"Von guten Mächten" (By good forces) is a Christian poem written by Dietrich Bonhoeffer in 1944 while imprisoned in the basement prison of the Reich Security Main Office because of his resistance to the Nazis. It is his last theological text before he was executed on 9 April 1945. It became a frequently sung hymn, with different melodies, which has appeared in current German hymnals. The incipit is: "Von guten Mächten treu und still umgeben", which can be translated literally as: "By good forces devotedly and quietly surrounded", or, in a more poetic, singable, widely used version: "By loving forces silently surrounded, ..."[1]. The seventh and last stanza "Von guten Mächten wunderbar geborgen" respectively "By loving forces wonderfully sheltered" is used as a refrain in this popular rendition.
History
Bonhoeffer was arrested as a prominent opponent of the Nazi regime on 5 April 1943, and was kept at different prisons. His writings in prison showed a new dimension in his theology. From mid-1944, around the time of the 20 July plot, he began to also write poems.[2]
He was transferred to the Reich Security Main Office in Berlin on 8 October 1944. From there he wrote on 19 December 1944 to his betrothed Maria von Wedemeyer, adding the poem with the comments "ein paar Verse, die mir in den letzten Abenden einfielen" (a few verses that occurred to me the last evenings) and "als ein Weihnachtsgruß für Dich und die Eltern und Geschwister" (as a Christmas greeting for you and the parents and siblings).[2] The poem refers both to his own situation and that of his family: he had to face possible execution, his brother Klaus and his brothers-in-law Hans von Dohnanyi and Rüdiger Schleicher were in prison, his brother Walter had died as a soldier, and his twin sister Sabine [de] had left the country with her Jewish husband Gerhard Leibholz [de].[2]
Bonhoeffer's letters to Maria were not intended to be published. She made a copy for relatives for Christmas 1944.[3] A derived typed copy appeared first in Geneva in 1945 in the ecumenical Gedenkschrift (memorial writing) Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Das Zeugnis eines Boten.[4] This version was believed to be authentic when Eberhard Bethge included it in his collection of Bonhoeffer's letters, Widerstand und Ergebung ('Resistance and Resignation'), in 1951. It differs from the original in four instances and served as the basis for hymn versions. When the original letter was published in 1988, it was printed then in the critical edition, Dietrich Bonhoeffer Werke, vol. 8 (1998).[5] The Protestant hymnal Evangelisches Gesangbuch of 1993 used the original text, followed by other hymnals and song books.[6]
Form and text
The poem is in seven even stanzas, different from Bonhoeffer's other poetic texts from the period, such as "Glück und Unglück", "Wer bin ich?", "Der Freund", "Vergangenheit". The seven stanzas are numbered as in a hymnal, possibly to clarify their order.
The text of the Evangelisches Gesangbuch follows Bonhoeffer's original:
God is next to[19] us in the evening and the morning,
and most assuredly on every new day.
Melodies
The meter of the poem does not match any hymn tune of the time. The personal beginning is not well suited to singing as a congregation. The earliest setting to music by Otto Abel in 1959 used originally only the final stanza. His melody was used for the Evangelisches Gesangbuch as EG 65, in the section Zur Jahreswende, and in the Mennonitisches Gesangbuch [de] as MG 272 in the section Durch das Jahr – Jahreswende und Epiphanias.[6]
The text has been set to music more than 70 times, including a 1971 version by Joseph Gelineau,[20] and a setting by Kurt Grahl [de] in 1976.[21][22] The most popular melody was written by Siegfried Fietz in 1970. In the style of Neues Geistliches Lied, he used the last stanza as a refrain, with a different melody in lower range for the verses.[23] It appears in several regional parts of the Evangelischen Gesangbuch,[24] and in regional parts of the Catholic hymnal Gotteslob, while the main section has the melody by Kurt Grahl as GL 430.[25]
Literature
Jürgen Henkys: Von guten Mächten treu und still umgeben. In: Hansjakob Becker u. a.: Geistliches Wunderhorn. C. H. Beck, München 2001, ISBN3-406-48094-2, pp 452–461.
^Ökumenische Kommission für die Pastoration der Kriegsgefangenen (ed.): Das Zeugnis eines Boten: Zum Gedächtnis von Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Genf 1945, p. 47.
^Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Widerstand und Ergebung (= Dietrich Bonhoeffer Werke, 8). Chr. Kaiser, München 1998, ISBN3-579-01878-7, p. 607ff.
^Gemäß Urtext als Adjektiv auf "Jahr" bezogen. In vielen älteren Ausgaben war "das Alte" substantiviert aufgefasst.
^Widerstand und Ergebung (alte Ausgabe), nach der Maschinenabschrift: "aufgescheuchten"
^Die Gottesanrede "Du, Dein" usw. schrieb Bonhoeffer im Autograph groß.
^Widerstand und Ergebung (alte Ausgabe), nach der Maschinenabschrift: "bereitet"
^In to the original manuscript this was an adjective referring to "the old year" but in many older editions it was made into a noun "the old"
^Widerstand und Ergebung (old Edition), according to the machine transcript: "shooed up"
^Addressing God, capitalised by Bonhoeffer in his manuscript
^Widerstand und Ergebung (old Edition), according to the machine transcript: "prepared"
^Widerstand und Ergebung (alte Ausgabe), nach der Maschinenabschrift: "still"
^Widerstand und Ergebung (old Edition), according to the machine transcript: "silently"
^Widerstand und Ergebung (alte Ausgabe), nach der Maschinenabschrift: "mit"
^Evangelisches Gesangbuch. Ausgabe für die Evangelisch-Lutherischen Kirchen in Bayern und Thüringen. 2. Auflage. Evangelischer Presseverband für Bayern, München 1995, ISBN3-583-12100-7, p. 132f.
^Widerstand und Ergebung (old Edition), according to the machine transcript: "with"
^Regionalausgabe Bayern-Thüringen, Nummer 637; Regionalausgabe Württemberg, Nummer 541 (stanzas 1, 5 und 6); Regionalausgaben Rheinland-Westfalen-Lippe und Reformierte Kirche, number 652. Hansjakob Becker: Geistliches Wunderhorn – Große deutsche Kirchenlieder; C. H. Beck, München, 2001, ISBN978-3-406-59247-8, S. 460.