Christmas Musings on the end of Religion & Bonhoeffer

 
It is Christmas again for the 2008th time (give or take a few years) and the 4th estate (the press) is happily informing us of how atheists and agnostics are antagonizing the world of faith. Signs are springing up next to nativity scenes saying "Religion is but myth and superstition that hardens hearts and enslaves minds". Posters on buses read – "why believe in a God? Just be good for goodness sake". There is not enough room here to begin to explain the folly of such a sign and I’m not sure of the value in such an exercise anyhow. History has a cyclical nature to it, like an ever looping line moving into the future, so I am careful to avoid making broad sweeping statements like "the end of religion is here" etc. That being said there has been a pretty long standing trend away from religion in the west ever since the enlightenment. Enough of a trend to suspect that religion could very well be on the way out.
 
For those of us in the "business" of religion this can cause one of three reactions:
 
1. Cold sweats and fear that God is losing the battle (and we perhaps our jobs)
2. Joy that this thick and obscuring cloak is finally being removed from Christ
3. Indifference (the most common)
 
If I must land anywhere I would prefer the second option. In many ways Christ was cloaked with religion from the beginning – from prior to his birth with the Jewish messianic expectations that were wildly co-opted by personal desires to see a warrior-king in the fashion of David rather then what we got – which was Christ, the very image of God.
 
In one of his letters from prison Dietrich Bonhoeffer reflects on the future of religion and Christianity in a way that makes him increasingly the prophet he appears to have been. As Christmas approaches and religion is increasingly attacked I give to you the following words from Bonhoeffer to reflect upon – he writes on April 30th 1944 from Tegel Prison to his best friend Eberhard Bethge the following:
 
What is bothering me incessantly is the question what Christianity really is, or indeed who Christ really is, for us today. The time when people could be told everything by means of words, whether theological or pious, is over, and so is the time of inwardness and conscience – and that means the time of religion in general. We are moving towards a completely religionless time; people as they are now simply cannot be religious any more. Even those who honestly describe themselves as ‘religious’ do not in the least act up to it, and so they presumably mean something quite different by ‘religious’.

Our whole nineteen-hundred-year-old Christian preaching and theology rest on the ‘religious a priori’ of mankind. ‘Christianity’ has always been a form – perhaps the true form – of ‘religion’. But if one day it becomes clear that this a priori does not exist at all, but was a historically conditioned and transient form of human self-expression, and if therefore man becomes radically religionless – and I think that that is already more or less the case (else how is it, for example, that this war, in contrast to all previous ones, is not calling forth any ‘religious’ reaction?) – what does that mean for ‘Christianity’? It means that the foundation is taken away from the whole of what has up to now been our ‘Christianity’, and that there remain only a few ‘last survivors of the age of chivalry’, or a few intellectually dishonest people, on whom we can descend as ‘religious’. Are they to be the chosen few? Is it on this dubious group of people that we are to pounce in fervor, pique, or indignation, in order to sell them our goods? Are we to fall upon a few unfortunate people in their hour of need and exercise a sort of religious compulsion on them?

If we don’t want to do all that, if our final judgment must be that the western form of Christianity, too, was only a preliminary stage to a complete absence of religion, what kind of situation emerges for us, for the church? How can Christ become the Lord of the religionless as well? Are there religionless Christians? If religion is only a garment of Christianity – and even this garment has looked very different at different times – then what is a religionless Christianity?

2 thoughts on “Christmas Musings on the end of Religion & Bonhoeffer

  1. Unknown's avatar J

    But what about the lamb Dad? We\’ve raised him from a baby. We\’ve held him in our arms. We\’ve fed and cared for him. He is like the family pet. You\’re saying now he has to go to Jerusalem and die? Take another that we don\’t care so much about. Why does it have to cost so much? It\’s just religion Dad.j

    Like

  2. Unknown's avatar Peter

    See that\’s what religion does though…it sanitizes and systematizes what can\’t be sanitized and systematized. The lamb\’s gotta die and we can\’t pick another one.

    Like

Leave a reply to J Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.