems he
was addressing. World War II was raging and the greatest ethical
questions of the century were confronting the church. Good men, and
even committed Christians, found themselves on opposing sides of
the war. It would be ludicrous to suppose that right and wrong on
individual or national levels was obvious, and that there was
universal agreement among Christians. In the midst of all of this
confusion a young pastor-theologian and member of the Resistance
could only advise that believers turn to Christ with the
expectation that true answers were obtainable. Such confidence is
sorely needed among Christians who face a world devoid of
answers.
The strength of Bonhoeffer's Ethics lies not in its
systematic resolution of problems facing the church, but rather the
acknowledgment that life is complex and that all systems outside of
humble submission to the Word of God are doomed to failure. As
unsettling as Bonhoeffer's Ethics may be, it is a refreshing
call to the contemporary church to repent and return to a life
characterized by prayer, the traditional mark of the early church.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Prison Correspondence
Our final consideration of the work of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who
was hanged in 1945 for his part in an assassination attempt on
Hitler, will center on his Letters and Papers from Prison
begun in 1942. These letters represent some of Bonhoeffer's
most mature work, as well as troubling observations concerning the
church in the turbulent middle years of the twentieth century.
The opening essay is titled After Ten Years. Here
Bonhoeffer identifies with the evil of the times, and especially
the war. He speaks of the unreasonable situations which reasonable
people must face. He warns against those who are deceived by evil
that is disguised as good, and he cries out against misguided moral
fanatics and the slaves of tradition and rules.
In viewing the horrors of war, Bonhoeffer reminds us that what
we despise in others is never entirely absent from ourselves.{17} This warning against contempt for humanity
is very important in light of authors such as Ernest Hemingway,
Jean Paul Sartre, and Albert Camus, whose contempt for the war
turned into disillusion with humanity. This is a striking contrast
between several witnesses to the war who came to very different
conclusions. Bonhoeffer's conclusions were the direct result of a
personal relationship with Christ. The conclusions of Hemingway,
Sartre, and Camus were the pessimistic observations of those
without a final hope.
Bonhoeffer faced death daily for many years and came to some
bold conclusions concerning how believers might posture themselves
toward this ultimate event. He argued that one could experience the
miracle of life by facing death daily; life could actually be seen
as the gift of God that it is. It is we ourselves, and not our
outward circumstances, who make death potentially positive. Death
can be something voluntarily accepted.{18}
The final question posed in this opening essay is whether it is
possible for plain and simple men to prosper again after the war.{19} Bonhoeffer does not offer a clear solution,
which may be seen as an insight into the true horrors of the war,
as well as an open-ended question designed to illicit individual
involvement in the problem.
Long before movies like Schindler's List, Saving Private
Ryan, or The Thin Red Line, Bonhoeffer reported on the
atrocities of the war. Some of the letters discuss the brutality
and horrors of life in the prison camps, and one can certainly
ascertain the expectation of execution in many of his letters. The
thing that makes these letters so much more important than the
popular films is that the letters are undoubtedly the confessions
of one who is looking at the war as a Christian. Bonhoeffer was
able to empathize with the problems faced by Christians living in
such turbulent times. Bonhoeffer's significance is
difficult to assess completely and accurately, but two observations
may help as we come to an end of our examination of his work.{20} We must always bear in mind the time of his
writings. This explains much that we might at first not understand.
Finally, any Christian would do well to read the works of one who
gave his life in direct connection with his Christian convictions.
There have been many martyrs in this century, but few who so
vividly recorded the circumstances that lead to their martyrdom
with both theological astuteness and a vision for future
posterity.
Notes
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship,
trans. R.H. Fuller, rev. ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1960), 30.
- Ibid., 53.
- Ibid., 54.
- Ibid., 59.
- Ibid., 87.
- Ibid., 87.
- Ibid., 94.
- Ibid., 98.
- Ibid., 102.
- Ibid., 102.
- Ibid., 102.
- William Kuhns, In Pursuit of Dietrich Bonhoeffer
(Garden City, N.J.: Doubleday, Image Books, 1969), 130.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Ethics, trans. Neville Horton
Smith (New York: Macmillan, 1965), 19.
- Ibid., 20.
- Ibid., 38.
- Ibid., 40.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison,
ed. Eberhard Bethage, trans. Rehinald Fuller and others,
rev. ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1967).
- Ibid., 17.
- Ibid., 17.
- An excellent and more thorough consideration of
Bonhoeffer's importance can be found in Eberhard Bethge's
Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Another excellent book for those
interested in his life is the biography by Mary Bosanquet,
The Life and Death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. These books are
full of details about the personal life of Bonhoeffer and offer
great insights into his Christian life.
© 1999 Probe Ministries International
About the Author
Todd A. Kappelman is a field associate with Probe Ministries. He is a
graduate of Dallas Baptist University (B.A. and M.A.B.S., religion and Greek),
and the University of Dallas (M.A., philosophy/humanities).
Currently he is pursuing a Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of Dallas.
He has served as assistant director of the Trinity Institute,
a study center devoted to Christian thought and inquiry.
He has been the managing editor of The Antithesis, a bi-monthly publication
devoted to the critique of foreign and independent film.
His central area of expertise is Continental philosophy (especially nineteenth
and twentieth century) and postmodern thought.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
Christianity.
In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
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1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100
Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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Updated: 14 July 2002
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