Last night, we watched the 2003 documentary Bonhoeffer. I needed to watch it for Systematic Theology class on Thursday, and I wanted us to watch something other than the Court TV kinds of shows that have consumed my spouse lately. I found it riveting, although it wasn't unfamiliar material to me. Let me collect some thoughts that might not have cohered into a focused essay:
--I wrote this Facebook post: "Watching a Bonhoeffer documentary for my Systematic Theology class, wondering about New Hampshire primary results, about past being prologue, about history not repeating but rhyming, -- and feeling really intrigued by this new seminary community that Bonhoeffer was creating before the Nazis shut it down. It's not new info to me, but feels newly pertinent."
--I know that I'm predisposed to focus on this topic, but I was surprised by how often Bonhoeffer thinks about how to create/protect community. I know, I know, he wrote a whole book called Life Together. It made me wonder what advice he would have to give us now as our communities seem to be torn into bloody tatters.
--Long ago, I read Life Together, but it wasn't what I expected or wanted. I should revisit it.
--I used to be very judgmental about the churches who tried to keep themselves safe by signing agreements with Hitler or by living in ways that deflected attention. I now have more sympathy for those impulses, that idea that if we can just survive, that is not something to discount. I don't get the idea that all of those churches/pastors/leaders were antisemitic, so much as I think they wanted to save their skins and live until the danger was past. I am not sure that all of those people knew what was going on, but I am no longer as sure of that.
--I had either forgotten or had never known that Bonhoeffer's group tried to kill Hitler more than once. I thought that there was a botched attempt, which exposed them all and sent them to concentration camps.
--Before they were arrested the family had devised a way of communicating with themselves in prison. They were allowed to have books, so the person sending a message would put a small dot under a letter every few pages. With these messages, they could keep track of what they were telling officials.
--They were tortured/interrogated, which Bonhoeffer's father said he feared more than death.
--I am also intrigued by the seminary that Bonhoeffer created. Did he do something radically different?
--I was struck by how much Bonhoeffer traveled, especially as war efforts amped up.
--I thought about my college years, in 1983 and 1984 where I first heard about Bonhoeffer. He seemed like one of the fathers of the Church, like Luther and Calvin, and it's sobering to realize that he hadn't been gone very long, 40 years, when I first heard about him.
--His theology seems much more severe, which makes sense, given what he was facing. My thoughts circle back to the question of evil, and how evil moves in the world. Those historic films of all the people cheering Hitler--so sobering, even when they're not unfamiliar.
--I'll be interested to see how we use Bonhoeffer's work in Systematic Theology. Much of the course focuses on Jurgen Moltmann, who my professor says is the most important theologian of the 20th century. Will the works speak to each other?
1 comment:
I hope you'll keep us posted on what happens in your Systematic Theology course. I've been thinking about Bonhoeffer too.
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