Dietrich Bonhoeffer is an Enemy of Christ

Throughout my life as a Christian I would see Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s books, and books about him, in Christian bookstores. Everyone can easily observe how popular he is. He is considered one of the most popular teachers of our age, even among evangelicals.

Of particular interest for many was that he involved himself in an attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler and was hanged for it in 1945. Many are of the opinion that he is an example of what a Christian disciple should be and therefore his writings are of particular interest to them. Jesus said, “Put your sword back into its place; for all those who take up the sword shall perish by the sword” [Matthew 26:52]. His execution was not martyrdom but the fulfillment of what Jesus said would happen to anyone who takes up the sword and in that sense he should be remembered for his wrong understanding of what Jesus commands of His disciples.

I am deeply troubled by Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s teachings and his legacy and perplexed by the honorary attention that evangelical Christians give to him.

It is amazing to realize just how much Bonhoeffer has influenced Evangelical Christians, particularly regarding discipleship. Bonhoeffer’s book The Cost of Discipleship (First Touchstone Edition, 1995) is counted his most widely read book.

I am amazed that so many evangelicals love this man. I am amazed because when I thought I would have look at this man’s teaching I found within only half an hour that he advocated doctrines that are clearly against Evangelical Christianity. Some evangelicals are beginning to admit that this is the case. Nevertheless, his impact upon bible believing Christians has had lasting harmful effects. While some may ignore his denial of a literal creation, of the inerrancy of Scripture, and of personal conversion, they love what he has to say about the cost of discipleship.

Bonhoeffer is complicated in his arguments and this helps him to disguise his false position.

Jesus said to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees [Matt 16:6,11,12]. If there was ever anyone to whom we should apply Jesus’ warning, it is Bonhoeffer.  Sure enough, many men like Bonhoeffer have had a harmful influence upon Evangelical Christians, but few to the extent as Bonhoeffer. As his writing is academic, it is particularly his influence upon Evangelical Christian leaders that his errors have had the most impact, which unfortunately has necessarily impacted those under their ministry.

Of particular importance is the costly impact of his book The Cost of Discipleship, in which he advocates a works-orientated view of Jesus’ teaching that we must deny ourselves and take up our cross.

Underlying Bonhoeffer’s approach to discipleship is the fundamental denial of the conversion experience among Evagelical Christians. He loathed the idea that by faith in the gospel message a person could have a conversion experience that then made that person a disciple of Christ.

There is constantly repeated in The Cost of Discipleship a different way of being a disciple, in contrast to a conversion by faith in Jesus Christ. He contrasts ‘cheap grace’ with ‘costly grace’ and his maxim is ‘only he who believes is obedient, and only he who is obedient believes.’

Have a read of some quotes from his book and then I will endeavor to summarize Bonhoeffer’s teaching. One must carefully read Bonhoeffer. When you dig deeper into his meaning you are left with something our Lord did not intend for us to believe.

Some Quotes from Bonhoeffer’s The Cost of Discipleship

  • Cheap grace means grace as a doctrine, a principle, a system. It means forgiveness of sins proclaimed as a general truth, the love of God taught as the Christian “conception” of God. An intellectual assent to that idea is held to be of itself sufficient to secure remission of sins. [p.43]
  • Costly grace is the treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it a man will gladly go and sell all that he has. It is the pearl of great price to buy which the merchant will sell all his goods. It is the kingly rule of Christ, for whose sake a man will pluck out the eye which causes him to stumble; it is the call of Jesus Christ at which the disciple leaves his nets and follows him. Costly grace is the gospel which must be sought again and again, the gift which must be asked for, the door at which a man must knock. Such grace is costly because it calls us to follow, and it is grace because it calls us to follow Jesus Christ. It is costly because it costs a man his life, and it is grace because it gives a man the only true life. [p. 45]
  • The only man who has the right to say that he is justified by grace alone is the man who has left all to follow Christ. [p.51]
  • The word of cheap grace has been the ruin of more Christians than any commandment of works. [p. 55]
  • The response of the disciples is an act of obedience, not a confession of faith in Jesus. [p. 57]
  • It is only the call of Jesus which makes it a situation where faith is possible. [p. 63]
  • …only he who believes is obedient, and only he who is obedient believes. [p. 63]
  • For faith is only real when there is obedience, never without it, and faith only becomes faith in the act of obedience.  [p. 64]
  • In the one case faith is the condition of obedience, and in the other obedience the condition of faith. In exactly the same way in which obedience is called the consequence of faith, it must also be called the presupposition of faith. Only the obedient believe. [p. 64]
  • …we must boldly assert that the step of obedience must be taken before faith can be possible. Unless he obeys, a man cannot believe. [p. 66]
  • The gracious call of Jesus now becomes a stern command: Do this! Give up that! Leave the ship and come to me! When a man says he cannot obey the call of Jesus because he believes, or because he does not believe, Jesus says: “First obey, perform the external work, renounce your attachments, give up the obstacles which separate you from the will of God. Do not say you have not got faith. You will not have it so long as you persist in disobedience and refuse to take the first step. [p. 67]
  • No one wants to know about your faith or unbelief, your orders are to perform the act of obedience on the spot. Then you will find yourself in the situation where faith becomes possible and where faith exists in the true sense of the word. [p. 67]
  • The actual call of Jesus and the response of single-minded obedience have an irrevocable significance. By means of them Jesus calls people into an actual situation where faith is possible….it is only through actual obedience that a man can become liberated to believe. [p. 83]
  • If our exegesis is truly evangelical, we shall realise that we cannot identify ourselves altogether with those whom Jesus called, for they themselves are part and parcel of the Word of God in the Scriptures, and therefore part of the message….It would be a false exegesis if we tried to behave in our discipleship as though we were the immediate contempories of the men whom Jesus called….It is neither possible nor right for us to try to get behind the Word of the Scriptures to the events as they actually occurred. [p. 84]
  • We must not do violence to the Scriptures by interpreting them in terms of an abstract principle, even if that principle be a doctrine of grace. [p. 84]
  • Suffering, then, is the badge of true discipleship. [p. 91]

Bonhoeffer advocates a discipleship based upon a mystical call that creates a situation in which faith becomes possible. He says that we are not to obtain our own discipleship from the Word of God, not from a principle according to a doctrine of grace, but only through some unique experience of our own, as we are obedient to that call. In order to be counted a true disciple we must be obedient to our unique call. It is a perfection based upon a faith in response to circumstances in our lives, rather than a perfection based solely upon faith in Jesus. It is a perfection of our discipleship measured by how much we suffer. Consequently, any Christian who is not always experiencing suffering is left feeling less than a disciple. Paul the apostle knew the secret of living with and without suffering [Philippians 4:12,13] while Bonhoeffer only knows how to suffer.

In short, Bonhoeffer teaches that one is a Christian because of how good we practice our discipleship. He rejects a conversion that then becomes the only basis of being a disciple.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer is an enemy of Christ.

Paul the apostle did not preach that people should look to something in their lives that they should see as their unique call to faith as the means of becoming a disciple of Jesus. Paul preached the cross of Christ and that by ‘hearing with faith’ in what God had done publicly, as they lay hold of it by faith, they could then receive the Spirit, which is to become a disciple of Jesus [Galatians 3:1-5]. In the same text of Galatians, Paul then says that their actual discipleship, that follows conversion (i.e., receiving the Spirit), in which they experience God helping them with miracles and the provision of the Spirit, was also to be by the same means of ‘hearing with faith’ in what God had done in Jesus’ cross. Paul’s teaching is that our conversion and discipleship are solely determined by a ‘hearing with faith’ in the objective truth of Jesus Christ and Him crucified.

A Christian is someone who has obtained ‘the righteousness of faith’ or the ‘righteousness of God’ [Bible texts] because they have believed in God’s Word, in the objective truth that is in Jesus.

A Christian is not someone who finds a merely subjectively determined “status of discipleship” by their own particular response of faith to some specific situation that is in their life.

How you respond to an unbelieving spouse, a difficult occupation, a major financial decision, or any other sort of situation, does not result in Justification by faith, believing in Jesus does. It is this biblical faith in Jesus alone that results in conversion, which Bonhoeffer denied. Having obtained God’s objective declaration of justification, by faith, we then experience the subjective and permanent work of the Holy Spirit, Regeneration. It is a new birth that can never be taken away from us. A salvation based upon faith in God’s Word that we then live out in a discipleship that owes its very existence by the new reality of being saved. 

Our discipleship does not determine our salvation, rather, our salvation determines our discipleship.

In another work Bonhoeffer said, ‘It is not the religious act that makes the Christian, but participation in the sufferings of God in the secular life.’ He wrote this in his Letters and Papers from Prison.  He was contrasting mere high church ritual to what he saw as a matter of practice upon the field of this world. Yes, it is true that religious acts do not make us Christians, but neither does participation in suffering.

So where does Bonhoeffer go wrong with Jesus’ teaching on taking up our cross and how has this adversely impacted Evangelical Christians?

Matthew 16:24 Then Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me.”

Bonhoeffer is fundamentally and seriously wrong regarding what Jesus meant by our denial and by our taking up of our cross and this has significantly influenced Evangelical Christians.

Bonhoeffer on Denial

In The Cost of Discipleship he wrote, ‘To deny oneself is to be aware only of Christ and no more of self, to see only him who goes before and no more the road which is too hard for us’ [p. 88].

There is a reason why Bonhoeffer is so popular. There is a delusion or a spell he crafts upon the reader. One must be careful and discerning in reading Bonhoeffer. Evangelicals do not usually read Roman Catholics and Lutherans who write beautiful images of spiritual devotion that are nothing more than beautiful gardens of death [Isaiah 1:29,30]. It all sounds so spiritual and on the surface seems to be something that could not possibly have anything wrong with it.

The problem with Bonhoeffer’s teaching about denial is that it fails to deny what needs to be denied. Ironically, Bonhoeffer is actually promoting a view that is the very thing that we should be denying. Notice that it is impossible to not see our self as he says. It is an imaginary concept of self-denial that is vague and mystical.

Satan would have everyone imbibe this “self-denial” in which we conveniently fail to focus on what we are to deny about ourselves. Again, it sounds so spiritual to ‘be aware only of Christ’ and to not see ourself or to not be aware of self. Bonhoeffer is putting a delusion upon evangelicals (though he had another target audience in mind, the Lutheran church in Germany during WWII). Never are we to have some sort of out-of-body experience in which we are no longer aware of self. On the contrary, we are to deny a self that we have a clear and full view of. 

In order to fulfill Jesus’ teaching, what is required is not a lack of awareness of self, but rather a profound awareness of self and what we are to deny.

Matthew 16:25 “For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it.”

Paul the apostle teaches us a denial that is specific and concrete. Paul is very clear about what he is denying and he got this teaching from the Lord Jesus Christ.

Philippians 3:7-9 But whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ. More than that, I count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ, and may be found in Him, not having a righteousness of my own derived from the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which comes from God on the basis of faith….

Paul understood Jesus to be saying that if we wish to come after Him we must have this denial of self. A profound denial of any trust in ourselves as that which gives us a basis of a right standing before God. Paul was once like Bonhoeffer, trusting in a perfect discipleship according to the flesh, but then Paul renounced all of that as loss for the sake of his conversion in Christ and a resting alone in the righteous standing that he obtained by being in Christ.

Like Paul we need a denial that is a biblical view of ourselves, as being without any merit, so that we can by faith rightly take hold of a true discipleship. The very thing we need to specifically deny is what is according to the flesh, a salvation by works, and all that is mere self-righteousness.

Bonhoeffer would have us become oblivious of the self that we are to deny. He wrote, ‘Only when we have become completely oblivious of self are we ready to bear the cross for his sake’ [p. 88]. This is not only impossible, but unbiblical. Consider that the Lord commanded us to love our neighbor as we love ourselves [Lev 19:18]. We are to love others with the awareness of how we love ourselves, not with a lack of awareness of how we love ourselves. In the same way we are to be fully aware of the self that we are to deny.

Bonhoeffer’s spiritualized denial of self, by means of an assumed ability to be oblivious of self, is the blindness of hypocrisy. This supra spiritual state that Bonhoeffer promotes is really an infatuation with a sense of merit that comes from making such a “denial” of self. “Oh, how spiritual I am, because I am oblivious of self and am only aware of Christ.” Do not listen to such men.

Philippians 3:18-19 For many walk, of whom I often told you, and now tell you even weeping, that they are enemies of the cross of Christ, whose end is destruction, whose god is their appetite, and whose glory is in their shame, who set their minds on earthly things.

Paul is talking about men like Bonhoeffer. Men who walk in the name of Christ but promote doctrines that are against Him. As Paul said at the beginning of Philippians 3, ‘Beware of the dogs, beware of the evil workers, beware of the false circumcision; for we are the true circumcision, who worship in the Spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in the flesh….’ Beware of any so-called teacher who claims to be “…aware only of Christ and no more of self….”

The word ‘appetite’ in the text above is literally the word belly. Meaning, that these men are fleshly or carnal in their doctrine. The same word is used in the passage just below.

Romans 16:17-18 Now I urge you, brethren, keep your eye on those who cause dissensions and hindrances contrary to the teaching which you learned, and turn away from them. For such men are slaves, not of our Lord Christ but of their own appetites; and by their smooth and flattering speech they deceive the hearts of the unsuspecting.

Paul warns us against men who are slaves of their own flesh. They are deceived by their own slavery to the flesh and they necessarily deceive others as they measure what is spiritual by carnal and fleshly means. Hence, Paul uses ‘appetites’ (literally, bellies) regarding what they are slaves of. Such a teaching of denial is carnal and natural, for there are many who walk according to the flesh and think that it is spiritual to do so.

Bonhoeffer on Taking Up Our Cross

How then is Bonhoeffer an enemy of Christ regarding Jesus’ teaching on how we are to take up our cross?

Bonhoeffer wrote,’The cross means sharing the suffering of Christ to the last and to the fullest. Only a man thus totally committed in discipleship can experience the meaning of the cross’ [p. 89].

How can any evangelical read this and not be alarmed? Are those who promote Bonhoeffer without any sense at all?

Any true Christian knows that it is not our experiences that make us Christians, but Jesus Christ alone. Bonhoeffer would have us esteem the pitiful experiences of our life as that which transports us into true discipleship.

Bonhoeffer goes on, ‘The cross is laid on every Christian. The first Christ-suffering which every man must experience is the call to abandon the attachments of this world. It is that dying of the old man which is the result of his encounter with Christ. As we embark upon discipleship we surrender ourselves to Christ in union with his death–we give over our lives to death. Thus it begins; the cross is not the terrible end to an otherwise godfearing and happy life, but it meets us at the beginning of our communion with Christ. When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die’ [p. 89].

If this doesn’t sound like error to you, then please let me explain. He is saying that by means of a discipleship under Christ, in which we continually experience various crosses, we fulfill Jesus’ words. By means of discipleship we become saved. By means of repeating over and over again all those little crosses in our life can we say that we have begun in our discipleship and in the same we maintain our discipleship. This is works righteousness and will necessarily burden us. When will we ever fulfill a sufficient taking up of our cross to say that we are truly disciples of Christ under this sort of teaching?

Galatians 6:14 But may it never be that I would boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.

Paul has only one cross in which he boasts, not lots of little insignificant crosses that Bonhoeffer would have us boast in. It is no wonder that Bonhoeffer denies personal conversion for this sort of Christianity. It is about a way of being a Christian that is built upon our own man made cross. Paul provides for us the true means of being separated from the world and its ways. Paul boasts only in the cross of Christ!

Paul says that the cross of Christ alone results in a crucifixion of himself from the world, while Bonhoeffer asserts that the things in his life that he offers up as crucified results in a separation from the world.

The serious error of Bonhoeffer is that he takes Jesus’ teaching and makes it a way to be counted a Christian by equating suffering in our life to taking up our cross. He writes, ‘But how is the disciple to know what kind of cross is meant for him? He will find out as soon as he begins to follow his Lord to share his life. Suffering, then, is the badge of true discipleship’ [p. 91].

Where does it say that suffering is the badge of true discipleship anywhere in the bible? By the term ‘badge’ Bonhoeffer means simply what one must have in order to be considered a true disciple of Jesus. He is not saying that it is merely one of our experiences, but the thing that defines a Christian. So to defend this position one must find in the Scriptures what is the primary characteristic of the Christian, not merely that suffering is experienced by Christians.

Dwight L. Moody wrote, ‘Love is the badge that Christ gave His disciples. Some put on one sort of badge and some another. Some put on a strange kind of dress, that they may be known as Christians, and some put on a crucifix, or something else, that they may be known as Christians. But Love is the only badge by which the disciples of our Lord Jesus Christ are known. “By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another” (John 13:35).’

Bonhoeffer does put on a strange dress. He then wrote, ‘If we refuse to take up our cross and submit to suffering and rejection at the hands of men, we forfeit our fellowship with Christ and have ceased to follow him’ [p. 91]. While it is most certainly true that our profession of faith will result in suffering at the hands of those who reject Jesus, what Bonhoeffer is doing is to equate ‘taking up our cross’ to our experience of suffering. He is saying that we can say we are taking up our cross as we experience suffering. This creates bondage and confusion. His vague application of what this means necessarily burdens the people of God.

Jesus said that in order to be saved we must take up our cross. So in order to be saved, according to Bonhoeffer, we must suffer. If you are not suffering you are not taking up your cross and cannot be counted a disciple of Jesus. Again, he is rejecting the conversion experience in which a person becomes a Christian because of faith in Jesus. Bonhoeffer is wrong. When a person believes in Jesus they are born again. They have become saved and now they are to walk by the same means in which they became a Christian [Gal. 5:25; Col. 2:6]. They are not to see their discipleship as something that saves them, but rather, that because they are saved they now have a discipleship that can be lived out, in the power that is in Jesus.

Bonhoeffer has made the common experience of Christians, namely suffering, to be a thing that determines whether or not we are a disciple of Jesus Christ. This is serious error and is to be absolutely rejected. Many suffer because of doing wrong [2 Peter 2:13]. Others wrongly think that because they suffer persecution that this proves that they are God’s chosen people, such as the Mormons and other cults. Furthermore, what then can we say of ourselves if we are not suffering at some particular time? Christians go through all sorts of experiences and yet we must understand that our experiences, whether good or bad, do not in themselves say if we are truly saved.

Instead of Bonhoeffer’s view of a vague denial of self and a never fulfilled taking up of our cross, we should hear Paul the apostle. Paul understood that Jesus’ teaching about denying ourselves and taking up our cross was about our conversion, not our ongoing discipleship. In other words, it is about denying what Bonhoeffer would have us make an idol of, namely ourselves, and it is about being crucified with Christ, which alone puts to death our sinful self.

If you would like more information about what Jesus meant when He taught that we must deny ourselves and take up our cross in order to be saved, then please read my book: Take Up Your Cross: Our Only Power to Live and Walk by the Spirit.


November 15, 2020 – Romans 8:1-17


November 22, 2020 – Romans 8:1-17, 2


February 6, 2022 – Colossians 2:6,7


October 16, 2022 – John 12:25 – God Wants You to Hate and Lose Your Life


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34 comments on “Dietrich Bonhoeffer is an Enemy of Christ

  1. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    2 Timothy 3:12

    • Mormons have also claimed to be in the truth because they were persecuted, so we must be discerning. 2 Timothy 3:12-15 says: ‘Indeed, all who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will be persecuted. But evil men and impostors will proceed from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived. You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing from whom you have learned them, and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.’

      It is by faith in Christ Jesus that we obtain salvation, founded upon what we have learned from the ‘sacred writings’ – Bonhoeffer denied this.

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

      So then, would you say the rich young ruler was saved since he called Jesus the “good teacher” — after all, selling his goods could never have saved him, only belief in Christ, which his profession of Jesus as “good” demonstrates.

      Faith without works is dead. That’s orthodoxy. That’s not justification by works. Bonhoeffer stood for Jewish brothers and sisters while other professing Christian’s let them burn in the gas chambers. Did Bonhoeffer’s works save him? Of course not. But who displayed their saving faith?

      Did Jesus tell everyone to sell what they had? No, but that was the cost of obedience for the rich young ruler. Did Jesus ask everyone to sacrifice their sons? No, but that was required of Abraham. Did the Lord tell everyone they needed to be “born again”? But when Nicodemus loved his heritage more than the Lord Jesus got to the heart of the matter. We must root out our idols.

      Matthew 25.

      • You are greatly mistaken.

        The rich young ruler calling Jesus “good teacher” was a not a biblical profession of faith resulting in conversion, it was part of his delusion that he was himself good. Jesus applied truth that is true for everyone. After asking about the commandments and the rich young ruler says he had kept them all, then Jesus said to him to give up all his possessions. You are greatly mistaken that Jesus was saying anything to the effect that giving up his possessions would have saved him! Jesus was showing him that he was full of covetousness (10th commandment), hence not a good person. He had not kept the commandments and therefore he needed to deny himself in the most profound way possible which is necessary for the biblical faith of salvation.

        Yes, faith without works is dead, but understand in James that he is addressing Jews who professed to believe in Jesus but presumed upon their heritage. Notice that with Abraham offering his son what was perfected was not his works but his faith (James 2:22). For a saved person who has been regenerated by faith in Jesus based upon the authority of the Word of God good works only confirm that the faith is real. Bonhoeffer, according to his stated position, did not have a biblical faith, so whatever “good works” he did were no different than a Pharisees. His “good works” did not display a biblical saving faith because Bonhoeffer denied that everyone needs to be born again and that a Christian was someone who became saved or converted solely from faith alone in Jesus Christ.

        Abraham obtained Justification by faith in Genesis 15:6. The testing of offering his son (Gen. 22) was for the purpose of testing him as to whether or not God would use his seed to bring about that One Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, to then fulfill the offering that we all need. You are greatly mistaken in your assertion that only Nicodemus needed to be born again, because like Bonhoeffer you deny salvation based solely on faith in the objective truth of God’s Word. Truly, we are not saved or become a disciple of Jesus because of a mere faith in some sort of situation in our insignificant lives, but rather, in the only power for our salvation – the gospel (Romans 1:16,17).

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

      It seems this entire screed is a defense of evangelical comfort. Dangerous to think that one should give up consumerism and truly follow the teachings of Christ? To get lost in the dogma of being “saved” by conversion without accepting the reality of cheap grace that has the American evangelicals helping put into power a vile and vulgar man as president. Recognizing everyone’s right to allow the Holy Spirit to bring forth the Christ within us, I find it amazing that anyone would consider Bonhoeffer anything less than a true follower of Christ. Just as it seems obvious that true Christians could never support a man such as Donald Trump in any endeavor let alone leadership of a nation.

      • You are mistaken about my arguments regarding Bonhoeffer. Read and address the arguments before you share your comments. Your comments about Trump seem to indicate an assumption that I endorse him (wrong topic for this site).

        Regarding the former, it is not about avoiding persecution, conflict, or securing comfort in the Christian experience, it is about exposing the supra-spiritual deception of Bonhoeffer and his followers, who boast that they are “only aware of Christ and no longer aware of self”. Bonhoeffer’s idolatry of self is actually the easier road for the flesh because it is not about denying something far more profound and does not require the greatest cost – that there is nothing of ourselves that merits our salvation.

        Persecution and conflict are most certainly the frequent experience of any true Christian, as 2 Tim 3:12 says, but true Christianity does not teach that we become Christians as a result of our experiences. The only way to become a Christian, which Bonhoeffer denied, is to have faith in Jesus, in the gospel message, which results in Justification and then Regeneration.

  2. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    finally!!! Someone who speaks out against the theology of Bonhoeffer. The mataxes book has done much more damage than goid and is completely one-sided.

  3. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    I am dismayed that you see Bonhoffer this way. Sometimes we must fight against unmitigated evil, and sometimes we must pay the ultimate price for fighting for good. Bonhoffer never lost his faith in spite of how he was treated. I regard that as a holy sign of ultimate goodness.

    • You are ‘dismayed’ that I see Bonhoeffer this way, yet Bonhoeffer claimed to be doing what Jesus commanded of him, in order to fulfill what Jesus said to be His true disciple. He was “fighting” against evil with a carnal and non-Christian conception of the nature of spiritual warfare. I object to Bonhoeffer’s teaching about what it means to be a disciple of Jesus. If you are a true Christian you should be dismayed by Bonhoeffer’s teaching about what is required to be a disciple of Jesus.

      Would Jesus have us kill people who are doing evil, who are slaves of the devil’s deception, mere pawns of evil? If there was ever a time Christians should have taken up the sword it was when the Lord Jesus was being crucified! Jesus said His kingdom was not of this world and if it were then His servants would be fighting (John 18:36). If Bonhoeffer is right then we should get on with killing those who are evil! John Calvin enforced brutality in the name of the law and for the “glory of God” against those in Geneva when they opposed him. Should we do the same?

      It is easy and carnal to revere men like Bonhoeffer because it so much easier than to really follow Jesus in the face of evil. It is easier to take up arms than to turn the cheek or to not resist the evil man (Matt 5:39; James 5:6).

      I am addressing Bonhoeffer’s stated teaching about what a true Christian is and it is nothing at all what Jesus taught. Jesus warned that if we take up the sword then we must be prepared to suffer the consequences of it, but to do so does not advance Jesus’ kingdom. Bonhoeffer should have just enlisted as a soldier and fought on the battlefield. He should not have argued that this was what it meant to be a true disciple of Jesus.

      • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

        What an easy way out of potential conflict. Conflict was and will always be present. The argument that Christians at all costs should stay out of the fight against evil absolves those timid souls of responsibility and more importantly exposes the hand wringing and lack of moral and/or physical courage needed to take a stand when a stand is required. To stand in the Gap as a light to the world requires more than theological arguments online…..Truly no cost to one’s opinion here. As Bonhoeffer so eloquently wrote it’s “cheap”. He places those He wants to use in various places and sometimes that includes in that place Mr Bonhoeffer found himself. God certainly greeted him with a “well done good and faithful servant”.

        • Bravely said by an anonymous post! How ironic. Thank you for providing an excellent example to every one of the carnal result of Bonhoeffer’s influence. What, to be a Christian then is to fight as the world fights?! Christ’s kingdom is not advanced by such a fleshly purpose.

          I do bravely declare my name, Steven L. Hitchcock, to all the world. A Christian man who has indeed volunteered to serve in the Infantry to fight for my country and I also bravely assert that the teaching of Bonhoeffer is a falsehood that burdens the people of God. A lie that is the truly easy way to be a Christian, reducing Jesus’ way of facing conflict to a fulfillment that is according to the flesh. Jesus would have His people to face conflict as He did, suffering shame in a way that wins sinners to God. I am not avoiding conflict my friend.

          • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

            You certainly aren’t avoiding conflict…..you are creating it. Claiming this man is “an enemy of Christ” does not edify or support. It divides. Who’s next? CS Lewis perhaps? Blessings to you brother. May you use your talents to build up rather than tear down that which does not need dismantled.

            • Another anonymous comment, so I don’t know who this is or if a totally new person. Now I am to avoid conflict. Jesus said in Matthew 10:34 “Do not think that I came to bring peace on the earth; I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.”

              As a Christian there will be unavoidable conflict but it is imperative that we understand that the sword that Jesus speaks of is not Bonhoeffer’s type of sword, but truth that necessitates division between light and darkness.

              Paul said in 2 Cor 10:3-5 ‘For though we walk in the flesh, we do not war according to the flesh, for the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh, but divinely powerful for the destruction of fortresses. We are destroying speculations and every lofty thing raised up against the knowledge of God, and we are taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.’ So would you counsel Paul the apostle to avoid making divisions?

              To avoid conflict with men like Bonhoeffer is to honor men above the Lord Jesus Christ. I must expose the lie. I must expose the harmful doctrine of this and any other man who burdens the people of God. There is conflict afflicting God’s people and it is from men like Bonhoeffer.

          • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

            You condemn Bonhoeffer for taking up the sword against Hitler, but then you proudly state how you joined the infantry to “fight for my country”. What hypocrisy.

            I can’t help but feel that you would have preferred that he had joined the military instead, and fought for Germany.

            • You are not understanding my position against Bonhoeffer. Have you read my arguments? I assert that those who esteem Bonhoeffer as a martyr are wrong. He was executed for his involvement in an attempt to assassinate Hitler and this is simply what Jesus said would happen, if they choose to take up the sword. I enlisted in the Army with the understanding that I was putting myself at risk of death, but if someone does die in warfare then it is not martyrdom. I have not condemned Bonhoeffer for fighting against Hitler, I have condemned his teaching about discipleship. He burdens the people of God with a teaching that says that we become Christians by our obedience and I assert that we become Christians by faith in the objective truth that is in Jesus. I hope this helps.

              • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

                Have you read any of Dr. Mark Thiessen Nation? Metaxas is no expert on Bonhoeffer and Nation (who is) paints a much different picture of Bonhoeffer, a man of faith who maintained a non-violent ethic throughout his years on earth. And while he might have known of it, he was not involved in an assassination attempt on Hitler. I would hope that, that knowledge would at least change some of your argument. He did not fight a carnal battle/use the sword. – menoman

                • I have not read anything from Dr. Mark Thiessen Nation. I only mention Bonhoeffer’s reputation of being involved in the assassination attempt even a recent movie depicts him. Ultimately, I really do not care if he was involved or not. My point in this post is his theological teaching about what makes a person a disciple of Jesus Christ.

  4. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    I am not a theologian or well versed in the subtleties of exegesis. I think that Bonhoeffer was shaped by the times in which he lived, pre WWII Germany, and probably struggled at the deepest level with what a believer’s response should be in the face of such widespread evil. My question for his detractors is what would you have done in his circumstances, especially considering the German Lutheran church acquiesced and for the most part cowered silently and in fear due to the threat of retaliation by the Nazi’s. It’s all too convenient to criticize from a perch of safety and comfort.

    • It is not about being some sort of expert on anything, it is about opposing a teaching that burdens the people of God regarding what makes one a Christian. I am not a pacifist and I am so very proud of those who fought against the atrocities of WWII. I even enlisted in the Infantry and would do so again without any conflict to the teaching of Christianity.

      Did you even read what I have written?

      I am in opposition to Bonhoeffer’s teaching on discipleship, which I assert burdens the people of God.

  5. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    You have taken centuries old Church teachings (from the time of Jesus and the Apostles) out of context via proof text. I do not wish to argue with you. I will merely pray that the Lord would send His Holy Spirit to enlighten what needs to be enlightened in your faith.

    • I appeal to you and to all those who are willing to read this argument – to adhere to the words of Jesus above Bonhoeffer. Notice in the following text that those who were ‘noble-minded,’ who understood the authority of the Scriptures, that it was said of them that they ‘believed’ – Acts 17:11-12 ‘Now these were more noble-minded than those in Thessalonica, for they received the word with great eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so. Therefore many of them believed, along with a number of prominent Greek women and men.’

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

      well written. Thank you.

  6. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Bullcrap. Bonhoeffer died fighting Nazi’s. Full stop. Any attack on Bonhoeffer is a defense of Nazism.

    • Your comment ‘Any attack on Bonhoeffer is a defense of Nazism’ is ridiculous. Where do I support any sort of view of Nazism?

      According to this logic the communists who fought Nazi Germany are also the “good guys”. This is just plain stupid. All sorts of people, with all sorts of views, were in a united opposition to Nazism and they would not have agreed with their supporters in the fight against Nazism on all other issues. Do you have a brain?

      Hear everyone what brilliant intelligence is fermented by Bonhoeffer supporters! If anyone is in opposition to Bonhoeffer then he is obviously a Nazi. I rest my case that those who espouse Bonhoeffer are just as wrong as Bonhoeffer is wrong.

  7. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Im with Dietrich bonhoeffer, the meek will inherit the earth. Not the weak. Jesus gave Paul the opportunity to apologize for having denied him. That implies he was suppose to take a stand. You can sit in the comfort of your dwelling and try to condemn his martyrdom all you want, But the Holy spirit tells us the truth. He was as good a servant as he could muster in the end. He carried his cross.

    • You are submitting yourself to a doctrine that will burden your soul and never give you salvation. A discipleship based on a self-determined assessment of whether or not you are bearing your cross as you wrongly presume Bonhoeffer did.

      Bonhoeffer claimed to be ‘only aware of Christ and no longer aware of self’. Do not be deceived by such a teacher and join with him in such a delusional boasting in self-righteousness.

      Rather, understand that we are to be crucified with Christ in a life changing conversion, in being saved, being born again, in which you hold only to Jesus Christ as your righteousness. Don’t look to the so-called merit of anything in your life as your hope of salvation, but in Jesus alone. We take a stand in a doctrine of grace by faith, not in a stand of a delusional man who thought he obtained salvation by his obedience.

      This is what Paul was taught. Gal. 6:14 ‘But may it never be that I would boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.’ Paul did not boast in his own assumed cross, but only in the cross of Jesus!

  8. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Seems to me a total misrepresentation of Bonhoeffer. I found nothing in the quotes that show Bonhoeffer rejected the need for conversion. I understand him to be saying what James wrote in James 2:20, “Faith without works is useless”, and in verse 24, “You see that a man is justified by works, and not by faith alone.” James was not contradicting Paul, who said, “For by grace you have been save through faith, . . . not as a result of works . . .”. For Paul went on to say, “For we are . . . created in Christ Jesus for good works.” Our works give evidence of a true conversion to Jesus Christ, leading to a life that is totally devoted to giving up all that would stand in the way of our following Christ as Lord, becoming a “living sacrifice” if you will.

    I’ve not read a great deal of Bonhoeffer’s writing, but what has been presented in this article seems to be dismissing the true calling we have in Christ. Advocating the idea that denying our selves and taking up our cross speaks only of a conversion experience takes Matthew 16 out of context. Jesus has spoken to the disciples about His coming suffering and death. Peter seeks to correct Jesus saying that such a thing would never happen. Jesus rebukes Peter as setting his mind on his own interests and not God’s interest.

    Anyone wishing to follow Christ must enter into Christ’s denial of self; “Follow me” Jesus said as He set His face toward the cross. The life of the true disciples is an ongoing walk of self-sacrifice for the cause of Christ, not to gain salvation, but because one has entered into salvation through faith and repentance.

    • I really appreciate your approach to critiquing my post. Much more thoughtful and engaging than most. Nevertheless, I disagree with you.

      In Bonhoeffer’s book ‘The Cost of Discipleship’, which I quote in my post, at the very beginning of Chapter 2 he says, ‘The CALL goes forth, and is at once followed by the response of obedience. The response of the disciples is an act of obedience, not a confession of faith in Jesus.’ There is so much more to support that Bonhoeffer denied conversion in the evangelical and biblical sense.

      If you don’t believe me have a look at this following site, though I do not share agreement with their other views, such as Calvinism. The folks at Banner of Truth argue that Bonhoeffer did not believe in biblical conversion, among many other things.

      https://banneroftruth.org/us/resources/articles/2016/bonhoeffer-reliable-guide/?srsltid=AfmBOopoqFiYjb-BlEK7vWTgyrP3ZL7e6N2QQHGbbp5F0sirDhyFytpS

      Regarding your points on the Christian duty that does relate to discipleship, such as doing good works and what you call ‘the true calling we have in Christ’. I agree with you that James does not contradict Paul regarding Justification by faith and that a Christian is under obligation (my words) to follow Christ and I think I agree with your statement, ‘The life of the true disciples is an ongoing walk of self-sacrifice for the cause of Christ, not to gain salvation, but because one has entered into salvation through faith and repentance.’

      But how can it be done? How does a Christian live out being a disciple? Bonhoeffer says obedience comes first.

      Paul writes in Galatians 5:24,25 to those who had gotten caught up legalism, ‘Now those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires. If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.’ Being crucified with Christ and taking up our cross refers to our conversion, in which we lose our lives by means of dying with Christ and raising to newness of life (see also Gal 2:20 and Gal 6:14). Only then are we able to do the discipleship that you refer to. For upon ‘living by the Spirit’ (i.e., Salvation; see Gal 3:2 ‘by hearing with faith’) there is then the result of the post-conversion experience of ‘walking by the Spirit’ (i.e., Discipleship). Our obedience does not result in being saved. Our faith in Jesus results in receiving the Spirit by faith and then we walk by the Spirit in which God enables us to follow Him in our discipleship (see Gal 3:5 ‘provides you with the Spirit and works miracles among you…by hearing with faith.’)

      Faith comes first. Faith in the Word of God, resulting in conversion, which Bonhoeffer denied.

      You refer to the context of Matthew 16. Please understand that when Jesus rebuked Peter, saying that he was setting his mind on man’s interests, it was because Peter was opposing Jesus’ purpose to go to the cross. Peter was full of himself and he was being carnal in his thinking, assuming an ability according to the flesh to follow Jesus and to be counted a disciple. Peter failed to understand that he needed Jesus to go to the cross to obtain for him a salvation that Peter then could walk in, by the power of the Spirit. Peter needed to ‘deny’ any and all confidence in himself, to lose his life, even as Paul did, and Peter needed to take up his cross in being crucified with Christ, even as Paul did.

      • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

        Hello Steven L. Hitchcock, I too am not ashamed to Post my name. Bruce Loy it’s nice to meet you. Now I can tell you, by your article and comments that you are very well versed with words and have more of a theological understanding of scripture than I do. Which I do appreciate, as I’m still learning God’s word till the day I die. But you say you’re not a pacifist, but everything in your comments about Bonhoeffer points to me that you are. Now I know you said you enlisted in the army to fight for your country. To prove that you weren’t a pacifist but pacifists aren’t excluded from military service. They’re called a conscientious objector. My father served in Korean war and went as such, serving his country in Korea behind the lines not fighting. So there is that. I also get the feeling that if you would of lived along side Bonhoeffer, you would of stood by the 1st German church that went with Hitler, or absconded to another country to avoid the situation at hand of Evil wiping out the Jews. Bonhoeffer was doing what he thought God was leading him to do. Right or wrong in your eyes or mine doesn’t matter. I believe Bonhoeffer knew that to live by the sword was to die by the sword. If you was to look at Jesus disciples which one aligns with you best? I myself is probably closest to Peter. I would just as well cut an ear off with my sword and let Jesus heal it, as long as it was for the right and truth causes. I know it doesn’t make it right. But I believe you are missing the point of Bonhoeffer existence. The Church of the time had become Pacifists and blind sheep going down the wrong road. He my friend had the courage to be the light in the darkness knowing good and well he would have to answer the final call. We need more Pastors and Priests to stand up against evil in our local towns and Governments. The Churches of America and the World have become complacent to the worldly ways. Where are our Christian leaders, oh wait, probably afraid they might offend someone? They have more interest in filling the pews than speaking truth. I truly don’t look at Bonhoeffer as a Martyr but was standing as light in darkness. Standing for truth. We must take up our cross. Jesus told us to.

        Matthew 16:24-25
        [24] Then Jesus said to his disciples, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. [25] For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will find it.

        I agree that works does not get you to salvation or Heaven. But your works will show once you have faith in Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior!

        James 2:18 NIV
        [18] But someone will say, “You have faith; I have deeds.” Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by my deeds.

        I’m not saying that Bonhoeffer theology is spot on, but I would say that he shows his Faith through his works. During such dark times in world history, he was a light when no one else was in the Christian realm. That is most likely the draw for so many evangelicals. So by calling him an Enemy of Christ, you are missing the point. In your reasoning, then the thief on the cross was probably an enemy also, but yet we know that he was with Christ in paradise that day. Just my 2 cents worth. Thanks for reading my rant!

        God bless you brother in Christ. Stuff like this is how I’m still learning about God!

        • Hello Bruce, thank you for your comment. Please understand that Bonhoeffer does not believe what one must believe to be a Christian. He denies substitutionary atonement, inspiration of the Holy Scriptures, Creation, personal conversion, and other very important doctrines.

          Many opposed Hitler and Nazism who were not Christian. Atheistic Communists also fought against Hitler and Nazi Germany, but that does not mean that they are to be followed. I am not a pacifist. I believe that a Christian can take up arms to defend their nation in a time of war, but in doing so I do not believe that that is what makes me a Christian. Again, even barbarians can be patriotic for their country.

          Bonhoeffer is an enemy of Christ because he taught things that are not Christian. Like many others he did not understand that denying yourself and taking up your cross refers to how we become saved, not how we live out our discipleship. To deny yourself is to deny yourself in the most profound way possible, which is to say that your only trust is in Jesus as your only hope of being right with God. To take up your cross is to die with Christ, which alone is what results in the death of our sinful self. When people think that they must find things in their lives to equate with something to deny or something that equates with taking up a cross they are trying to save themselves accordingly to Bonhoeffer’s idea of an obedient discipleship.

  9. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Wow. how far off you are in understanding Bonhofer

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