Thursday, March 29, 2012

Bonhoeffer's 1933 Christology Lectures: Liberal and Dialectical Theology on the Way to Discipleship


            The 1933 summer semester at the University of Berlin opened with a massive bonfire of burning books.  Students and professors joined the SA in celebrating May 10 as national “will to live” day by tossing the works of Einstein, Freud, Rathenau, Heuss, and others into the flames; the same spectacle could be observed in university towns all across Germany.  Joseph Goebbels, Adolf Hitler’s Minister of Propaganda, concluded the anti-intellectual ceremony in Berlin by exclaiming, “Oh century, oh scholarship, it is a joy to be alive!”[1]  Among those whose name was ritualistically shouted by the crowd as his book went up in flames was Heinrich Heine.  A century earlier he had written: “When they burn books, they will ultimately also burn people.”[2]
            Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945) was a junior lecturer at the University of Berlin that summer, and he offered a lecture series on Christology.  He considered the course his most demanding and difficult because, as his biographer Eberhard Bethge explains, “he had to bring together all of his thoughts, statements, and experiments and test their validity and foundation.”[3]  Bonhoeffer was now at the high point of his academic career, and the series on Christology forced him to articulate succinctly this aspect of his theology.  However, the course was not carried out in theological isolation.  The stirring events around the rise and rule of Hitler and Nazism were a constant combatant against the core of Bonhoeffer’s being and beliefs.  At one point during the semester, Bonhoeffer chose to cancel a lecture in order to organize and prepare leaflets for church elections.  He led a group of students and German Evangelical church sympathizers in forming the Young Reformation movement to act against the rising influence of the so-called German Christians in church leadership.  The church election was largely rigged in favor of the German Christians, who were swept into power in July of 1933.[4]
            In the midst of these early tumultuous months of Hitler’s rule, Bonhoeffer presents an original and cohesive Christology.  The Christology lectures certainly build and work from concepts developed in earlier works, like his dissertation Sanctorum Communio and his habilitation Act and Being, but they also offer a clear way forward for Bonhoeffer’s emerging theology of discipleship.  Bonhoeffer addresses the central question “who is Jesus Christ” in the lectures.  In doing so, he provides insights that, as was noted by Bethge above, work to bring together all of his experimental thoughts and ideas.
Two sources specifically force Bonhoeffer into the creative work of theological construction: liberal theology and its nemesis dialectical theology both exert a strong influence on Bonhoeffer’s development.  The Christology lectures afford the opportunity to examine how successfully Bonhoeffer appropriated the two divergent theological traditions.  Liberal theology, espoused by his eminent teacher and mentor Adolf von Harnack, relied solely on the science of historical study to discover the human Jesus of Nazareth.  Theologically, however, Bonhoeffer was much more drawn to the emerging work of dialectical theology and its commitment to revelation, represented by Karl Barth.  But Bonhoeffer was never so critical of liberal theology as to dismiss its insights.  Instead, he works, especially in the Christology lectures, to coherently incorporate liberal theology into dialectical theology.  The result, this paper argues, are critical Christological formulations that serve to frame Bonhoeffer’s larger development of a theology of discipleship.  This theology of discipleship acts as both a summary of Bonhoeffer’s driving question, “who is Jesus Christ,” and it provides a compelling way to help formulate a contemporary theological construction of discipleship.[5]
            The paper will proceed in three phases.  First, it will address the historically decisive divide between the liberal theology of Harnack and the dialectical theology of Barth in order to show how Bonhoeffer seeks to provide a critical but fair incorporation of liberal into dialectical theology.  Second, it will show how this move of incorporation propels his construction of a “positive” Christology in the lectures.  Finally, the paper will argue that this positive Christology in turn provides an important framework for Bonhoeffer’s emerging theology of discipleship.

(Excerpt from Winter 2012 seminar paper)

[1] See Eberhard Bethge, Bonhoeffer: A Biography, rev. ed. (Minneapolis: Fortress: 2000), 279-80 and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Berlin: 1932-1933, vol. 12 of Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works, English edition, ed. Larry L. Rasmussen (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2009), 4.  Subsequent references to the English edition of Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works will be abbreviated as DBWE.

[2] Bonhoeffer, DBWE 12, 4.

[3] Bethge, Bonhoeffer, 219.
[4] See Bethge, Bonhoeffer, 293-95.
[5] This paper is part of a larger historical and constructive theological project that offers the development of a theology of discipleship as a key hermeneutic in the life and thought of Bonhoeffer.