Dietrich Bonhoeffer
General
Teachings/Activities *
[Editors Note:
Dietrich Bonhoeffer has been celebrated by
some believers as a Christian hero who was martyred for his faith. There
are a number of books for sale about Bonhoeffer, including the popular
book "Hanged on a Twisted Cross" which hold him up as a true
Christian. His status as a Martyr of the
faith is not however supported by his own writing titled "Letters
and Papers from Prison". The
following is an excerpt from an examination of the life and beliefs of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer]
Original link
Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945) was a
neo-orthodox German theologian, pastor, preacher, radio broadcaster, and
prolific writer in the 1930s and early-1940s, during the rise, rule, and
downfall of Adolph Hitler. He was greatly fascinated with neo-orthodox
thought, theology, and terminology, and was greatly influenced by the
major theologian of neo-orthodoxy, Karl Barth (1886-1968). Bonhoeffer's
writings are credited with helping to father the "Death of God" theology
which was popularized by the Anglican Bishop John A.T. Robinson in the
decade of the1960s. Bonhoeffer was in reality a practical atheist and a
religious humanist who denied virtually every cardinal doctrine of the
historic Christian faith (Letters and Papers from Prison, ed.
Eberhard Bethge, New York: Macmillan Co., 1972, pp. 9-12).
Bonhoeffer readily acknowledged "the debt he owes to liberal theology."
Declaring that it was impossible to know the objective truth about
Christ's real nature and essence, Bonhoeffer proclaimed that God was dead.
Moreover, Bonhoeffer believed that the true Christian was the confessing
believer who totally immersed his life in the secular world, becoming a
secular Christian. Rejecting the objective unalterable moral standards of
the Bible, Bonhoeffer proclaimed a situational ethics -- that right and
wrong are determined solely by the "loving obligations of the moment" (Letters
and Papers from Prison, ed. Eberhard Bethge, New York: Macmillan
Co., 1972, pp. 9-12, 378; Ethics, pp. 38, 186; No Rusty
Swords, pp. 44-45).
- The son of a Berlin professor of psychiatry, Bonhoeffer studied
theology at Tubingen, Berlin and at Union Theological Seminary in New York
City. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Bonhoeffer, student chaplain and
lecturer at the University of Berlin, joined the anti-Nazi pastors in the
German "church struggle." In 1935, he was appointed head of the
Finkenwalde Confessing Church Seminary, which was closed by the government
in 1937. In 1939, Bonhoeffer rejected the possibility of a job in America,
safe from the impending European war. He was convinced that he had to face
the difficulties ahead with the Christians in Germany.
Back in Germany during World War II, Bonhoeffer was forbidden to preach or
to publish. Though claiming to be a disciple of Gandhi and his credo of
non-violence, Bonhoeffer worked as a double agent in the anti-Nazi
resistance movement and in the German military office, and eventually
joined the wartime conspiracy to assassinate Hitler. His arrest in 1943,
however, arose from his direct involvement in smuggling fourteen Jews to
Switzerland. He was hanged by the Nazis at Flossenburg on April 9, 1945.
Although only 39 when executed, Bonhoeffer left a rich legacy of books,
some of his best known being Sanctorum Communio, Act and Being, The
Cost of Discipleship, and Life Together, as well as
letters, papers, and notes published by his close friend and biographer,
Eberhard Bethge. These include Letters and Papers from Prison,
Ethics, and six volumes of collected writings (Dr. Ruth Zerner,
City University of New York, "Dietrich Bonhoeffer," Eerdmans'
Handbook To The History of Christianity, 1977, p. 603).
- Although Bonhoeffer presented his own strain of neo-orthodox
existentialism, many evangelicals have been taken in by his warm-hearted
piety and by his high sounding devotion to Christ and call to suffer for
His sake. His religious terminology may appear to be evangelical, but its
substance was existential. Yet, there are those today who continue to
present Dietrich Bonhoeffer as a genuine Christian hero (e.g.,
Don Matzat,
Chuck
Colson, and the editorial board of
Christianity Today). Grand Rapids Baptist College (GARBC
-- now Cornerstone College) scheduled a play in the
fall of 1991 which extolled Bonhoeffer's memory. And Dr.
John F. MacArthur,
Jr., has used quotes from Bonhoeffer to expound on the nature of true
Christian fellowship ("The Riches and Responsibilities of Fellowship,"
The Master's Current, Winter 1994, p. 2). All such accolades
to Bonhoeffer are clearly unwarranted.
- The following is a summary of beliefs and influence of Dietrich
Bonhoeffer as taken from some of the over 14 books and documents
attributed to him:
1. He believed that "God is
teaching us that we must live as men who can get along very well without
Him. The God who is with us is the God who forsakes us." Bonhoeffer also
believed that the concept of God as a "supreme Being, absolute in power
and goodness," was a "spurious conception of transcendence," and that
"God as a working hypothesis in morals, politics, and science ... should
be dropped, or as far as possible eliminated" (Letters and Papers
from Prison, S.C.M. Press edition, Great Britain: Fontana Books,
1953, pp. 122, 164, 360).
2. He believed that mankind had become of age and no longer needed
religion, which was only a deceptive garment of true faith; he suggested
the need for a "religionless Christianity." To Bonhoeffer, "the
Christian is identified not by his beliefs, but by actions, by his
participation in the suffering of God in the life of the world" (Letters
and Papers from Prison, S.C.M. Press edition, Great Britain:
Fontana Books, 1953, p. 163). Thus, Bonhoeffer's final writings have
given impulse to Marxist theologians sponsoring "liberation theology"
and to others wishing to promote a worldly social gospel.
3. He refused to discuss the origin of Christ, His relationship to the
Father, His two natures, or even the relationship of the two natures.
Bonhoeffer was adamant in his belief that it was impossible to know the
objective truth about the real essence of Christ's being-nature (Christ
the Center, pp. 30, 88, 100-101).
4. He questioned the Virgin Birth, and in reality denied it
(The Cost of Discipleship, p. 215).
5. He denied the deity of Christ; he advocated that "Jesus Christ Today"
is not a real person and being, but a "corporate presence" (Testimony
to Freedom, pp. 75-76; Christ the Center, p. 58).
6. He denied the sinlessness of Christ's human nature and further
questioned the sinlessness of His earthly behavior (Christ the
Center, pp. 108-109).
7. He believed that Christ exists in three "revelatory forms" --
as Word, as
sacrament, and as church. From asserting
that Christ is the church, he followed
that all persons in the church are
identical with Christ (Christ the Center, p. 58;
The Cost of Discipleship, p. 217). This amounts to pantheism!
8. He believed that Christianity is not exclusive, i.e., that Christ is
not the only way to God (Testimony to Freedom,
pp. 55-56).
9. He was a prominent figure in the early ecumenical movement, as
evidenced through his associations with the "World Alliance for
International Friendship" (a forerunner of the apostate World Council of
Churches [WCC]), Union Theological Seminary, and Visser 't Hooft (who
later became the first General Secretary of the WCC) (Testimony to
Freedom, pp. 22, 212, 568). Bonhoeffer also reached out to Roman
Catholics, prefiguring the broader ecumenism that blossomed after
Vatican II in the mid-1960s.
10. He was a practical evolutionist (No Rusty Swords, p.
143), and believed that the book of Genesis was scientifically naive and
full of myths (Creation and Fall: A Theological Interpretation of
Genesis 1-3).
11. He adhered to neo-orthodox theology and terminology concerning
salvation (Testimony to Freedom, p. 130), was a
sacramentalist (Life Together, p. 122; The Way to
Freedom, pp. 115, 153), believed in regenerational infant baptism
(Letters and Papers from Prison, Macmillan, pp. 142-143) as
well as adult
baptismal regeneration
(The Way to Freedom, p. 151), equated church membership
with salvation (The Way to Freedom, p. 93), and denied a
personal/individualistic salvation (Letters and Papers from
Prison, Macmillan, p. 156).
12. He placed little or no value on the Old Testament --"... the faith
of the Old Testament is not a religion of salvation" (Letters and
Papers from Prison, S.C.M. Press edition, Great Britain: Fontana
Books, 1953, p. 112).
13. He denied the verbal-plenary inspiration of Scripture, believing
that the Bible was only a "witness" to the Word of God and becomes the
Word of God only when it "speaks" to an individual; otherwise, it was
simply the word of man/men (Testimony to Freedom, pp. 9,
104; Sanctorum Communio, p. 161). To Bonhoeffer, the Bible
was meant "to be expounded as a witness, not as a book of wisdom, a
teaching book, a book of eternal truth" (No Rusty Swords,
p. 118). He also believed in the value of higher criticism/historical
criticism, which is a denial of the inerrancy and authenticity of the
Bible (Christ the Center, pp. 73-74).
14. He had no faith in the physical resurrection of Christ. Bonhoeffer
believed the "historicity" of the Resurrection was in "the realm of
ambiguity," and that it was one of the "mythological" elements of
Christianity that "must be interpreted in such a way as not to make
religion a pre-condition of faith." He also believed that "Belief in the
Resurrection is not the solution of the problem of death," and that such
things as miracles and the ascension of Christ were "mythological
conceptions" as well (Christ the Center, p. 112;
Letters and Papers from Prison, S.C.M. Press edition, Great
Britain: Fontana Books, 1953, pp. 93-94, 110).
- Dr. G. Archer Weniger declared, "If
there is wholesome food in a garbage can, then one can find some good
things in Bonhoeffer, but if it be dangerous to expect to find nourishment
in a garbage can, then Bonhoeffer must be totally rejected and repudiated
as blasphemy. It is worse than garbage" (FBF Information Bulletin,
May 1977, p. 12).
*
The material in this report was adapted in part from a
paper by Don Jasmin (Fundamentalist Digest, P.O. Box 2322,
Elkton, MD 21922-2322). See also the 9/13/93 and 9/18/95 issues of
Christian News (p. 21 and pp. 11-13, respectively), and the Oct-Dec
1991 Bibliotheca Sacra, pp. 399-408.]
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