What is it about?

Dietrich Bonhoeffer encountered Aryan nationalism and racism with sacrificial grace and Christian opposition. One of the first and the very few to speak out against the Nazis and to follow through with active resistance, he resisted Nazi intrusions into the life of the German church and the impact of Nazi bigotry on Jews and others excluded from full participation in German society. During his time in New York City at Union Theological Seminary and at Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, he witnessed the impact of racism in the United States. Identifying with the oppressed in both the U.S. and Germany, he said the church of Christ lives in all people, beyond all national, political, social, and racial boundaries.

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Why is it important?

Offering an ecumenical vision of the Christian church that greatly transcends the Christian nationalism of National Socialism, Bonhoeffer moved from academic and pastoral ministry to direct action against Nazi oppression by smuggling Jews out of Germany, using ecumenical contexts to spread word about resistance to the Nazis, and seeking the overthrow of Nazi leadership. Self-sacrificing in his devotion to public activism, he saw that God's love for the world and incarnational Christian spirituality could be expressed through political action.

Perspectives

Bonhoeffer expressed faith through prayer and justice, not in powerful religious organizations, and sought a future form of the church that might be unexpected-- nonreligious in a conventional sense, but able to convert and transform. He consistently sacrificed his own safety to resist the oppression of the German people, while expressing the unity of faith and action in the world through sacrificial grace.

Dr Robert Boak Slocum
University of Kentucky

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This page is a summary of: Thrown into God’s Arms: The Sacrificial Grace of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Journal of Ecumenical Studies, January 2023, Project Muse,
DOI: 10.1353/ecu.2023.0001.
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