|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
If Protestants had saints, Dietrich Bonhoeffer martyred under
Hitler on April 9, 1945 just days before the Allies reached his
concentration camp would be one of the rst canonised. Not just his
unsought martyr s death, but his life s movement from privilege to
growing identi cation with the suffering, his courageous return
from the safety and beckoning success of the US to Germany, his
work with the Confessing Church and, more controversially, with the
underground resistance in the plot to assassinate Hitler, all argue
his case for canonisation. Bonhoeffer is among ten
twentieth-century martyrs above the Great West Door at Westminster
Cathedral, where their portraits often tell more about the artists
and their age than the saint and theirs, the movement of their
lives and the movements they belonged to or founded. This is
certainly true of Bonhoeffer and the Church of his anguished age.
This collection of essays is from Down -Under, for with the
exception of the paper by UK theologian Keith Clements, are all the
papers are by writers who live and work in the southern hemisphere.
They include former Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, South
African theologian, John de Gruchy, and a number of Australian
writers. These include papers by historian John Moses, and
theologians Gordon Preece, Brian Rosner, Bruce Barber, Max
Chamption and Neil Holm. Kevin Rudd writes in this volume that
Bonhoeffer is, without doubt, the man I admire most in the history
of the twentieth century. He was a man of faith. He was a man of
reason . . . He was never a nationalist, always an internationalist
. For tormented twenty- rst century humanity Bonhoeffer is still
one of our best guides to that new humanity being birthed by the
Spirit of Christ in the midst of those seeing from and suffering
below.
This collection of essays brings together various writers, biblical
scholars, academics, and athletes to examine sport and religion
|
|