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GROWING
EDGES
Reading Richard's Streams of Living Water has
reminded me of the importance of all the traditions
for our personal and corporate spiritual lives.
Contemplative: The Prayer-Filled Life. Holiness:
The Virtuous Life. Charismatic: The Spirit-Empowered
Life. Social Justice: The Compassionate Life.
Evangelical: The Word-Centered Life. Incarnational:
The Sacramental Life. In the first chapter of
Streams, "Imitatio: The Divine Paradigm," Richard
shows us that Jesus intentionally sought his Father's
nurture in all these areas of the spiritual life.
We are challenged to do the same.
A
Twentieth-Century Model. While Jesus is
our "divine paradigm," other lives can be important
examples as we mature into Christlikeness. Though
certainly less than perfect, these saints—past
and present—can motivate and teach us in our apprenticeship
to Jesus Christ.
Clearly,
in our century, one of the champions of the Way
is Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the focus of this Perspective.
Bonhoeffer's life was filled with practices designed
to develop within and without the fruits of the
traditions of Christian life and faith we emphasize
at Renovaré. One of the most striking things about
Bonhoeffer is how he was challenged in all six
streams, leading to a balance of strength and
sensitivity, earthiness and eternity reminiscent
of Jesus.
For
those less familiar with Bonhoeffer's story, his
career as a theologian developed under the gloomy
and deceptive cloud of Adolf Hitler and Germany's
Third Reich. Born in Breslau to German parents
in 1906, Bonhoeffer spent less than four years
outside his native country during his short life.
Though tempted, along with all Germans, to complacency
and capitulation during the Nazi regime, by 1933
Bonhoeffer clearly saw that the direction the
German State Church (of which he was an ordained
pastor) was heading had little to do with Christ
crucified.
As
a part of the Confessing Church—a group of German
Lutheran pastors that withheld their support of
Hitler—Bonhoeffer proclaimed publicly his distrust
of the Nazis and concern over deteriorating conditions
for Jewish people in Germany. Stripped of his
pastoral authority by the state, in 1939 Bonhoeffer
joined with dissenting members of the German military
intelligence who were attempting to subvert the
Führer and his Nazi government. Their activities
included smuggling Jewish persons to Allied and
neutral countries and plotting to assassinate
Hitler. After discovery of their anti-Nazi activities
in 1943, Bonhoeffer was imprisoned and eventually
hung as a traitor, just weeks before the Allied
victory.
Faithful
and True. Though it is difficult to fully
appreciate the context of Dietrich Bonhoeffer's
life, his prophetic example stands as a reminder
that sometimes we must make difficult choices.
God's kingdom is an all-inclusive community of
loving persons, but we live during a period when
God's reign is not realized in all people. And
so, given the difficulties of our everyday life
circumstances, we can begin to comprehend the
incredible strength Bonhoeffer must have been
given to remain true to God's vision and hope
in the midst of such acquiescence by his people
and church. It was a gift of God given to Bonhoeffer,
one that we also receive as we are nurtured and
mature in the life of apprenticeship to Jesus,
our everliving Savior, Teacher, Lord, and Friend.
Shalom,
Lyle SmithGraybeal
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