Given the number of people who've been "saved" these days, you'd think the
world was becoming a brighter place. It could be, too, if more people would
stop worrying about religion and lose themselves in service to God and each
other. People like Christoph Friedrich Blumhardt (1842-1919), the maverick
German pastor and religious socialist who wrote the piece below.
Blumhardt's witness influenced theological giants like Dietrich Bonhoeffer
and Karl Barth, but his books (mostly collected sermons and devotions) can
hardly be characterized as theology -- they are too blunt, too earthy, too
real. Burning away the trappings of modern piety like so much chaff, his
"active expectation" of God's kingdom leads us away from ourselves and
toward our fellow human beings. Blumhardt's Christ is not the bringer of a
new religion (nor a political power-seeker), but a Savior whose humanity
brings hope to the despondent, and whose compassionate hands reach down
into the darkest places.
Post by Earl Cardhttp://www.bruderhof.com/articles/bl/PetrifiedReligion.htm