Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Lesson 7:  Letters and Papers from Prison (Part 4): Conclusions and Consequences

Lesson 7: Letters and Papers from Prison (Part 4): Conclusions and Consequences

Throughout his writings, Bonhoeffer repeatedly contends the Church must commit herself to living in complete honesty and by the standards found in the scriptures if she is to save the world from self-destruction. Only in this way can she avoid the sickening religiosity that ignores the real dangers in a modern evil culture. In the […]

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Lesson 6: Letters and Papers from Prison (Part 3): The Real Meaning of Christian Faith

Lesson 6: Letters and Papers from Prison (Part 3): The Real Meaning of Christian Faith

The second chapter in Bonhoeffer’s proposed book on religionless Christianity in our world come of age examines the real meaning of faith. He repeatedly claims this demands the absolute honesty of repentance that admits our failures and accepts divine guidance as well as an accurate reading of the Biblical message. The latter acknowledges that the […]

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Lesson 5: Letters and Papers from Prison (Part 2): Stocktaking of Christianity

Lesson 5: Letters and Papers from Prison (Part 2): Stocktaking of Christianity

I thought the best way to report what Bonhoeffer meant by the need for a religionless Christianity in this world come of age would to be to use an outline he himself provides. At one point in the Letters, he reports he wants to write one more book, no longer than 100 pages with three […]

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Lesson 4: Letters and Papers from Prison: Observations

Lesson 4: Letters and Papers from Prison: Observations

My primary goal when I started rereading the Letters was to examine what Bonhoeffer means about the need for a religionless Christianity in our world come of age. He repeatedly claims that this demands brutal honesty in reading the scriptures and analyzing our society. It’s obvious he thought his two years in prison forced him […]

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Lesson 3: Ethics

Lesson 3: Ethics

Bonhoeffer’s arrest prevented him from finishing what was meant to be his greatest work. Back in seminary, I rather hurriedly read what we have of the Ethics as an academic study and was unimpressed. I reread it in the past few days as a historical statement and found much to ponder and admire. In fact, […]

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Lesson 2: The Cost of Discipleship

Lesson 2: The Cost of Discipleship

I first read The Cost of Discipleship my first year in divinity school when a classmate, Gene Outka, who went on to teach ethics at Yale, recommended it as something every Lutheran pastor should read. It was good advice. Bonhoeffer laments that the Church has made Luther’s justification by grace through faith into a doctrine […]

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Lesson 1: Life

Lesson 1: Life

When Paul suggested we do something on a Lutheran theologian and mentioned Dietrich Bonhoeffer, my ears went up. A number of my other friends have named him recently when discussing how the church should relate to government activities they think are unchristian. Lutherans have special problems, because Luther’s two kingdoms theory makes obeying the ruling authorities […]

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