The Bonhoeffer Book & That Famous Niemoller Quote

What I've Been Reading and That famous Niemoller Quote

I recently finished reading a biography of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. The funny thing is that I chose this book because I was confused. I was mixing Bonhoeffer up with Niemoller. I was so excited to learn more about the man who said this:

What I've Been Reading and That famous Niemoller Quote
Martin Niemoller

I took that photo on our 2012 trip to Boston.

Bonhoeffer had a lot in common with Niemoller, except he was executed about 2 weeks before Hitler killed himself.

Hitler personally selected Bonhoeffer to be killed because Bonhoeffer was part of a large conspiracy of German aristocrats to assassinate Hitler.

In fact, they tried to kill Hitler and failed several times without Hitler even knowing it, until that last time when the bomb actually did explode, right at Hitler’s feet, and the evil murderous man didn’t die.

You’ve heard of the Gestapo, but have you heard of the Abwehr? That was another German government intelligence agency. The Abwehr was full of guys who wanted to kill Hitler in order to save millions of lives and to save Germany. It was dissolved by the Nazis in 1945 when they realized it was full of conspirators.

Bonhoeffer was a part of that group. Niemoller was not. Niemoller had already been in prison since the beginning of the war.

Don’t let Niemoller fool you. He was humble. He spoke out so boldly against the Nazis, from his pulpit, as a Lutheran pastor, that he spent pretty much all of World War II locked in a German prison cell.

His support for Hitler was extremely short-lived. When Hitler first rose to power, some people just thought “Yay! Not Communist!” It didn’t take too long for the gloves to come off.

Did you know that when Alan went to Iraq he learned that their whole middle eastern society was indoctrinated to believe that the Holocaust never happened? They all believe it was a giant myth. They say it was propaganda put out by the Jews, because there is such a strong hatred of Jews over there.

History tells the true story. There are survivor stories, photos, videos, piles of their hair, remaining buildings of their death camps, and first-hand journal accounts of what happened to the Jews and to anyone else who stood in the way of the Nazis.

Niemoller and Bonhoeffer did know each other long before either of them were imprisoned. There was mutual respect there. They ran in the same circles, knew many of the same people, and lead the Confessing Church movement. The Confessing Church Movement pulled away from the German Church, blatantly disagreeing with Nazi policies.

It was so interesting to learn about WWII from more of a viewpoint on what was happening inside Germany.

No quote in the Bonhoeffer book beat Niemoller’s quote on apathy.

There’s a reason that quote is so famous, but here are a few quotes from the book on Bonhoeffer that I found interesting.

I loved what Bonhoeffer wrote in his Advent letter of 1938 to Confessing Church leaders. I love it because the fact is that good is not always winning. Sometimes evil is winning, but that doesn’t mean you should not do the right thing:

“And we simply cannot be constant with the fact that God’s cause is not always the successful one, that we really could be “unsuccessful”: and yet be on the right road. But this is where we find out whether we have begun in faith or in a burst of enthusiasm.”  (Bonhoeffer, p. 318)

Not every nation’s churches folded under the pressure of the government as Germany’s did.  Germany occupied Norway from 1940-1945, and their church leaders fought back, even if their government didn’t.

“In March Quisling overreached again, establishing a Norwegian version of the Hitler Youth. A thousand teachers immediately struck in protest……On Maundy Thursday, Bishop Berggrav, the heroic leader of the pastors’ resistance, was put under house arrest. So on Easter, April 5, every pastor in Norway did what their bishops did six weeks earlier and what Bonhoeffer had begged the German pastors to do in July 1933: they went on strike.”  (Metaxas, p. 395)

A different 9/11.

In Europe, they write dates with the day followed by the month and then the year, so 9/11 is November 9th. Germany’s 9/11 was in 1938. It is called Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass. The Nazis beat up and killed Jews, destroyed their businesses, burned their synagogues, and destroyed and looted their homes. Broken glass was everywhere. The result thereof was only more terror.

Here is a little bit of what Bonhoeffer wrote in response to it. He read Psalm 74, the 2nd half of which reads “They burn all of God’s houses in the land.”

“This was when Bonhoeffer most clearly saw the connection: to lift one’s hand against the Jews was to lift one’s hand against God himself. The Nazis were attacking God by attacking his people. The Jews in Germany were not only not God’s enemies; they were his beloved children.” (Metaxas, p. 316)

Whether you agree with Bonhoeffer or not, he was a fascinating man who walked very closely with God. I thoroughly enjoyed learning more not only about him but about WWII Germany.

If you can hang with the first half of the Bonhoeffer book, which is slower, you will be richly rewarded by the second half.

 

 

And for my next book, I have decided to read something quicker. I’m going with a Christian fiction novel involving some espionage and action. Excited to get into this one too.

What have you read lately that’s good? Leave me a note in the comments.

 

 

10 comments

  • Anonymous

    Joel Rosenberg’s newest book, The Final Warning, is VERY VERY good. It is one of those ” hard to put down books.” I highly recommend it.

  • Thanks for the history lesson. I find this stuff fascinating! I love that quote, too. It reminds me of one from an excellent historical fiction book called “From Anna” about a German family fleeing German and coming to Canada during WWII. In it, the father’s brother and sister in law refuse to leave with the family and say “If all people of reason flee, who will speak the truth?”

  • This is such a well written review April. With my schedule I don’t know if I could get through the 600 pages, but you have certainly now have me want to read it.

    With both being Pastors I myself get Niemoller and Bonhoeffer confused. Your post did clear this up for me. Friends in the same circle and it was Niemoller who spent WW2 in the German prison cell. It has me wondering how our own churches would hold up if the governments put pressure on them like what happened in Germany.

    Thank you so much for sharing! God Bless! 🙂

    • Thank you, Carl. I hear ya. It took me 3 months. I thought of that too. We are so blessed to live in a time where we have as much freedom as we do. I’m so inspired by men like these.

  • Whoa. I have heard that people believe the Holocaust didn’t happen, but my own grandmother escaped it. This is a beautiful post. I’d love to read more – about both men, actually!
    And really.. insane what Alan learned out there.

    • Oh how I would love to hear your grandmother’s story. If you have ever blogged about it, send me the link. I know that’s a deep topic to blog, especially being so close to you. Alan saw so much over there. That sort of thing was exactly why Gen. Eisenhower insisted they photograph as much ch as possible and make the German people do the clean up. Did you see Band of Brothers?

  • Wow! This book looks interesting! I love reading books about spies, I would be a horrible spy lol. Truth can be stranger than fiction, I can’t believe the Middle Eastern society believed the Holocaust never happened. that’s wild.

    • Yep. They still believe that. They will argue with ya over it. They also sold commemorative lighters and other souvenirs with the planes flying into the towers, bc some of them were happy to see 9/11 happen to us. Truth is definitely stranger than fiction. So true.

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