Bonhoeffer's Reception
of Luther. Michael P. DeJonge. Oxford
University Press, 2017.
Bonhoeffer was a Lutheran. Say it again. Bonhoeffer was a
Lutheran. Although his long-standing association with his contemporary Karl
Barth has sometimes led us to believe Bonhoeffer was more Barthian than
Lutheran, and although evangelicals (that bastard Eric Metaxas chief among
them) like to claim him for their cause, the truth is simple: Bonhoeffer was a
Lutheran.
DeJonge opens his book with simple statistics. Bonhoeffer
quotes Martin Luther more than any other theologian--870 times, and usually
approvingly. Karl Barth, by contrast, gets fewer than 300 citations in
Bonhoeffer, and theologians like Augustine, Aquinas, Kierkegaard, and Calvin
each get only a few dozen citations.
Frequency alone fails to establish influence, so DeJonge
offers a more nuanced and compelling thesis. "Bonhoeffer thought his
theology was Lutheran, and he was justified in thinking so" (7). DeJonge
believes this thesis has interpretive value, because taking Bonhoeffer's
Lutheranism "seriously generates better interpretations of his texts in
their context than readings that do not" (7). It especially facilitates
coherently interpreting what are otherwise especially difficult problems in
Bonhoeffer scholarship.
Offering this thesis, DeJonge then unpacks first how
Bonhoeffer understood himself as a Lutheran, and second what it might mean for
Bonhoeffer to consider himself a Lutheran. Much hinges on this method. It
offers itself as a compelling model for interpreting any theological figure.
Consider first how the author gives
him or herself, their own self-understanding. Engage their self-understanding
charitably. Then consider more broadly whether their self-understanding
comports with a broader historic understanding of the tradition. Or, as DeJonge
once more summarizes it, "Bonhoeffer understood his own thinking to be
Lutheran (in a narrow, insider sense of Lutheran), and he was justified in that
(in a broader, outsider sense of Lutheran)" (10).
Failing to notice the Lutheran character of Bonhoeffer's
thinking results in a variety of interpretive problems. For DeJonge, chief
among these is the inattention to the connection between Bonhoeffer's theology
and Luther's two-kingdoms thinking. Similarly, attending to the influence of
Luther on Bonhoeffer highlights Bonhoeffer's academic phase focus on "the
church as the present Christ or, what is the same, the place where the gospel
is preached and heard" (14).
The book opens with a consideration of Luther Renaissance
scholars' impact on Bonhoeffer, with particular attention to Karl Holl.
Although Holl is not widely known today, he is recognized as the initiator of
the Luther Renaissance. Bonhoeffer's close engagement with Holl illustrates how
early and deep Luther is in Bonhoeffer's thinking. Intriguingly, Bonhoeffer
even offers a correction to Holl's hyper-focus on conscience, and instead
grounds justification in Christ rather than the conscience, a move that has
significantly influenced our theology of justification yet today.
Christology takes center stage in the book as a whole.
DeJonge maps the influence of Luther on Bonhoeffer's single-agent Christology.
"The heartbeat of Lutheran christology is the christological 'is'--this
man is God--which translates into the exclusive agency of the person of
Christ... if there is anything about the Lutheran tradition that Bonhoeffer
sees with [special] clarity and pursues with abandon, it is the exclusive
christological agency of the person of Christ" (67).
Then, from "Christ is" DeJonge notes that
Bonhoeffer moves to "Christ is present" and finally to "Christ
is present as Word, sacrament, and church-community." Sound Lutheran? You
bet!
Something I particularly love about DeJonge's approach: he
has a way of situating Bonhoeffer, placing him within a particular tradition
and historical moment while also reading him generously. Having outlined a
variety of theologies of two-kingdoms that arose in the 20th century, he says
of Bonhoeffer that his "two kingdoms thinking is of course of a particular
type... from early through the late period of his thinking, Bonhoeffer thinks
in terms of the two kingdoms, although his thinking adjusts, to borrow a phrase
from Ethics, in accord with
reality" (102-103). This is the kind of author and scholar you want to
spend time with, somebody who generously reads his subject of inquiry, and even
enlists that author in the interpretation of his own development.
In the late portion of the book, DeJonge takes time to
disambiguate Bonhoeffer from the Anabaptist theological lens, especially the
work of John Howard Yoder and Stanley Hauerwas. Such disambiguation is
essential, because the association of Bonhoeffer with Anabaptism "leads to
a number of misinterpretations. " So he takes time in the Anabaptist
chapter to demonstrate Bonhoeffer's non-commitments to nonviolence over-against
the misinterpretations of Hauerwas and Yoder (143).
A book on Bonhoeffer necessarily must include notes on
resistance. "There has been consensus for several decades among political
historians of the early modern period that European theories of resistance
found their first articulation in the Lutheran tradition" (198). So even
if much has been and needs to be said about Luther's influence on Hitler and
the system Bonhoeffer was resisting, failures to note the connection between
the Lutheran articulation of resistance and Bonhoeffer's commitment to
resistance result in a misinterpretation of the theological grounding of such
resistance.
For Bonhoeffer, as for Luther, an authentic understanding of
the doctrine of justification results in an abiding commitment to the vocation
of a Christian, which Bonhoeffer interprets as responsibility. DeJonge quotes
his World Alliance Lecture: "vocation is responsibility, and
responsibility is the whole response of the whole person to reality as a
whole" (249). Over-against a pseudo-Lutheranism that divides reality into
independent spheres, with Christ an authority over only some of those spheres,
DeJonge sees that Bonhoeffer in a deepening of Luther's key insight centers in
on this concept of responsibility (Stellvertretung).
Bonhoeffer is not just influenced by Luther. He also offers a "critique of
Lutheran according to what he considers its own best standards" (248). In
theology, there's really no better form of reception than that.
[review forthcoming in World & World: Theology for Christian Ministry]
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