That was a bold statement.

Didn’t his compassion for others stem from his faith in Christ? So he essentially died not so much for defending his Christian faith but he
died for living out his Christian faith?
He’s supposed to have had a vision when he was a young boy, of Mary, who offered him the choice of being a martyr, which he chose.
Perhaps this was playing on his mind, that now was the right time to step up, to make a vision he had years earlier, come true?
Knowing at the age of 12 that at some point in the future, you would be a martyr, and therefor by definition have your place in heave assured and guaranteed, must be quite a comfort, in fact an indescribable comfort, and not something just about every other Christian enjoys.
Wouldn’t his faith in Christ embolden him to carry out his priestly duty even at the expense of his life?
There were 167 other Catholic priests in Auschwitz, none of whom offered their lives in the place of others, so I don’t think it has anything to do with priestly duty.
The accounts I’ve read of his words to the commandant, include ‘‘I am old’’ (he was only in his 40s) and ‘‘I am alone’’ ‘‘I have no one and he has a family’’.
The words are interesting, and combined with his starvation and beatings, and his medical condition, may indicate someone who, frankly, has had enough of life, or may have felt he was about to die soon anyhow, and remembering a vision of being a martyr, decided now was as good a time as any to end it all, and let some good come from it.
His place in heaven, was, after all, assured from a long time earlier.
However, no one actually knows the state of his mind at the time. The Church has declared him a saint, which I don’t dispute or have a problem with as that is for the Church.
But if the argument is entertained no one can know the mind of the atheist when they offered and risked their lives for others, it seems to me no one can know the exact state of his mind either.
He may, in fact, have lost all faith, and all will to live, looking at the horror around him, and not knowing how much longer he could live out a starvation existence, decided to end it all in despair, knowing the end would come soon, but horrifically, in that bunker.
We know that those that have decided to end their lives, carry on as normal right up to the moment they pull the rope or trigger. So it could be with him carrying on being a priest. But he knew his sufferings would be over much quicker than if he stayed above ground.
To clarify, I know what the Church declaration means, and I am not desputing it as that is the Churches business and for Her to decided.
I am simply pointing out that for me, personally, I have some questions around this man and his actions that are enough to raize suspicions for me
Sarah x
