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Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the search for Christian freedom
Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the search for Christian freedom
Oct 26, 2024 10:23 PM

While imprisoned by the Nazis at Tegel military prison, and shortly after learning of the last failed attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler, Dietrich Bonhoeffer penned a short poem for his friend, Eberhard Bethge, titled “Stations on the Road to Freedom.”

e across the poem before, but in recently reading Eric Metaxas’ fine biography of the man, I was reminded of its power and potency in describing the essence of Christian freedom.It es all the pelling given its context, serving as a “distillation of his theology at the time,” as Metaxas describes it.

Though we must be careful to appreciate the time and place from which it sprung, it brings with it plenty of implications for the ways in which we order our lives and allegiances.Indeed, in his prodding toward obedience, discipline, and submission to God — features many would find contradictory or in opposition to freedom — Bonhoeffer’s embrace of this profound paradox dovetails quite nicely with Lord Acton’s famous notion of “defining liberty not as the power of doing what we like, but the right of being able to do what we ought.”

DISCIPLINE

If you set out to seek freedom, then learn above all things to govern your soul and your senses,

for fear that your passions and longings may lead you away from the path you should follow.

Chaste be your mind and your body, and both in subjection, obediently, steadfastly seeking the aim set before them;

only through discipline may a man learn to be free.

ACTION

Daring to do what is right, not what fancy may tell you,

valiantly grasping occasions, not cravenly doubting –

es only through deeds, not through thoughts taking wing.

Faint not nor fear, but go out to the storm and the action,

trusting in God mandment you faithfully follow;

freedom, exultant, will e your spirit with joy.

SUFFERING

A change e indeed.

Your hands, so strong and active, are bound; in helplessness now you see your action is ended;

you sigh in relief, your mitting to stronger hands; so now you may rest contented.

Only for one blissful moment could you draw near to touch freedom;

then, that it might be perfected in glory, you gave it to God.

DEATH

Come now, thou greatest of feasts on the journey to freedom eternal;

death, cast aside all the burdensome chains, and demolish the walls of our temporal body, the walls of our souls that are blinded,

so that at last we may see that which here remains hidden.

Freedom, how long we have sought thee in discipline, action, and suffering;

dying, we now may behold thee revealed in the Lord.

For more, watch Eric Metaxas’s 2012 keynote at Acton University onDietrich Bonhoeffer and the Christian social witness.

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