[1] On April 9, 1945, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Protestant theologian
and pastor of the Confessing Church, was condemned to death on
charges of high treason by an SS special court and hanged in
Flossenbürg concentration camp. He was one of the millions of
victims of Nazi barbarity, one who had conciously taken sides with
the persecuted and was willing to share their fate. He could have
had it otherwise.
[2] When Dietrich Bonhoeffer was born on February 4, 1906 the
world still seemed to be in order. His childhood years fell in a
period which was later called "the good old days." Dietrich was the
sixth of eight children. His father, Karl Bonhoeffer, was a
renowned physician, director of the famous University clinic in
Berlin, his mother Paula, née von Hase, was a self-assured
woman with a critical mind and teaching qualifications. The family
in which Dietrich grew up was among the cultural élite of
the German Reich.
[3] Dietrich Bonhoeffer's childhood in the academic upper class
suburb of Berlin Grunewald was an intact one. Later he was to say
that his home had protected him for a long time from the darker
sides of life. But he also noted what he owned to his origins: the
feeling of having "a place in the world," the confidence of being
able to achieve something special and the awareness of being
responsible for what happens in the world.
When Dietrich was eight the First World War began. In Europe the
lights were going out, what had seemed to be a sound world was
coming unstuck, and it would never return to its old order.
Dietrich had come to terms with the death of a brother and face up
to crisis and conflicts of a changed world. He decided to study
theology. That is also noted in his school-leaving certificate
which he was given in 1923 with the best marks. There was one
exception: handwriting very bad!
[4] His decision was a matter of controversy in his enlightened
scholarly family. The Bonhoeffers kept aloof from a church where
the "cassocks hid a thousand years of mould." And the theology
student who hoped his studies would bring him an answer to the
"riddles of his life" remained an outsider in the conservative
German church of the 1920s. It was not until he encountered other
forms of church life and theological thought that he came closer to
what he was seeking: a Christian community in which the Gospel
takes a new social form. His guides to this "communion of saints" -
"Sanctorum Communio" was the title of Bonhoeffer's doctoral thesis
- were mainly the representatives of the Social Gospel in the
United States. I am convinced - as opposed to most of the
German Bonhoeffer scholars, but in accordance to old Bonhoeffer
friends like Eberhard Bethge, Albrecht Schönherr and Otto
Dudzus - that the decisive change in Bonhoeffer's theological
thinking took place during his studies at the Union Theological
Seminary in New York.
[5] From 1930 to 1931 the young scholar spent a study year at
Union Theological Seminary in New York. He was chilled by the
bourgeois white churchliness of conservative America. However, in
the base communities of the "other America" he found evidence of
the church he was searching for. In the United States it became
clear to Bonhoeffer that the Gospel surpassed the social and
national bounds in which the church in his own country was held.
The storefront churches and self-help centers of Harlem and the
ecumenical and cosmopolitan atmosphere of the seminary impressed
Bonhoeffer deeply. In the black churches of Harlem and the
settlement movement of the base communities he found the Gospel as
"good news for the poor" hand in hand with concrete social
commitment. He was impacted by the antecedents of the American
civil rights movement and the encounter with the representatives of
the Social Gospel who sought to think and practice the commands of
Christ in social and political categories. Conversation partners
and friends like Frank Fisher from Harlem, Paul and Marion Lehmann
from the base communities, and Reinhold Niebuhr, professor for
social ethics at the Union, gave a new direction to Bonhoeffer's
search for a concrete expression of "communion of saints" as
"Christ existing as community." The friendship with Jean Lasserre,
a French scholar at the Union Seminary, who confronted Bonhoeffer
with the commands of the "Sermon on the Mount," decisively changed
his life: "I believe I know that inwardly I shall be clear and
honest with myself only if I truly begin to take seriously the
Sermon on the Mount ... There just happen to be things that are
worth an uncompromising stand. And it seems to me that peace and
social justice, or Christ himself, are such things."
[6] From then on Dietrich Bonhoeffer was constantly to stress
that in the Christian communion national, racial and social
boundaries are abolished. He himself would step across these
barriers time and again. He transcended the conservative Lutheran
ethics which was still following the doctrine of the two kingdoms,
which assigns to the church the proclamation of the "pure Gospel"
of grace and leaves the world its "autonomy." Now he was to insist
that faith in Christ and discipleship has a political and a social
dimension. In Bonhoeffer's subsequent praxis, inspired by the ideas
of the Social Gospel, what he later called "the church for others"
became concretely visible. In summer 1932, being engaged in
political and social movements in Berlin, he said: "Consider what
is on earth. By that much will be decided today, whether we
Christians have enough strength to bear witness to the world that
we are no dreamers with our head in the clouds, that we do not let
things come and go as they are, that out faith is not the opium
which leaves us content in the middle of an unjust world. But that
precisely because we look to what is above we protest all the more
stubbornly and deliberately on this earth."
[7] When in 1933 the Protestant Church in Germany greeted the
brutal exclusion of entire social groups as the "restoration of
order" Bonhoeffer was a single voice speaking for the
victims. "The church has an unconditional obligation to the
victims of any ordering of society, even if they do not belong to
the Christian community." Intimations of the positions and efforts
of the American Civil Liberties Union, which engages on behalf of
politically and ethnically excluded citizens, here should not be
ignored. At the beginning of the Nazi terror Bonhoeffer wrote to
Reinhold Niebuhr that "a horrible cultural barbarity is threatening
so that we too here must immediately form a Civil Liberties Union."
And he added, "The way of the church is darker than almost ever
before."
II.
[8] In June 1931 Bonhoeffer returned to Berlin. In the
Reichstag elections of September 1930 the Nazis had climbed from 12
to 107 seats. Klaus Bonhoeffer had already written to his brother
in America: "They are flirting with Fascism. I am afraid that, if
this radical wave captures the educated classes, it will be all up
with this nation of poets and thinkers."
[9] On January 30, 1933, Hitler came to power. His followers
celebrated their victory with a torch-light parade through Berlin.
Soon millions of Germans would be reciting on every possible
opportunity: "Führer command, we follow!" At the same time,
war broke out within the country. On February 27 the Reichstag
burned down; the allegedly "Communist conspiracy" fit with Nazi
strategy all too well. In the very same night four thousand
Communist functionaries were arrested in accordance with previously
prepared lists; many of them were murdered in the SA cellars or
"shot while attempting to escape." The next day appeared the
"Emergency Decree for the Protection of the Nation and the State,"
which provided the "legal" basis for the incipient National
Socialist terror.
[10] At first it was directed almost exclusively against the
Left - and was applauded in the highest church circles. Under the
slogan "better Brown than Red," representatives of both Catholic
and Protestant churches welcomed the destruction of the labor
movement and also the persecution of all those who had always been
a thorn in the flesh especially of nationally minded Protestants:
democrats, liberals, pacifists, socialists. They included
also the critical Jewish intelligentsia, indeed all of "Jewry that
dominates the press, the stock exchange, the theatre et cetera," as
the Rhineland General Superintendent wrote in a letter to his
vicars. And the Berlin General Superintendent Otto Dibelius gave a
sermon on the occasion of the reopening of the Reichstag on March
21, 1933, in which he proclaimed: "If the state exercises its
office against those who undermine the foundation of state order,
above all against those who with corrosive and mean words destroy
marriage, cast scorn on faith and besmirch death for the
Fatherland, then may it exercise its office in the name of
God."
[11] Three weeks later Bonhoeffer spoke before a group of Berlin
pastors on "The Church and the Jewish Question." This talk was to
be the first and only reaction from within the Protestant church as
early as 1933 to the abolition of civil rights for Jewish citizens,
which began with the boycott of Jewish stores and the proscription
of Jewish civil servants, and which was to end in the gas chambers
of Auschwitz and Treblinka. The "Law on the Reconstruction of the
Civil Service," the so-called Aryan Paragraph, adopted in April
1933, was reason enough for Bonhoeffer to resist the state: "The
church has an unconditional obligation to the victims ..."
Moreover, the church has the possibility and the duty, "not just to
bandage the victims under the wheel, but to put a spoke in the
wheel itself." (Or, more exactly: the church has to throw itself
between the spokes of the wheel in order to stop it!) After
these words, Bonhoeffer continued his lecture to an almost empty
room. With his call for political resistance he remained alone in
his church.
[12] But things were to get much worse. On July 1933 church
elections took place in the Protestant church. Although there had
been an opposition election ballot, "Gospel and Church," 70 percent
of the vote went to the German Christians, who demanded for the
Germans "a racially appropriate Christianity," in keeping with the
"German spirit of Luther and heroic piety." The "German Christians"
occupied all key positions in the church and began to build "the
new church of Christ in the new state of Adolf Hitler." The first
step was the introduction of the Aryan Paragraph at the "Brown
Synod" in Wittenberg in September 1933, the exclusion of baptized
Jews out of the church. At that time Bonhoeffer preached: "We
must decide, we must discern between the spirits ... Come, you who
have been left alone, you who have lost the church, let us return
to Holy Scripture, let us go forth and seek the church together ...
Church, remain a church! Confess, confess, confess!"
[13] This commitment to Holy Scripture and to Jesus Christ as
the sole Lord of the church was to become the common concern of
many men and women in the Protestant church who were now
increasingly seeking to resist the heresies of the German
Christians and the "Reich Bishop" by the grace of Hitler. They
joined forces in the Confessing Church, which in April 1934 with
the "Barmen Theological Declaration" sent a clear signal for
resistance against the attempt of the state to bring the church
into line. At the same time, however, its representatives declared
that they were concerned "only with the church," and did not
represent political opposition to the Hitler regime. On the
contrary: "We stand by our state in obedience and love." Dietrich
Bonhoeffer was unable to accept this attitude: "This is the
capitulation of the church to politics!" And little later he wrote:
"There must be in the end a break with theological backing for
restraint against state action. Open your mouth for the dumb - who
in the church is still aware that in such times this is the least
demand that the Bible makes?" And ten years later, Bonhoeffer wrote
in a draft for a church confession of guilt -which was made by the
German churches only a half century later: "The church was silent
where it had to cry out... the church confesses that it had
witnessed the lawless application of brutal force, the physical and
spiritual suffering of countless innocent people, oppression,
hatred and murder, and that it had not raised its voice on behalf
of the victims and has not found a way to hasten to their aid. It
is guilty of the death of the weakest and most defenseless brothers
(and sisters!) of Jesus Christ."
III.
[13] No person is born as a hero, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer was no
exception When he felt increasingly isolated even in the Confessing
Church with his demand for political resistance against the Hitler
regime, he went "into the desert for a time," but followed the
continuation of the church struggle with burning interest from his
foreign pastoral office in London. He had taken leave of his
students with the words: "We must now endure in silence, and set
the firebrand of truth to all four corners of the proud German
Christian palace, so that one day the whole structure may
collapse."
[14] The time Dietrich Bonhoeffer spent in London gave him the
opportunity not only to think through his political and theological
position, but also to clear his mind about himself - about his
readiness to endanger himself, about the extent of his power to
resist, and about the cost of renouncing all security of his
privileged social background.
[15] When in 1935 he was recalled by the Confessing Church, the
positions in the church struggle had been clarified. A small,
determined section of the Confessing Church resolved to establish
an emergency church under the leadership of a "Council of Brethren"
in opposition to the Reich church government, which was now
composed of less radical German Christians, moderate
representatives of the Confessing Church and "Neutrals." Bonhoeffer
was asked to take on the directorship of the preacher's seminary of
the "confessing" Confessing Church, which, as a new and exciting
experience, began to train its own clergy. This period initiated a
phase in Dietrich Bonhoeffer's life in which, as he later said, an
attempt was made "to live something like a holy life." The idea was
not a new one, for the "communion of saints," the particular form
of Christian community of living in the world had always interested
him. Now, however, the issue had become a radical one; for the
traditional form of existence of this community, the church, had
been destroyed where he was to live - and he was to help to
discover and to build up new forms. But how was this to be
done without those who wanted this new church embodying it
themselves, making it visible through their entire human
existence?
[16] Bonhoeffer expected no less than this of himself, but also
from the candidates of the preacher's seminary in Finkenwalde. For
them he was an extraordinary seminary director. He shared
everything he had with his students, lived and worked, discussed
and celebrated with them, trying out an alternative style of life
and work in preparing the young theologians for their insecure
existence as pastors in an underground church. Two of his best
known books were written in this situation; Life Together and Cost
of Discipleship.
[17] In this discipleship Bonhoeffer demanded unconditional
commitment, discipline and a refusal to compromise, in contrast to
the segment of the moderate part of the Confessing Church which was
meanwhile collaborating with the Reich church in a committee set up
by the government. He soon found himself under fire once again
within the church. When he was denounced by the Lutheran
Oberkonsistorialrat and later bishop Theodor Heckel as a pacifist
and enemy of the state and was banned from teaching in all German
theological faculties, there was no protest at all from church
circles. Only the small church of the Council of Brethren remained
loyal to him. In1937 the governing institutions of the Confessing
Church were destroyed, many of its leaders imprisoned, its
preacher's seminaries shut down by the Gestapo, but its work in
underground activities.
[18] In this situation the most sensible policy once again
seemed to be retreat. American friends organized a teaching
contract and United States visa for the highly endangered
Bonhoeffer. In June 1939 Dietrich became once more the guest of the
Union Theological Seminary in New York, where he spent the most
difficult and agonizing weeks of his life. He was unable to come to
terms with having left the young theologians, whom he had so often
exhorted to resist, alone in their struggle. Many of them were
already in prison, and church leadership was not coming to their
aid. Bonhoeffer could not remain in exile; he wanted to
"participate in the fate of Germany" side by side with his friends.
"I must live through this difficult period of our national history
with the Christian people of Germany. I will have no right to
participate in the reconstruction of Christian life in Germany
after the war if I do not share the trials of this time with my
people. My brethren in the Confessing Synod wanted me to go. They
may have been right in urging me to do so; but I was wrong in
going. Such a decision each person must make for him- or herself.
Christians in Germany will 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 our civilization. I know which of these
alternatives I have to choose. But I cannot make the choice in
security." Bonhoeffer took one of the last ships back before war
broke out. In July 1939 he returned to Berlin.
IV.
[19] Back in Germany, Bonhoeffer had to face a further difficult
decision. His brother-in-law Hans von Dohnanyi, lawyer in the
political section of the Military Intelligence Service, the
so-called Abwehr and an adamant opponent of Hitler, asked him to
take on the job of department courier, thus reinforcing the
resistance group within the Abwehr. He was to use his ecumenical
contacts to communicate secret information about the plans and aims
of the German resistance movement to Western countries. That was
high treason with the aim of killing Hitler and toppling the Nazi
regime. But in public it looked like collaboration: Bonhoeffer had
become an "agent of grace."
[20] The straightforward and uncompromising Bonhoeffer did not
find this an easy role. At all events it was not the "holy life" he
had once sought to lead. For a long time he had considered that the
appropriate form of resistance for him was a "resistance to the
utmost," with non-violent methods which he wanted to learn from
Mahatma Gandhi, with whom he corresponded in his London time. Now
things were quite different. The confessor became a conspirator,
who took part in planning an assassination attempt on Hitler and
the leadership of the Nazi regime, and who, in his last and
uncompleted book Ethics thought through his new role. The
discipleship of Jesus, he asserted, can in extraordinary situations
also mean becoming guilty for the love of one's neighbor. "Jesus is
not concerned with the proclamation and realization of new ethical
ideals; he is not concerned with himself being good. He is
concerned solely with love for the real man (and woman), and for
that reason he is able to enter into the fellowship of guilt of
human beings and to take their burden upon himself... If any person
tries to escape guilt in responsibility, he or she cuts him- or
herself from the redeeming mystery of Christ's bearing guilt
without sin and has no share in the divine justification which lies
upon this event. He or she sets his or her personal innocence above
their responsibility for human beings and is blind to the more
irredeemable guilt which he or she incurs precisely in this."
[21] Bonhoeffer wanted to impress on his church that the
neutrality in political conflicts which it liked to claim ceased to
be neutrality when it de facto tolerated existing power and
prevailing injustice because it did not fight against these
actively, even with force. It had become clear for him that
his own ethical rigor no longer worked; that it was too much bound
up with his own personal search for perfection. Now he faced the
question of which was the greater guilt, that of tolerating
Hitler's dictatorship or that of removing it. In particular, anyone
who was not ready to kill Hitler was guilty of mass murder, whether
he liked it or not. Bonhoeffer left no doubt that any use of force
is and remains guilt. But he insisted that there can be situations
in which a Christian must become guilty out of the love to
suffering human beings.
[22] The church might not have been struggling with this problem
at the same time, but that was not true of a large number of
Christians who found themselves involved into resistance to the
Hitler régime. Hans Scholl, a medical student in Munich, was
studying the attitude of mediaeval theologians to tyrannicide in a
monastery library in Bavaria. The "White Rose" student resistance
group had so far written and distributed pamphlets against the
Hitler régime. Now it sought contact with other resistance
groups and discussed the possibility of taking part in attempts at
an overthrow. Dietrich and Klaus Bonhoeffer acted as contacts. But
the meeting did not take place. The Munich group came to grief in a
pamphlet campaign; its members were condemned to death after a
hasty trial. Even after the war there were chaplains and bishops
who dissociated themselves from commemorations of Hans and Sophie
Scholl and their friends, saying the church had nothing to do with
enemies of the state and revolutionaries.
[23] Christians in resistance had to face all by themselves the
question what guilt they were ready to shoulder. "As good
Christians we had to become criminal," said Gertrud Staewen from
the Berlin discussion group around Karl Barth. She was part of a
resistance group which helped Berlin Jews to disappear - with
forged passes and stolen food coupons. Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a
regular resource person and contact with the Confessing
Church. Hardly anyone had posed as consistently as Bonhoeffer
the question of incurring guilt in borderline political situations
and had then reflected on it. He did so on behalf of many
Christians in resistance who had been abandoned by their church.
But he was also to be the only German Protestant theologian who
would later play a role in the ecumenical movement, in the
liberation churches and movements of South Africa and Latin
America.
[24] Dietrich Bonhoeffer understood his participation in the
preparations for an assassination attempt as a voluntary assumption
of guilt to prevent further crimes and violence from being
committed in the name of the German people in the occupied areas
and in the concentration and extermination camps. In his essay
"After Ten Years" written on Christmas 1942, he wrote: "The great
masquerade of evil has played havoc with all our ethical concepts.
For evil to appear disguised as light, charity, historical
necessity, or social justice is quite bewildering to anyone brought
up on our traditional ethical concepts ... Who stands fast? Only
the person whose final standard is not his or her reason,
principles, conscience, freedom or virtue, but who is ready to
sacrifice all this when called to obedient and responsible action
in faith and in mexclusive allegiance to God - the responsible
person, who tries to make his or her whole life an answer to the
question and call of God."
[25] Bonhoeffer stood by this decision to the last. When the
news of the failure of the assassination attempt reached him in his
prison cell in Tegel, on July 21 1944 he wrote these words in a
letter to his friend Eberhard Bethge: "During the last years I have
come to know and understand more and more the profound
this-worldliness of Christianity ...I thought that I could acquire
faith by trying to live a holy life, or something like that. But I
discovered later, and I am still discovering right up to this
moment, that it is only by living completely in this world that one
learns to have faith."
[26] For a long time the Protestant Church in Germany found it
impossible to understand Bonhoeffer's attitude. As late as 1953 the
Bavarian Lutheran bishop Meiser refused to take part in a memorial
service for Bonhoeffer in Flossenbürg on the grounds that he
had been a member of the political resistance and not a church
martyr for the sake of Christian faith. It was a sign of rethinking
and of hope that fifty years after his death a great church
commemoration took place in Flossenbürg and in all parts of
Germany. However, it will be more important that the remembrance of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer in our church is bound up with the will to
stand by the victims and to thrust a spoke in the wheel wherever
human rights are forgotten.
V.
[27] One of the keywords in Bonhoeffer's fragment of "Ethics" is
responsibility, with which he describes the form of Christian
existence in the midst of the world in its conflicts and agonies.
This attitude however, was not first of all grounded on social
ethics, but rather on Christology.
[28] "Who are you, Christ?" asked Bonhoeffer at the beginning of
his Christology lecture in 1933 at the Theological Faculty of the
University in Berlin. He would pose it anew and even more
precisely in a letter to Eberhard Bethge from his prison cell in
Tegel on April 30, 1944: "Who is Christ for us today?" In reply he
would offer no simple, generalized answers, but instead raise
liberating and disquieting questions, opening horizons and
empowering a praxis that was inspired by the thought that Christ is
"the person for others" and church "is only church when it is there
for others." In his Christology lecture Bonhoeffer stressed, that
the self understanding and praxis of Christians and the "communion
of saints" depends on Christ the Crucified. Therefore he took a
clear stand against the fatal euphoria and the godless pride of the
German Protestant "national revival." Here was a denial of the
stance of the Reichskirche that rejected the revelation of God in
the crucified Christ in favor of "natural "revelations of God in a
people, race, nation, blood and soil. Because responsibility is
grounded in Christ, the crucified, the "person for others," it
cannot be misused for an imperialistic "God with us" ideology.
Bonhoeffer's Christology lectures ended with a penetrating
reference that the center of Christian faith and community is the
humiliated and crucified Christ, whom the church must follow into
humility. His hope was that this perspective from below would
immunize the church against all temptations to pervert the cross of
Jesus Christ into a cross of triumph.
[29] "Who are you, Christ?" Bonhoeffer asked this question ever
anew and concretely. Because of the hiddeness of God in the
Crucified Christ, discipleship of Christ became the only visible
sign of his presence. The act of believing became an act of living,
and the question about who Christ is came to be connected with the
question about where he here and now was concretely to be found. In
the moment of greatest existential affliction and haunted by the
question whether the safety of American exile was his proper place,
Bonhoeffer wrote in his journal: "Have I, after all, avoided the
place where He is for me?"
[30] The place where Christ would be present for Bonhoeffer was
in the political conspiracy, in the perilous praxis of a piety that
voluntarily assumed guilt, in the encounter with fellow human
beings who had been forsaken by the world in the prison of Tegel
and in the hell of the extermination camps. Bonhoeffer both
personally and theologically achieved the shift in the perspective
from top to bottom that he demanded of his church: "It remains an
experience of incomparable value, that we have learned to see the
great events of world history for once from below, from the
perspective of those who are excluded, suspected, maltreated,
powerless, oppressed and scorned, in short the sufferers."
[31] In this experience Dietrich Bonhoeffer crossed a final
bridge. The pastor and theologian, who had often spoken of the
church as the "communion of saints" and the "communion of brethren"
(let's hope he included the sisters in his mind!) expanded this
concept in the emergency community in Tegel prison. In a profoundly
moving poem "Night Voices in Tegel" he describes how a fellow
inmate was led away to execution in the early hours of the morning.
The scene ends with the words: "I go with you, brother, to that
place, and I hear your last words: Brother, when my sun has waned,
live on for me." Brethren are now to be found not only in the
communion of saints, brethren are all who share in suffering and
persecution and in the desperate hope to survive. "Brother" now
also means the non-Christian, the Jewish, the atheist the socialist
(and let me now add the Muslim) brother and sister. This conception
of brother- and sisterhood transcends the border of nation, class,
race and also of religion.
[32] At the end of his life Bonhoeffer's understanding of
Christian faith is secular, religionless, committed to solidarity.
It exists from the "prayer and action of the righteous in human
life" and through a border-crossing ecumenical movement from below.
In this movement it becomes clear that, like Christ himself, his
disciple is the "man and woman for others" and that the Church is
only the Church when it is there for others. This Church is not
remote from the struggle for a just, habitable world for all human
beings. In following the humiliated Christ it must share in the
messianic solidarity with the afflicted and the outcast. A church
that, like the German church, through silence and collaboration
must share the blame for the devastation of two world wars and for
the systematic murder of the weakest and most defenseless brothers
and sisters of Jesus Christ can only act in His name if it offers
resistance today to the merciless exclusion of entire regions of
the world and of ever larger groups of people from the centers of
power, profit and consumption. In the Christ who suffered in
solidarity with his humiliated brothers and sisters lies the
deepest roots for the secular and responsible existence of those
women and men who follow Him, and who - within and outside the
church and perhaps even beyond every institutionalized church -
will be both the salt of the earth and a subversive element, in
praying and doing what is right in human life.