Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the search for Christian freedom
Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the search for Christian freedom
Mar 28, 2026 4:05 PM

While imprisoned by the Nazis at Tegel military prison, and shortly after learning of the last failed attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler, Dietrich Bonhoeffer penned a short poem for his friend, Eberhard Bethge, titled “Stations on the Road to Freedom.”

e across the poem before, but in recently reading Eric Metaxas’ fine biography of the man, I was reminded of its power and potency in describing the essence of Christian freedom.It es all the pelling given its context, serving as a “distillation of his theology at the time,” as Metaxas describes it.

Though we must be careful to appreciate the time and place from which it sprung, it brings with it plenty of implications for the ways in which we order our lives and allegiances.Indeed, in his prodding toward obedience, discipline, and submission to God — features many would find contradictory or in opposition to freedom — Bonhoeffer’s embrace of this profound paradox dovetails quite nicely with Lord Acton’s famous notion of “defining liberty not as the power of doing what we like, but the right of being able to do what we ought.”

DISCIPLINE

If you set out to seek freedom, then learn above all things to govern your soul and your senses,

for fear that your passions and longings may lead you away from the path you should follow.

Chaste be your mind and your body, and both in subjection, obediently, steadfastly seeking the aim set before them;

only through discipline may a man learn to be free.

ACTION

Daring to do what is right, not what fancy may tell you,

valiantly grasping occasions, not cravenly doubting –

es only through deeds, not through thoughts taking wing.

Faint not nor fear, but go out to the storm and the action,

trusting in God mandment you faithfully follow;

freedom, exultant, will e your spirit with joy.

SUFFERING

A change e indeed.

Your hands, so strong and active, are bound; in helplessness now you see your action is ended;

you sigh in relief, your mitting to stronger hands; so now you may rest contented.

Only for one blissful moment could you draw near to touch freedom;

then, that it might be perfected in glory, you gave it to God.

DEATH

Come now, thou greatest of feasts on the journey to freedom eternal;

death, cast aside all the burdensome chains, and demolish the walls of our temporal body, the walls of our souls that are blinded,

so that at last we may see that which here remains hidden.

Freedom, how long we have sought thee in discipline, action, and suffering;

dying, we now may behold thee revealed in the Lord.

For more, watch Eric Metaxas’s 2012 keynote at Acton University onDietrich Bonhoeffer and the Christian social witness.

[product sku=”1417″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
10 Signs You May Be a Distributist
The presence of one group at the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protests might be surprising: the Distributist Review has produced this flyer for distribution at the protests. They don’t seem to have asked themselves whether G.K. Chesterton and Hillaire Belloc would have gone down to protest with the unwashed masses (the answer, of course, is never in a million years)but contemporary “neodistributists” are a more inclusive set. Theygo far beyond the metaphysical and aesthetic principles of Chesterton and Belloc’s economics.Since...
‘All things wise and wonderful…’
This past Sunday one of the songs in our worship service was the hymn, “All Things Bright and Beautiful.” Here’s the first stanza: All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small, All things wise and wonderful, The Lord God made them all. If the new translation of Abraham Kuyper, Wisdom & Wonder: Common Grace in Science & Art, were to have panion hymn, this might well be the perfect candidate. ...
Samuel Gregg on the GOP Roundtable
Acton director of research Samuel Gregg offers his thoughts on last night’s GOP Roundtable in this NRO Symposium. Gregg thinks the debate offered an important alternative to the government-driven economy talk that fills the news every other night of the week. In a week in which two American economists from the non-Keynesian side of the ledger received the Nobel Prize for Economics, last night’s GOP debate gave us some insight into the depth and character of the various candidates’ mitments...
Samuel Gregg on Morality and the Free Market
In a report on the Republican roundtable debate at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, National Review Online’s Kathryn Lopez writes about the ongoing breakdown of the family and its role in economic life. She talks to Acton’s Samuel Gregg about the clashing views that often exist in the conservative world on economic questions. “There are obvious tensions between those free marketers who have problems with objective morality and those social conservatives who have a bad habit of blaming the market...
The Iron Lady and the Acton Institute
Thursday, October 20, former United Kingdom Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher will be honored with the 2011 Faith & Freedom Award in Grand Rapids. The award will be accepted by former Thatcher adviser John O’Sullivan at Acton’s 21st Annual Dinner. O’Sullivan is currently vice president and executive editor Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Still a close friend of Thatcher, O’Sullivan defined the essence of ‘Thatcherism:’ Thatcherism is bination of economic liberty, traditional conservative and Christian values, British patriotism, and a strong attachment...
Freedom in a Land without Churches?
There are no more Christian churches in Afghanistan — not a single public house of Christian worship is left standing. In other news, NATO success against the Taliban may have been intentionally exaggerated, although we already knew that progress in that country is… slow. It’s no surprise, of course, that the United States hasn’t been able to establish self government-in-a-box in a country where,according to the State Department,religious liberty has declined measurablyeven in the last year. Religious liberty must be...
Mitt Romney, the Mormon Question, and Presidential Elections
Mitt Romney’s faith made headlines again at the Values Voters Summit in D.C., where Robert Jeffress, who is the pastor of First Baptist Church in Dallas, proclaimed last week, “Do we want a candidate who is a good, moral person, or one who is a born-again follower of the Lord Jesus Christ?” Jeffress, who introduced Governor and presidential candidate Rick Perry before his remarks to the group, was not just proclaiming his support for Perry but signaling evangelicals to not...
Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth: Courage in Christ (1922 – 2011)
“They were trying to blow me into heaven, but God wanted me on Earth.” – Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth’s courage, tenacity, and epic struggle for racial equality in the city of Birmingham, Alabama, is legendary. Birmingham, not so affectionately nicknamed “Bombingham” in the 1950s and 1960s for its propensity for racial acts of terror, named its airport after the famed American Civil Rights leader in 2008. This account, which speaks to the madness in Birmingham during his pastorate...
Belloc, Distributism and Political Power
I can always mon ground with the Distributists I meet. We want to replace the government-corporate cronyism that characterizes so much of our current economic system. And we want our culture to raise up young people with the skills, virtues and freedom to accumulate productive capital and invest it in ways that promote human flourishing for themselves and others. But then there’s the question of centralized political power in the economy. Sometimes when Distributism is described, you get the sense...
Samuel Gregg: Religious Freedom and the Arab Spring
Acton’s director of research Samuel Gregg tackles the question of religious liberty in Islamic states this morning, over at The American Spectator. In a piece titled “The Arab Spring’s Forgotten Freedom,”Gregg describes the tensions between Christians seeking religious freedom in the Middle East and the Islamic states they inhabit, and then looks hopefully to the source of a resolution. For at least one group of Middle-Easterners, the Arab Spring is turning out to be a decidedly wintery affair. And if...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved