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 Christian History, April 28, 2000
Dietrich's Friend Eberhard
By Elesha Coffman, assistant editor of CHRISTIAN HISTORY
Just over a month
ago, on March 18, theologian and biographer Eberhard Bethge died at age 90.
Most of what we know about Dietrich Bonhoeffer comes from Bethge's books, one
of which was recently re-released in revised form. Most of what we know about
Bethge is that he wrote about Bonhoefferall six of my Web searches on Bethge's
name turned up only bylines.
A few more details on Bethge's life are available. He was born
in Warchau, near Magdeburg, in 1909. He attended several universities, receiving
a Doctor of Divinity degree, before attending the secret Finkenwalde Seminary
where Bonhoeffer taught the doctrines of Germany's Confessing (anti-Nazi) Church.
He became Bonhoeffer's close friend and confidant, and he also married Bonhoeffer's
niece, Renate.
Though a member of the Resistance, Bethge was drafted to serve
in the German army during World War II. He was later arrested, along with dozens
of other resisters, after the failed attempt to kill Adolf Hitler on July 20,
1944. After the war he spent several years as pastor for the same German-speaking
congregation in England that Bonhoeffer had served in 1933-35. He also held
various academic posts and lectureships, including stints at Harvard Divinity
School, Chicago Theological Seminary, and Union Seminary in New York. He continued
to give lectures until a year before his death.
Bethge is best known as the author of the definitive biography
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Man of Vision, Man of Courage. (A new version, Dietrich
Bonhoeffer: A Biography, has just been released by editor Victoria J. Barnett,
who corrected some translation errors and added material from the German editionnotably
on Bonhoeffer's childhoodthat had never appeared in English.) Bethge also
collected and edited Bonhoeffer's Letters and Papers from Prison (most
of the letters were addressed to him) and the unfinished effort Bonhoeffer considered
his main life's work, Ethics. More recently, Bethge edited Friendship
and Resistance: Essays on Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
In 1991 Bethge wrote an article for Christian History titled
"My Friend Dietrich." Reflecting on his former companion's work, he admits that
"the language, concepts, and thought paradigms of this man are a half century
old and older.
We find in him no answers to many of our most pressing questions."
Yet even after 45 years, Bethge still discovered new insights in his friend's
words:
"I am truly familiar with Bonhoeffer's letters to me from Tegel
[prison]. However, in some places, whether from instinct or fear, I had perhaps
long overlooked things."
His letter on July 21, 1944, the day after the failed uprising,
is perhaps my favorite. [Bonhoeffer had learned through a radio broadcast that
Hitler had survived the assassination attempt.] It contains a kind of account
by Bonhoeffer about his lifewhich was to end by impending execution, an act
of revenge by Hitler meant to be a death of disgrace. I had never really pondered
what Bonhoeffer wrote there: 'For this reason I thankfully and peacefully reflect
on things past and things present.' For a long time I
overlooked the words, 'and things present'! This 'things present' was, of course,
the failure of that uprising the day before. 'Things present' meant the shattering
of all hope for himself, for the church, and for Germany. It meant the gallows,
in shame. Why then did he write, 'I thankfully and peacefully reflect on
things present'?
"Because only when the July 20 assassination attempt failed
was it revealed to all the world that Bonhoeffer and his friends, in any case,
did not stand on the side of the murdering Devil. They stood rather on the side
of the God-forsaken victims. As a German, Bonhoeffer had felt guilt-laden connections
to his nation's murder of the Jews. At last the terrible time of increasing
guilt was over. The time of complicity with the perpetrators had ended."
Bethge is survived by Renate, a son, and two daughters.
Elesha Coffman can be reached at cheditor@ChristianityToday.com.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
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