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Bishop George Bell of Chichester, Blessed John Henry Newman, Bonhoeffer, Hans Scholl, Sophie Scholl, The White Rose, Theodor Haecker
Many of us see our countries as possibly headed into dark times, and sometimes we despair, and it is hard to remember that while we are in this world, we are not of this world. But we do have our duties and responsibilities in this world as well. Perhaps a reminder wouldn’t hurt. Particularly one which reminds us that what we say and write and do today may well echo down the corridors of time. This is an article I first published here on 19 February 2018. I ran across it yesterday, and think it worth a rereading. Neo.
Here most of us admire the Blessed John Henry Newman quite a lot, as we should. After all, most of us who write here are orthodox Christians of one flavor or another. Nor are we alone.
A couple of weeks ago, I was involved in a discussion of The White Rose, one of the main resistance groups in Nazi Germany, and how it was almost completely driven by Christian ideals, although its leadership was a combination of Catholic, Lutheran, and Orthodox.
But how did that come to be, can we see the roots of this? Why yes, yes, we can.
An article in Catholic Herald last week by Paul Shrimpton tells how a goodly share of what Hans and Sophie Scholl believed and would lead them to the guillotine, seventy-five years ago yesterday, came from Newman.
From their letters and diaries we know that they were strongly influenced by St Augustine’s Confessions, Pascal’s Pensées and George Bernanos’s Diary of a Country Priest. Now it has become clear that their lives were also shaped by the writings of Blessed John Henry Newman.
The man who brought Newman’s writings to the attention of the Munich students was the philosopher and cultural historian Theodor Haecker. Haecker had become a Catholic after translating Newman’s Grammar of Assent in 1921, and for the rest of his life Newman was his guiding star. He translated seven of Newman’s works, and on several occasions read excerpts from them at the illegal secret meetings Hans Scholl convened for his friends. Strange though it may seem, the insights of the Oxford academic were ideally suited to help these students make sense of the catastrophe they were living through.
Haecker’s influence is evident already in the first three White Rose leaflets, but his becomes the dominant voice in the fourth: this leaflet, written the day after Haecker had read the students some powerful Newman sermons, finishes with the words: “We will not be silent. We are your bad conscience. The White Rose will not leave you in peace! Please read and distribute!”
When Sophie’s boyfriend, a Luftwaffe officer called Fritz Hartnagel, was deployed to the Eastern Front in May 1942, Sophie’s parting gift was two volumes of Newman’s sermons. After witnessing the carnage in Russia, Fritz wrote to Sophie to say that reading Newman’s words in such an awful place was like tasting “drops of precious wine”.
In another letter, Fritz wrote: “We know by whom we were created, and that we stand in a relationship of moral obligation to our creator. Conscience gives us the capacity to distinguish between good and evil.” These words were taken almost verbatim from a famous sermon of Newman’s called “The Testimony of Conscience”.
The White Rose, which Hans and Sophie led, has become the most famous anti-Hitler resistance in Germany today, saving only the Zwanzigsten Juli conspiracy itself, in which the Rev Dr. Dietrich Bonhoeffer was implicated. This founder (amongst others) of the Confessing Church would surely have also agreed with much of what Hans and Sophie learned from Newman’s writing.
In fact, I’m quite sure he was familiar with it, if in no other way, because of his friendship with Bishop George Bell of Chichester, now subject to a witch hunt led by his own church, to whom Bonhoeffer’s last message from Flossenbürg was addressed. Of course, Bonhoeffer was hanged a few weeks before the camp at Flossenbürg was liberated.
When Fritz visited Sophie’s parents, he gave them a collection of Newman sermons translated by Theodor Haecker. Haecker himself also visited the Scholls, and signed the visitor’s book with Newman’s own motto, Cor ad cor loquitur (“Heart speaks to heart”).
So does it still.
Sorry NEO, it looks like a stepped on your post. Do you know how to put it into draft and release it tomorrow?
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It’s done. It will come up tomorrow (July 20th). Now to read this one…
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Thanks, Nick.
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Thanks, Nicholas.
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Sadly, I cannot remember how to remove my post from today and schedule it for tomorrow. Anybody out there that can do that? Nicholas maybe?
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I’ll take a look – I might have the necessary privileges.
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These are depressing times, to be sure. I frequently think about the totalitarian regimes of the 20th century and the parallels between them and the tyranny we experience now. I also often think about the English Civil War, the Glorious Revolution, and the American Revolution. I also read an interesting piece on the French Revolution recently.
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They are, indeed.
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We overthrew the tyranny of the Crown, but now we have the tyranny of Parliament, which is doing everything in its power to prevent a No-deal Brexit. History will judge them, and we will remember their treachery.
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You’d best do so. Any group in power is a threat.
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I am also deeply ashamed about how our elite has treated your President these past few weeks: first the ambassador, and now the row over his supposedly “racist” comments. I get angrier by the day (and, given I have no cakes or carbs to eat my anger away, that anger is not abating). I am deeply ashamed of my countrymen: they are lesser sons of greater sires; they are the orphans crouching in the ruins of a once-great civilisation; they are the spirit of Esau, of Ahab, and all who rebel against the laws of nature and God.
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They are, in a sense, but we have plenty of them too. We openly call ours traitors. But they’re really just cowards, afraid to stand for anything and so they fall for nothing. That’s life, I think.
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This is a wonderful article! I can’t remember reading it last year so was very glad it was reposted.
Re tyrannical regimes… we know all about those in Europe. We could well do with a few cloned Trumps over here!
Most of our countries are ruled by blinkered, hypocritical, p.c. Marxists who talk much of “the right of free speech” and “tolerance” but show neither towards those who refuse to tow the line of their evil anti-Christian ideology. Only Poland and Hungary’s leaders appear to have some real integrity and common sense. The others are leading us along the wide downward road to total destruction.
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Thank you, my friend. It struck me then and now as one that needed posting. As to Europe’s ‘leaders’, it does seem that way mt heart aches for you all, but it’s something you’ll have to do for yourself. Britain shows signs of waking up, but is it enough people, I guess we’ll see, but yes, Poland and Hungary have become the leaders. Because they are pretty much Christian and spent their time under communism, I’d be likely to guess. I tend to agree with Gorbachev (I think it was) who commented that the Soviet Union had essentially moved to Brussels.
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