Shortly before he was hanged by the Nazis in 1945 at age 39, Dietrich Bonhoeffer reportedly told a fellow prisoner: ''This is the end — for me the beginning of life.''
It was – more than he knew.
Even as the German theologian — a Lutheran — was anticipating eternal life in heaven, his death marked the beginning of his ever-growing reputation as a martyr and hero to the cause of anti-Nazi resistance.
Churches worldwide commemorate him in statues and stained glass. Readers have explored him in books about and by him, particularly his blunt calls to sacrificial discipleship. ''When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die,'' he famously wrote.
He's been widely quoted – and misquoted. People across the ideological spectrum have claimed Bonhoeffer would support their side on issues ranging from the Vietnam War to post-9/11 militarism to same-sex marriage to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
And the battle for Bonhoeffer is fiercer now than ever, nearly 80 years after his death.
''The desire to harness Bonhoeffer's moral capital for partisan ends has intensified as knowledge of his life and witness has expanded, and as American society has grown more polarized,'' scholar Stephen Haynes wrote in the book, ''The Battle for Bonhoeffer.''
Numerous Bonhoeffer scholars and relatives signed statements in recent months decrying the use of his words and example in causes they say would have appalled him – such as modern-day religious nationalism and xenophobia in the United States and Europe.