Jurgen Moltmann’s eyes searched the German forest for a glimpse of his fellow soldiers’ Nazi gray uniforms. Somehow he’d gotten separated from his unit and was now alone near the front lines.
Not far ahead he detected movement in the trees, then spotted a brown army jacket and the unmistakable shape of the other soldier’s helmet: British.
Moltmann made a split-second decision. He put his hands on top of his head, and walked toward the enemy. After a year and half of war, after enduring nightly bombing raids in Hamburg and witnessing the horrific deaths of friends, Moltmann decided he’d endured enough.
It wasn’t a war he believed in anyway. Hitler had cut short his education in 1943 when Moltmann’s whole class was assigned to the anti-aircraft batteries in Hamburg. He’d been just sixteen years old.
As he approached the British soldier, Moltmann thought, Being a POW can’t be worse than the war itself. But behind the barbed wire of the camp in Belgium he suffered horrific nightmares, felt unrelenting guilt for what his country had done, and collapsed into deep depression and hopelessness.
Later Moltmann was transferred to Kilmarmock, Scotland, assigned to a POW road crew. Relentless rain drummed on their backs day after day. To and from the work site he and fellow prisoners rode in trucks—silent, with heads down near their knees. “It was a picture of real forsakenness,” Moltmann later recounted (1).
While in Scotland, a U.S. Army chaplain gave Moltmann a Bible, and out of boredom he started to read. In the book of Mark he encountered another Man who also knew forsakenness, and soon the young soldier came to believe in Christ.
The war ended in April of 1945 but at least 400,000 German prisoners were kept in the British camps, to be repatriated to their homeland one boatload at a time. Germany had been decimated; there weren’t enough places to live nor enough food to eat if all the prisoners were returned en masse.
In 1946, Moltmann was transferred to Norton Camp in Nottinghamshire, England, which the YMCA helped to run. Though still prisoners, the men were allowed to study education or theology.
Moltmann chose the latter, anxious to understand more of his newfound Christian faith. He took advantage of the large library and proffered lectures. He learned Hebrew and Greek.
Frank and Nellie Baker, a young pastor and his wife, served several small churches in the area. God gave them the desire to minister to the POWs of Norton Camp. With the commander’s permission, the couple took a prisoner home for dinner each Sunday after worship.
Moltmann was one of them. “The seed of hope was planted in my heart around Frank and Nellie Baker’s Sunday dinner table,” he said (2).
In 1947, he attended a Student Christian Movement conference. There he experienced reconciliation with young men and women who had fought for the Allies.
As a result of the forgiveness and increasing hope in his spirit, Moltmann decided to continue his study of theology once he returned to Germany, to better understand “the power of hope that had saved his life” (3).
Since Moltmann had been one of the last Germans captured, he was one of the last to be sent home, in 1948. By 1952, he had earned a doctorate degree and become pastor of the Evangelical Church of Bremen-Wasserhorst.
In subsequent years he taught theology at an academy (1958-1963), then Bonn University (1963-1967), and finally the University of Tubingen (1967-1994).
Moltmann also wrote forty-three books. The first, published in 1964, carried a highly appropriate title: The Theology of Hope. And today he is regarded as “one of the most significant theologians of the age” (4).
Jurgen Moltmann, March, 2016
But if it weren’t for hope, we’d surely not know of Jurgen Moltmann because “without hope one cannot live,” he wrote. “To live without hope is to cease to live. Hell is hopelessness. It is no accident that above the entrance to Dante’s hell is the inscription: ‘Leave behind all hope, you who enter here’” (Theology Of Hope).
https://www.azquotes.com/quote/843177
Moltmann’s transcending hope prospered in the war’s aftermath, even amidst the decimation, grief, and uncertainty, because he embraced what Christ offered him: resurrection hope.
“Hope finds in Christ not only a consolation in suffering, but also the protest of the divine promise against suffering. If Paul calls death the ‘last enemy’ (1 Cor. 15:26), then the opposite is also true: that the risen Christ, and with him the resurrection hope, must be declared to be the enemy of death” (Theology of Hope) (5).
That gleam of resurrection hope has now been shining through Jurgen Moltmann for over seventy years, impacting for eternity countless others.
We would do well to remember him, consider his way of life, and imitate his faith (Hebrews 13:7).
Notes:
- https://highprofiles.info/interview/jurgen-moltman/
- http://www.jacoblupfer.com/blog/2015/2/28/where-jurgen-moltmann-found-hope
- https://scienceandbelief.org/tag/norton-camp/
- https://www.christiantoday.com/article/liberation-and-hope-10-of-the-best-jurgen-moltmann-quotes/83599.htm
- https://ryandueck.com/2007/06/19/moltmann-on-hope/
Sources:
https://highprofiles.info/interview/jurgen-moltman/
https://scienceandbelief.org/tag/Norton-camp/
https://spu.edu/depts/uc/response/spring2k8/features/wartime-blessings.asp
Grace Notes by Phillip Yancey, Zondervan, 2009, p. 116.
Volume 10, Tome 1, Kierkegaard’s Influence on Theology: German Protestant Theology, edited by Jon Stewart.
Photo credits: http://www.needpix.com; http://www.flickr.com (2); http://www.dailyverses.net; http://www.simple.m.wikimedia.org; http://www.az quotes.com; http://www.canva.com.
Thank you, Nancy, for that inspiring message. It proves once again that, through a horrific experience such as war and being a POW, our Awesome God has a master plan. Through His Grace, He has and continues to use Jurgen Moltmann to bless the people of this world.
I, too, find great encouragement through stories like this one. When I see how God has brought such heroes as Moltmann through horrific circumstances, I KNOW he can carry me through my (much smaller) challenges!
Thanks Nancy, very powerful.
Thank you, Gary. I agree Moltmann’s story IS powerful! He certainly provides an example of what God can do, even in the midst of suffering.
What a wonderful testimony!
I’m so glad you found wonder here, Lesley. Praise God who engineered it!
wow I didn’t know this story and even hadn’t thought about what happened to the POWs in England during and after the war. Quite a story and witness. Would make a great book. God’s grace is amazing.
Yes, Moltmann’s story and that of others deserve to be preserved, as a witness of God’s intervention and purpose achieved in the most grotesque circumstances!
I had never heard of this man. As we know, God’s ways are always higher than ours. He never allows our lives to take a certain direction without reason. A very encouraging and beautiful story and wonderful example of His love and power. By the way, my mom and I have a cat that is missing an ear…probably due to being attacked by another animal. A few weeks ago I finally gave it a name…HOPE!
I too found encouragement in Moltmann’s story, another example of how God can turn around the darkest of circumstances. So glad you found encouragement too. P.S. What a perfect name for your new cat! LOVE it!
This is WONDERFUL, Nancy. I’ve read Moltmann and understand how influential he has been to Christian theological thinking for the last few decades, but I knew nothing about his life. Powerful story — so grateful you wrote it!
And I’m so grateful you read the post and found the wonder in Moltmann’s story! Thank you for stopping by, Diana, and leaving your encouraging comment.