K
KP3243
Guest
Be fair though not all Lutherans went along with the Nazis just like not all Catholics went along with them either. You cannot ignore Dietrich Bonhoeffer just like how we don’t want people to forget Titus Brandsma.Hi Temple,
For the record, I joined this site specifically to take part in this conversation, which by the way is “Protestantism, Luther, and the rise of Nazi Germany”. This is precisely what I am interested in and it is the subject that I have begun to post quotes about. It seemed to me at first that you were interested in this subject also. Once it became clear that evidence that does not support your opinions, all of the sudden, you want to talk about Mussolini, the Italian fascist movement, and of course – the Catholic Church. To me that sounds like a different thread and I hope you find someone who wants to explore that subject with you.
If I didn’t know better, I would think that you are trying to keep me from posting the information I have planned. At the moment that is specifically about the relationship between the Nazi’s and Protestantism, and how that differed from their relationship with the Catholic Church.
In Steigmann-Galls excellent book, there are at least a dozens of specific examples of the fact that the Nazi’s looked much more favorably on Protestantism than it did on the Church. In addition, the Protestants, and specifically the Lutherans looked much more favorably on the Nazis than did the Church. The Protestants and the Nazi’s shared a great deal more ideologically than the Nazis did with the Catholics. Just a few of those comments are as follows:
“Lutheran Protestants were more likely to endorse the basic contours of Nazi ideology than Calvinists or Catholics were. This is evident not only in their conceptualization of the Marxist or Jewish ‘dangers’ – which Catholics often feared as much as Protestants – but in a theological valorization of the Volk as an order of God’s creation. Whereas the Catholic establishment was wary of volkish theology and its practical consequences, large segments of the Protestant establishment felt more comfortable with the racialist segments that underlay Nazi eugenicism. In fact, more than simply accommodating eugenics, many of these Protestants actively advanced its cause through their own institutions, most notably the Inner Mission, the Protestant welfare organization founded in the nineteenth century. These Protestants did not passively accept eugenics as a fait accompli of Nazi governance; rather, they were among the primary advocated of racial science before the (Nazi) Seizure of Power." Steigmann-Gall, pg. 191
“In the same way, (Nazi) Heydrich derided the Catholic Church as perhaps the enemy of the state.” Steigmann-Gall, pg. 153 Emphasis Stiegmann-Gall
In regards to clerical and also racial anti-Semitism: “On example is an official statement issued by seven Lutheran state churches in December 1941, which flatly rejected those ‘Protestant Jews’ who had been at the heart of the doctrinal dispute between Confessing Christians and DC. Fondly recalling Luther’s command that Jews should be banished from German lands, the statement went on to claim that ‘From Christ’s crucifixion to the present day, the Jews had fought against Christianity, or have misused or falsified it for their selfish aims. Christian baptism does not alter the racial character of the Jew, his affiliation with his people, or his biological essence.’ As Victoria Barnett states: ‘The troubling historical evidence suggests that the churches refrained from criticizing the regime, not just because they wanted to remain ‘apolitical’ but because they often agreed with it.” Steigmann-Gall, pg. 185-6
“Whereas Catholics tended to reject Nazi racial theory, in almost all instances Nazis rejected Catholic internationalism. On the other hand, many Nazis proclaimed an affinity for Protestantism……….Whereas the Catholic Church continued to be attacked for its ‘internationalism’ and doctrinal stand against racialist categories, the Protestant Church was generally treated much more favorably.” Steigmann-Gall, pg. 154-5
“As Hitler told Albert Speer, ‘Through me the Protestant Church could become the established church, as in England…….By contrast, Hitler’s attitude towards Germany’s other great confession left no room for ambiguity: ‘The Catholic Church has always been an enemy of a strong form of government.” Steigmann-Gall, pg. 176
Hitler said that, “although he was born a Catholic, ‘Inwardly he stood closer to the Protestant Church………Hitler expected from Protestant pastors ‘a different attitude to that of the Catholics.’” Steigmann-Gall, pg. 168
“Opinions expressed that year made it plain that, despite these concerns, many leaders of the Protestant League saw Nazi policies as congruent with their own.” Steigmann-Gall, pg. 139
Again, this is only a small sampling of the quotes which prove that there was a very clear connection between Nazi ideology and Protestant and especially Lutheran theology.
We have seen the claim that: “As for who is to blame for National Socialism, it certainly is not Luther or Protestantism. Most of those in the upper-echelons of the Third Reich (Hitler, Himmler, Heydrich, etc.) were practicing or former Catholics……” While this statement does agree with the version of history that has historically been told on the popular level by Protestant, it is not in keeping with the actual facts.
As pointed out by Professor Hillerbrand, the Lutheran churches and Lutheran theology did play a role in Nazi totalitarianism. That role was not hilarious.
Blessings, Topper