[1] "Who are you, Christ?" In her paper, "A Spoke in the Wheel,"
Dr. Renate Wind has presented a compelling glimpse of a Christian
whose probing of that question, that prayer, over the course of
some of the most perilous years in human history can provide
insight for us in our own potentially "perilous praxis." Building
on Dr. Wind's paper, I would like to suggest specific means by
which I see Bonhoeffer's resistance to evil having taken shape for
his own time, in concrete strategies stimulating new conversation
and action today.[1] Note: I am treating
Bonhoeffer's response primarily to political evil, not to more
specifically interpersonal or intrapsychic dynamics that might be
experienced as destructive; by "political evil" I understand those
systems, institutions, or events (crystallized here quite
concretely in Hitler's Nazi regime from 1933 on) whose actions or
effects violate the revealed and discerned will of God for
creation. [2]
Strategies of Resistance
[2] As Dr. Wind notes, Bonhoeffer's resistance is grounded not
in theories of social ethics, but in Christology - meaning not
disembodied Christological abstractions, but a living connection to
Jesus Christ, the One who for Bonhoeffer is the very unity of God
and world. Bonhoeffer's becoming a Christian in 1931 or thereabouts
was truly a life-changing event, as he discovered in Jesus Christ a
love that broke through his elitism and loneliness and drew him
into the heart of the Scriptures, the church, and the world.
[3]His conversion to Christ
slowly led him out of the relative safety of privilege and into the
love of brothers and sisters in increasingly radical and risky
discipleship. And his experience of prayer and community provided a
touchstone of reality, centered in Scripture, discernment, and
friendship, in a frightening, disorienting world of lies,
suspicion, brutality, and hatred. For Bonhoeffer, "discipleship is
joy"[4] because it draws the
disciple into intimate connection with Christ, the very reality of
God and the deepest reality of the world[5]. The Christian can thus
avoid the twin pitfalls of despair, rage and cynicism, on the one
hand, or pious withdrawal from the world on the other.
[3] I have drawn from Bonhoeffer's biography ten strategies I see
him using in resisting the public evil manifested in Hitler's
totalitarian Nazi dictatorship, war, and "final solution." I have
laid out these strategies in a somewhat chronological order, not
ranked according to importance. Some are more obvious means of
resistance in his context, while others may seem
counter-intuitive.
[4] 1) Use of the gifts of privilege. This
includes, at perhaps the most primal level of all, the emotional
perks flowing from birth as an upper-class male in his society: the
capacity to be cared for, being "worth" investing in, the
preconscious assumption of one's own inherent value nourishing a
strong, healthy self and voice and body and life to be risked and
offered. Bonhoeffer's privilege made possible not only "the good
life" of fine food and clothing, spacious housing (with the
requisite staff of servants), leisure and music and books and
vacations, but also a first-class theological education, extensive
international travel and contacts, and a host of connections within
government, culture, and church - all resources that proved crucial
to his later role in the conspiracy. Of course the gifts of
privilege are helpful for resistance to evil only if risked, i.e.,
used, as such, rather than being seen as means of "buying" one's
escape, in some form or another, from the necessity of such risk.
But certainly it is clear that Bonhoeffer did use the gifts of his
birth and station both consciously and unconsciously in the service
of his resistance. And it is clear that the necessity of just such
use of his status was itself a central value of this very
upbringing.
[5] Along with his trust in Jesus Christ (#3), I believe
Bonhoeffer's use of the gifts of privilege ranks among the most
significant - and radical - of these ten strategies for a North
American audience. This way of life challenges us in two
directions. First, it gives pause to those, including many
Christians, who instinctively insist that remedial or healthy
self-care is "bad" and "selfish" since the true Christian stance is
always one of "selflessness" - this is manifestly untrue of
Bonhoeffer's life as a whole. Simultaneously, however, he
challenges the apparently rampant and ever more crippling belief
within the current U.S. political climate that resources once
attained are most defiantly not meant to be poured out for others,
but to be accumulated and tightly guarded, if necessary by force of
arms. In contrast to both positions, Bonhoeffer models a life
deeply and consistently nourished, on many levels and without
apology, and at the same time convinced that the fullness of life
takes place not in hoarding these gifts but in their becoming a
resource radically available for challenging injustice and
fostering authentic human life. One may well take issue with his
example as to how this balance is best reached - e.g., an ascetic
he certainly was not - but that such a balance is essential to
healthy Christian life often needs defense from both
directions.
[6] 2) Intellectual analysis: tools of cultural,
historical, theological, sociological analysis focused around
concrete Christian community and its actual, authentic life in the
world. Bonhoeffer shows that "academic" need not mean "irrelevant";
he used his academic gifts as powerful resources for engaging the
real problems and challenges of church and world. Even his early
writings, unlike the later texts not written in response to
concrete political developments, proved crucial in providing an
analytic foundation from which he could later identify the
distortions of authentic human community Hitler represented and
enacted. And his Ethics and the Letters and Papers from Prison
theological letters show the ongoing fruitfulness to the end of
such analytical tools well, creatively, and incisively used.
Bonhoeffer famously demonstrates the power of a life in which
intellectual analysis is constantly in dialogue with both prayer
and political engagement; perhaps this comes to fruition most
profoundly in the practice of discernment central to Bonhoeffer's
spirituality[6]. For discernment, a
practice deeply rooted in prayer, encompasses the most incisive
capacities of the mind as well, in light of all the complexity of
one's contemporary circumstances calling for response.
[7] 3) Trust in Jesus Christ. Bonhoeffer's
becoming a Christian was clearly a watershed experience in his
life: the gift of transforming intimacy with God and fellow
Christians, growing capacity for deep prayerful listening, radical
exclusivity of allegiance to Christ in the face of all the world's
(or his own life's or church's) idols, commitment to the church in
all its concrete struggles in the real world.... in short, for him,
a fundamental re-orientation to reality. This includes, of course,
the practice of personal prayer, one's own heart and deepest
conception of the Real. Prayer in and of itself is the very heart
of resistance, not "prior" to real resistance or something
ancillary, a selfish luxury. It is what grounds a person in Reality
itself, namely (for Bonhoeffer) Jesus Christ so intimately and
powerfully present to each person, and simultaneously redeeming the
whole world. Without prayer, resistance really is futile (!); but
prayer itself is resistance and opens a different world shaped by
God. The practices of Christian life, nourishing that deepest
commitment, provide the means by which authentic resistance, and an
alternate vision of reality, can ever be sustained over the long
haul. Thus the foremost strategy of Bonhoeffer's resistance to evil
is surely - most undramatically and yet transformingly - the
practice of daily prayer, Scripture reading, community worship, and
confession by which he and those in his closest circles stayed
close to a very different Reality than the one proclaimed in Nazi
pulpits, Nazi newspapers, Nazi newsreels. These practices of faith
nourish the profound levels of discernment, vision, hope, and
courage that make truly effective resistance
possible.[7]
[8] 4) Public regional, national, international
ecclesial leadership. This strategy is in some ways the most
obvious; this is the sort of thing we readily think of when we
consider the necessity of resisting evil in the world, and it is
Bonhoeffer's public leadership that first brought him into
prominence and gave his writings their audience. From his national
radio address the day after Hitler's rise to power, through
countless sermons and church speeches, to leadership in the
institutional resistance that became the Confessing Church, and to
international and ecumenical advocacy for peace and truth and the
urgency of the Gospel, Bonhoeffer consistently and courageously
spoke out. As insistently as he could, he attempted to rally others
to stand with him in urging the church to take seriously its
authentic nature and responsibilities. The three roles he urged in
April 1933 for the church in the face of an unjust state,
highlighted in Dr. Wind's lecture and specifically in the title of
both her talk and her biography of Bonhoeffer, culminate in the
call to the church to become, itself, "a spoke in the wheel" of
injustice. Already in 1933 Bonhoeffer urged the church to civil
disobedience. And, however unthinkable such a possibility appeared
to most of his contemporaries, this still stands as the great
untested possibility: what might have happened if a critical mass
of others had been able to hear, with him, the call that made such
radical disobedience a liberating step of true discipleship? He
gives us courage to hear the urgent divine call at the heart of our
own times as well, and if necessary to take steps that feel risky
and radical in order to be faithful to thechurch and to the One who
creates it. And this cannot evade public responsibility: action in
correspondence with reality, in the real world.
[9] 5) Withdrawal to regroup. From 1933-35
Bonhoeffer withdrew from Germany to serve as pastor to a
congregation in London. Karl Barth criticized this decision, just
at the point the Confessing Church was coming into being and
needing strong leadership. During those years Bonhoeffer continued
to read and cultivated ties with Mohandas Gandhi, as well as
developing the network of international and ecumenical alliances
that both grounded him in a reality beyond Nazi Germany and
provided contacts essential to the later resistance against Hitler.
Were these years a form of escapism? Or a strategic form of
resistance? I tend to take the latter view in Bonhoeffer's case
but, regardless, I believe it important to highlight the
significance of strategic withdrawal within a life or campaign of
resistance. Discernment itself, that essential process of
clarification of vocation and the particular leading of God in
complex situations, can at times be nearly impossible without such
space to reflect. In his periodic retreats to Ruth von
Kleist-Retzow's estate as well, Bonhoeffer reminds us that stepping
back to rest, to re-group, to ponder the lay of the land and one's
actual resources, gifts, and vocation, may be as essential to
resistance as the public moments, the courageous speeches and
pivotal turning points that result. A similar pivotal withdrawal as
in London - though with a much quicker turn-around back to Germany
- took place in June 1939 in New York as, reflecting on the
situation in Germany and his own place within the beleaguered
Confessing community, Bonhoeffer realized despite imminent war that
he needed to return, a discernment that eventually drew him into
the resistance itself. Just as in the time in England which both
equipped him for and allowed him to recognize his call to the
seminary leadership of Finkenwalde, so too this later withdrawal
proved extraordinarily clarifying of Bonhoeffer's true vocation at
a decisive moment.
[10] 6) Reclaiming of monasticism, as a personal
and communal spiritual strengthening for vocation. In Bonhoeffer's
Finkenwalde, a common life of prayer shaped by the Word encompassed
current events and the complexity of pastoral practice in the real,
political world, as well as personal depths and interpersonal life.
In addition to an ordered rhythm of prayer, study, meals, and play
together, this life also included the practice of confession as an
act of mutual self-disclosure, friendship, and accountability. Here
one moves into difficult, radical truth-telling about one's life,
to learn the contours of one's own blind spots and capitulations,
and to experience the incomparable gift of trust and the profound
liberation of truth-telling within human and divine
friendship.[8] Ultimately, Bonhoeffer
teaches us, we will simply not be able truly to tell the truth
about society/church if we can't face and confess shameful aspects
of our own selves; it's all of a piece. And such confession itself
takes place only within relationships grounded securely in the
living Word and love of God.
[11] 7) Action to rescue Jews (Operation 7). Along
with speaking out as fully as possible, the rescue of Jews from
Nazi terror, usually at tremendous personal risk, has of course
come to be seen the paradigmatic resistance to evil on the part of
righteous Germans during WWII. Bonhoeffer did participate in such
action - his involvement in the Abwehr-orchestrated operation to
smuggle several Christian Jews into Switzerland is well documented
- but on the whole his resistance activity was not centered in
directly humanitarian work. Nevertheless it is clear that he sees
costly solidarity with those most oppressed as a key criterion of
the church's (and his own) faithfulness; becoming a "person for
others," a "church for others," is of the utmost
importance.[9] In fact, he comes to see,
it is in joining those who suffer, leaving positions of privileged
distance and bearing the same risks and dangers as the most
vulnerable, that one finds the "place" from which reality is best
viewed.[10] If, ultimately for
Christians, reality is manifested most clearly in Jesus Christ,
then such solidarity is precisely what draws a person closest to
the Crucified.
[12] 8) Conspiracy to overthrow Nazi government
and to assassinate Hitler: discernment, responsibility, risk,
guilt. As problematic as this phase of his resistance is for many
Christians to this day, nevertheless with it Bonhoeffer raises
unavoidable questions about the place of guilt within authentic
Christian vocation in an immeasurably complex and ambiguous world.
In a situation where no option was guilt-free, this willingness to
move into actual political action also meant the willingness to
incur guilt: to act in ways of love even if that meant one's own
hands got dirty. As a Lutheran he knows we're never "pure" anyway.
Maintaining personal innocence is not the point of Christian
discernment; effective and responsible action within history is.
So, within the extraordinary situation of inevitable sin,
Bonhoeffer discerns which option is God's call.[11] This does not "justify"
the use of violence, which is always a grave offense before God and
makes a person truly guilty. Yet the mandate to "obedient [i.e.,
called by God alone] and responsible [i.e., potentially effective,
not suicidal or destructive] action"[12] is
for him the ultimate act of unconditional trust in a profoundly
this-worldly God. It also provides an example of an authentically
Lutheran model of holiness, grounded not in personal purity but in
faithful discernment and action.
[13] 9) Friendship, love, gratitude, poetry,
music, prayer: Strengthening friendship and family bonds is itself
resistance to all forms of evil bent on separating us from the
sheer goodness of life and creation. Like the divine love tasted
and soaked up in prayer, the experience of human love ushers us
into a different reality than that overshadowed by rage, fear, or
despair. In prison Bonhoeffer's capacity for human love, and for
prayer as a lifeline of reality, deepens into profound and
heartfelt letters and poetry -- the agony of imprisonment within a
world so rich with friendship, love, and the created world -- and
an overarching gratitude able to encompass everything within the
mercy of God[13]. In a beautiful essay
from shortly before his imprisonment, he even suggests gratitude as
a primary category for discernment itself:
That for which I can thank
God is good. That for which I cannot thank God is evil. And the
determination whether I can thank God for something or not is
discerned in Jesus Christ and his Word. Jesus Christ is the
boundary of gratitude. Jesus Christ is also the fullness of
gratitude; in him gratitude knows no bounds. It encompasses all
gifts of the created world. It embraces even pain and suffering. It
penetrates the deepest darkness until it has found within it the
love of God in Jesus Christ.... Gratitude is even able to encompass
past sin and to say yes to it, because in it God's grace is
revealed--O felix culpa (Romans 6:17). [14]
[14] 10) Martyrdom: the ultimate fruit of the
view from below. As noted above, all of these strategies of
Bonhoeffer's resistance to evil are rooted not in asceticism, some
heroic desire for self-sacrifice, but in the ever-incarnate love at
the heart of his profoundly Lutheran spirituality of the cross: the
desire to be with Jesus Christ wherever he is, and to follow him
wherever he leads, simply for the sake of living with him and all
those he loves. If that union with Christ and action on behalf of
the "least of these" brothers and sisters leads a person also into
death, then such martyrdom becomes the ultimate "strategy" of
resistance to evil, as in fact Bonhoeffer's own legacy has borne
powerful fruit for Christians in situations of injustice around the
world. The blood of Christian martyrs really is "seed of the
church" (Tertullian).
[15] One final note: an attempt like this to tease apart strategies
of resistance, as if each were somehow merely a functional tool
separate from the others and from the unique person, circumstances,
and God calling them all forth, inevitably distorts the very nature
of discipleship itself. For of course Christian discipleship is not
the application of disembodied strategies but a whole human life in
which, in the case of Bonhoeffer, all of these strategies, and
others I haven't thought of, come together in the concrete gifts,
resources, personality, psyche, limitations, and blind spots of a
particular human being attempting to follow Jesus Christ within
particular communities in a given place in history. His
intellectual gifts shape his public leadership; his rooting in
family and friendships and social location shape his experience of
Jesus Christ; his capacity for personal confession shapes his
participation in the conspiracy - and vice versa, and so on. For
each of us as well, in our given communities, within our
circumstances and limits, the discernment of our concrete, ongoing
vocation will be as complex and multifaceted as Bonhoeffer's.
Despite (or even more profoundly because of) his limits, he
inspires us with the unfolding of a joyful, mature, and spiritually
free Christian life in one of the most brutal periods in human
history. He gives us insight into particular tools helpful to us as
well for discipleship within a public sphere increasingly -
ominously - marked by greed, arrogance, deceit, cynicism, and
xenophobia. And ultimately he points us beyond himself to the One
who desires our joy, our maturity, our spiritual freedom as well in
courageous response to the needs of this period of history in which
we live. Who are you, Christ? It's a good question.
© August 2003
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 3, Issue 8
[1] This text began as a response to
Dr. Wind's March 31, 2003, lecture entitled, "A Spoke in the Wheel"
(also printed in this issue). In that response, I used the
structuring device of seven concentric "circles of resistance" I
saw in Bonhoeffer's life. Centering in prayer, these circles of
resistance expanded to encompass friendships, family, close
Christian community, the church, and the world come of age. In
April I then revised this material for presentations to clergy and
lay leaders of the Montana Synod of the ELCA. In expanding this
material into a full-length lecture - this time building on my own
interpretive presentation of the Bonhoeffer biography - I revised
it into these ten "strategies." The present piece is therefore
closer to the Montana lecture, and its primarily reflective (rather
than critical/academic) genre reflects this. I assume basic
familiarity with Bonhoeffer's story and writings here.
[2] As part of his lifelong suspicion
of general principles, Bonhoeffer rejected attempts to categorize
"good" and "evil" in some absolute or universally-applicable way.
Rather than knowledge of good and evil (the serpent's temptation),
he insisted at the very outset of his Ethics that what is to be
sought is the will of God in the concrete situation of
responsibility. Thus a central theme of his life and resistance
(and of this essay) is that of mature Christian discernment.
[3] Cf. Bonhoeffer, "Christus,
die Wirklichkeit, und das Gute," in Ethik, ed. Ilse Toedt et al.
(Munich: Christian Kaiser Verlag, 1992), 31ff. (Ethics, trans.
Neville Horton Smith (New York: Touchstone/Macmillan, 1955),
186ff.)
[4] Bonhoeffer, Discipleship (DBWE
volume 4), ed. Geffrey B. Kelly and John D. Godsey, trans. Barbara
Green and Reinhard Krauss (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001),
40.
[5] Ethik 40 (Ethics 193).
[6] I have written on the place of
discernment in Bonhoeffer's spirituality in "Probing the Will of
God: Bonhoeffer and Discernment," Dialog 41/1 (Spring 2002):
42-9.
[7] For more on Bonhoeffer's spiritual
practices, particularly as these nourished his resistance, see the
newly published study by Geffrey B. Kelly and F. Burton Nelson, The
Cost of Moral Leadership: The Spirituality of Dietrich Bonhoeffer
(Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003). Of course, as this volume's
title makes clear, Bonhoeffer's spirituality (unlike some uses of
this term) is not limited to prayer practices. Indeed, all ten of
the strategies outlined here are dimensions of a life whose inner
and outer coherence lies in its self-understanding as discipleship
taking seriously the public as well as private implications of
faith in Jesus Christ.
[8] See the chapter on confession in
Life Together (DBWE volume 5), ed. Geffrey B. Kelly, trans. Daniel
W. Bloesch and James H. Burtness (Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1996), 108-118.
[9] Letters and Papers from Prison
(LPP), new greatly enlarged edition, ed. Eberhard Bethge (New York:
Macmillan, 1971), 381f.
[10] "The View from Below," published
with "After Ten Years," LPP 17.
[11] In several sections of his Ethics
Bonhoeffer explores these questions. See the extended treatment
titled, "The Structure of the Responsible Life" (Ethics 220-50), in
which Bonhoeffer treats such matters as discernment of reality, the
"boundary" or "extraordinary" situation, guilt, and freedom. In
German cf. Ethik 256-89.
[12] Here I am citing, and expanding,
Renate Wind's phrase in her
[13] His letters, particularly those
to his parents, his fiancée Maria von Wedemeyer, and his
best friend Eberhard Bethge, are a profound testimony to this
capacity for friendship, love, and gratitude. In addition to LPP,
see also the volume of letters to and from Maria, gathered in Love
Letters from Cell 92: The Correspondence between Dietrich
Bonhoeffer and Maria von Wedemeyer 1943-1945, ed. Ruth-Alice von
Bismarck and Ulrich Kabitz, trans. John Brownjohn (Nashville:
Abingdon Press, 1992.
[14] "On the Gratitude of Christians,"
Konspiration und Haft 1940-1945 (DBW 16), ed. Joergen Glenthoej,
Ulrich Kabitz and Wolf Kroetke (Munich: Christian Kaiser Verlag,
1996), 491, forthcoming translation. This volume, which I have had
the privilege of translating (DBWE 16, Conspiracy and Imprisonment
1940-1945, will be published by Fortress Press in 2004 or
2005).