George Bell, Bishop of Chichester
Church, State, and Resistance in the Age of Dictatorship
Andrew Chandler
- 224 Seiten
- English
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George Bell, Bishop of Chichester
Church, State, and Resistance in the Age of Dictatorship
Andrew Chandler
Über dieses Buch
The story of a significant British church leader who fought for justice and freedom
during World War II It was to George Bell, an English bishop, that Dietrich Bonhoeffer sent his last words before he was executed at the Flossenbürg concentration camp in April 1945. Why he did so becomes clear from Andrew Chandler's new biography of George Kennedy Allen Bell (1883–1958). As he traces the arc of Bell's life, Chandler reshapes our perspective on Bonhoeffer's life and times. In addition to serving as bishop of Chichester, Bell was an internationalist and ecumenical leader, one of the great Christian humanists of the twentieth century, a tenacious critic of the obliteration bombing of enemy cities during World War II, and a key ally of those who struggled for years to resist Hitler in Germany itself. This inspiring biography raises important questions that still haunt the moral imagination today: When should the word of protest be spoken? When should nations go to war, and how should they fight? What are our obligations to the victims of dictators and international conflict?
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface
- Prelude: The Little Blue Notebook
- 1. Beginnings, 1883-1914
- 2. To Lambeth Palace, 1914-1924
- 3. The Canterbury Deanery, 1924-1929
- 4. Chichester, 1929-1932
- 5. The German Vortex, 1933-1937
- 6. A Disintegrating Peace, 1937-1939
- 7. The War of Faiths, 1939-1942
- 8. Resistance in Germany and the Politics of War, 1942-1945
- 9. The New World Disorder, 1945-1948
- 10. Ecumenical High Tide, 1948-1954
- 11. Toward the End . . . 1958
- 12. The Place of George Bell
- Appendix 1: Piety
- Appendix 2: Provocation
- Bibliography
- Index