Dietrich Bonhoeffer

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Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906 – 1945) was a German Lutheran theologian and pastor. He was also a participant in the resistance movement against Nazism. Bonhoeffer was involved in various schemes formulated by members of the German Military Intelligence Office to assassinate Adolf Hitler and in April 1943 was arrested, imprisoned and ultimately hanged in Flossenbuerg just before the end of the Second World War in Europe.

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Background

Bonhoeffer attended college in Tübingen, received his doctorate in theology from the University of Berlin and was ordained in the Lutheran church. He then spent a post-graduate year abroad studying at Union Theological Seminary in New York City, NY.

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Bonhoeffer's legacy

Dietrich Bonhoeffer is considered a martyr for his faith. In the mid-1990s, the German Government officially absolved him of any "crimes" he might have committed pursuant to the positive law of the National Socialist regime.[citation needed] The calendars of the Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America commemorate him on April 9, the date on which he was hanged in 1945. His books Ethics (1949) and Letters and Papers from Prison (1953) were published shortly after his death. The theological and political reasons behind his shift from Christian pacifism, which he espoused in the mid-1930s, to participation in planning the assassination of Hitler are much debated. Bonhoeffer's last writings, as found in his fragmentary Letters and Papers from Prison, continue to intrigue theologians, and there has been a considerable amount of scholarly discussion about his theological development. In his well-known letters Bonhoeffer introduced the concepts of "religionless Christianity" and "a world come of age", which in turn became incorporated into both John A. T. Robinson’s controversial 1963 book Honest to God and the "Death of God" movement. Bonhoeffer is one of the few theologians embraced by both liberal and conservative Christians, but each group interprets his prison theology differently.[citation needed] Conservatives see those writings as simply another expression of his earlier traditional theology, although in an updated language. Liberals interpret his prison writings as a radical new expression of a much more secular understanding of the basic Christian message. [citations needed] Before his death Bonhoeffer himself frequently commented on the radical nature of his late thought. His last words were: "This is the end - for me the beginning of life."

Bonhoeffer is one of the ten twentieth-century martyrs from across the world who are depicted in statues above the Great West Door of Westminster Abbey, London.

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Selected works

Further reading

See also

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