T
Tempelritter
Guest
Yes, Luther was a vocal anti-Semite, as were legions of others within the Catholic and emerging Protestant churches of the time. There is, however, a distinction between old-world religious anti-Semitism, and the modern racial anti-Semitism, which began emerging in the late 19th century, that informed the Nazis’ worldview.
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, and there were also practicing or former Lutherans (Goering, Hess, etc.). There is great ambiguity as to whether most or all of them renounced Christianity, and embraced Germanic neopaganism, atheism, and so on. Hitler himself gave contradictory writings on his faith throughout his life, variously suggesting that he had repudiated Catholicism, and at other times reaffirming that he would never leave the Church. He and others, particularly Himmler, often disparaged Christianity as a Jewish perversion, and certainly the latter favoured its removal from the German and European way of life. The Third Reich tolerated Christianity because it needed the support of the 98%+ Christian population, but it is quite likely that, following victory in the war, an incremental crackdown on the churches would have come.
In short, no, the fact that the Nazis wheeled out every historical anti-Semitic text they could find, including Luther’s works (which themselves were not a contemporary anomaly), does not mean that Lutheranism in any way facilitated National Socialism.
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, and there were also practicing or former Lutherans (Goering, Hess, etc.). There is great ambiguity as to whether most or all of them renounced Christianity, and embraced Germanic neopaganism, atheism, and so on. Hitler himself gave contradictory writings on his faith throughout his life, variously suggesting that he had repudiated Catholicism, and at other times reaffirming that he would never leave the Church. He and others, particularly Himmler, often disparaged Christianity as a Jewish perversion, and certainly the latter favoured its removal from the German and European way of life. The Third Reich tolerated Christianity because it needed the support of the 98%+ Christian population, but it is quite likely that, following victory in the war, an incremental crackdown on the churches would have come.
In short, no, the fact that the Nazis wheeled out every historical anti-Semitic text they could find, including Luther’s works (which themselves were not a contemporary anomaly), does not mean that Lutheranism in any way facilitated National Socialism.