Bonhoeffer: Religionsloses Christentum (Religionless Christianity)

Chaitanya Jyothi Museum Opening, 2000

RAMANAM
In the Name of The Father, and of The Son and of The Holy Spirit, Amen.

Countrymen,

ORBIS NON SUFFICIT
SOLUS DEUS SUFFICIT

By Dietrich Bonhoeffer:

The thing that keeps coming back to me, is what is Christianity, and indeed what is Christ for us today? The time when men could be told everything by means of words, whether theological or simply pious, is over, and so is the time of inwardness and conscience, which is to say the time of religion as such. We are proceeding towards a time of no religion at all; men as they are now simply cannot be religious any more. Even those who honestly describe themselves as “religious” do not in the least act up to it, and so when they say “religious” they evidently mean something quite different.

Our whole 1900 year old Christian preaching and theology has always been a patter – perhaps a true patter – of religion. But if one day it becomes apparent that this a priori “premise” simply does not exist, but was an historical and temporary form of human self expression; i.e., we reach the stage of being radically without religion — and I think more or less the case already, else how is it, for instance that this war (WWII), unlike any of those before it, is not calling for any “religious” reaction? — what does it mean for “Christianity”

It means that the linchpin is removed from the whole structure of our Christianity to date, and the only people left for us to light on in the way of “religion” are a few “last survivals of the age of chivalry” or else one or two who are intellectually dishonest. Would they be the chosen few? Is it on this dubious group and none other that we are to pounce, in fervor, pique, or indignation, in order to sell them the goods we have to offer? Are we to fall upon one or two unhappy people in their weakest moment and force upon them a sort of religious coercion?

If we do not want to do this, if we had finally put down the western pattern of Christianity as a mere preliminary stage to doing without religion altogether, what situation would result for us, for the church? How can Christ become the Lord of even those with no religion? If religion is no more than the garment of Christianity — and even though that garment had very different aspects at different period — then what is religionless Christianity? What is the significance of a Church in a religionless world? How do we speak of God without religion, i.e. without the temporally influenced presuppositions of metaphysic, inwardness, and so on? In what way are we the Eklesia, those who are called forth, not conceiving of ourselves as specially favoured, but as wholly belonging to this world? Then Christ is no longer an object of worship, but something quite different, indeed and in truth the Lord of the world.

The Pauline question whether circumcision is a condition of justification is today, I consider, the question whether religion is a condition of salvation. Freedom from circumcision is at the same time freedom from religion. I often ask myself why a Christian instinct frequently draws me more to the religionless than to the religious, by which I mean not with any intention of evangelizing them, but rather, I might almost say in brotherhood. While I often shrink with religious people from speaking of God by name — because that Name somehow seems to me here not to ring true, and I strike myself as rather dishonest (it is especially bad when others start talking in religious jargon; then I dry up completely and feel somehow oppressed and ill at ease) — with people who have no religion I am able to speak of God quite openly and as it were naturally.

Religious people speak of God when human perception is (often just from laziness) at an end, or human resources fail; it is really always the Deus ex machina they call to their aid, either for the so called solving of insoluble problems or as support in human failures — always, that is to say, helping out human weakness or on the borders of human existence. Of necessity, that can only go on until men can, by their own strength push those borders a little further, so that God becomes superfluous as a Deus ex machina. I have come to be doubtful even about talking of “borders of human existence.” It always seems to me that in talking thus we are only seeking frantically to make room for God.

I should like to speak of God not on the borders of life but at its centre, therefore not in death but in his life. On the borders it seems to me better to hold our peace and leave the problem unsolved. Belief in the Resurrection is not the solution of the problem. The Church stands not where the human powers give out, on the borders, but in the centre of the village. That is the way it is in the Old Testament and in this sense we still read the New Testament far too little on the basis of the Old. April 30th, 1944

This statement comes from the prison letters of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the great German Theologian imprisoned for his connection with a plot on Hitler’s life. In 1945, by special order of Himmler, he was hung at Flossenburg just before Third United States Army, LTG George S. Patton, Jr., Commanding, liberated the prison.

Highlight 1: “The Pauline question whether circumcision is a condition of justification is today, I consider, the question whether religion is a condition of salvation. Freedom from circumcision is at the same time freedom from religion.”

Highlight 2: “The Church stands not where the human powers give out, on the borders, but in the centre of the village.”

Update 1: Honoring COL Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg and the others.

Update 2: From Power LineScience and Scientism.

AUM NAMAH SHIVAYA

A Young Dieterich Bonhoeffer
A Young Dieterich Bonhoeffer

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