Today we remember Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the anniversary of his death in 1945.
This bright, young Lutheran pastor was only twenty-four when he
participated in his first public protest against Nazism and the
complicity of the Christian churches in that regime's rise to power. He
was one of the leaders of the Confessing Church, a Protestant group that
resisted Hitler and the Nazi party. In 1935 he was the founder and dean
of a seminary at Finkenwald, Germany, which served that church body. It was there that he wrote his two most famous published works: Life Together and The Cost of Discipleship.
As the Nazi ring closed in upon him and the Confessing Church, he had
an opportunity for asylum in the United States, which he declined. He
was arrested and jailed in 1943, and from his cell in Berlin he helped
plan an assassination of Adolf Hitler. The assassination failed and
Bonhoeffer's involvement was discovered, and he was sent to Buchenwald
concentration camp. But his life was spared, for reasons we do not know,
and he was transferred to Schoenberg Prison. There he served as
chaplain to fellow inmates until on a Sunday in 1945, immediately
following divine services, he was summoned by the guards and taken by
automobile to Flossenburg Prison, where he was summarily hanged. That
was on April 9. Bonhoeffer was thirty-nine years old. The crumbling
German Reich formally surrendered twenty-eight days later.
Read the Wikipedia article here.
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