Dietrich Bonhoeffer's letters to his...
Illustration
Dietrich Bonhoeffer's letters to his parents while incarcerated in the Nazi prison reflect the spirit of Sirach's call to honor one's parents. On December 17, 1943, he wrote an early Christmas letter not knowing if he would still be there on Christmas day. In Dietrich's letter he is more concerned about his parents' feelings than his own. With unusual empathy he is sensitive to the shadow that his being in prison casts over the little happiness that they have in the midst of the war.
He longs to be released and to see his parents again. But they have given him a rich heritage of faith. In his own words: "But for years you have given us such lovely Christmasses, that our grateful memories are strong enough to cast their rays over a darker one. In times like these we learn as never before what it means to possess a past and a spiritual heritage untrammelled by the changes and chances of the present."
Bonhoeffer goes on to say that for a Christian he does not believe it is particularly difficult to spend Christmas in a prison cell. Since Christ was born in a stable because there was no place for him in the inn -- "these are things which a prisoner can understand better than anyone else."
On this coming Christmas Eve he will be thinking of his parents very much, and perhaps the real meaning of Christmas will be apparent to all.
He longs to be released and to see his parents again. But they have given him a rich heritage of faith. In his own words: "But for years you have given us such lovely Christmasses, that our grateful memories are strong enough to cast their rays over a darker one. In times like these we learn as never before what it means to possess a past and a spiritual heritage untrammelled by the changes and chances of the present."
Bonhoeffer goes on to say that for a Christian he does not believe it is particularly difficult to spend Christmas in a prison cell. Since Christ was born in a stable because there was no place for him in the inn -- "these are things which a prisoner can understand better than anyone else."
On this coming Christmas Eve he will be thinking of his parents very much, and perhaps the real meaning of Christmas will be apparent to all.
