AN ATTEMPTED ANSWER TO THE ATHEIST CLAIM THAT HITLER WAS A CHRISTIAN AND HATED THE JEWS FOR THAT REASON
In 1944 Hitler said, “I may not be a light of the Church, a pulpiteer, but deep
down I am a pious man, and believe that whoever fights bravely in defense of the
natural laws framed by God and never capitulates will never be deserted by the
lawgiver, but will, in the end receive the blessings of Providence."
It is obvious we should take Hitler at his word but Christian scholars don't
want us to do that.
One such scholar is JP Holding.
JP HOLDING ON HITLER'S BRAND OF RELIGION
The following is a review of Hitler's Christianity by Christian theologian JP
Holding.
It argues that suggestions that Hitler was not a sincere supporter of
Christianity but was paying lip service for a political advantage, or was a
proper Christian or was in fact an occultist are wrong.
JP Holding rejects the notion that Hitler was a secret atheist or an occultist
(the evidence that “he was an occultist is based on non-scholarly sources of no
evidential value) or an orthodox Christian. He imputes Hitler with a heresy
called positive Christianity. Hitler used the term but not as a religious label
as Holding says. Yet Holding writes, "Positive Christianity was the professed
faith of many Nazi leaders." Hitler may have made a mess of theology but his
intention was to be an orthodox Christian and to appeal to other orthodox
Christians and the Churches to be on his side against the Jews. He simply
selected what suited him from Christianity. And all Christians do that for
nobody can learn or practice it all. Steigmann-Gall is quoted as pointing out
that Hitler had nothing good to say about paganism and is quoted as saying that
positive Christianity did not refer to a system of religion or theology to which
a person might be invited to convert.
Holding also wants us to think that Hitler had his own brand of Christianity
called positive Christianity. That is nonsense – positive Christianity meant
orthodox Christianity but Holding wants you to see it as a label for a new
religion. It was a description not a religious label. Hitler in fact did not try
to found a new Christianity. He just distorted the old one from an anti-Semitic
entity and force into a bigger and more virulently anti-Semitic one. His
theology did not result in new Churches but spoke to the existing Churches. They
were involved in it more than he was for they were the theological and social
powers and Hitler was not a theologian - he needed them to supply him with his
religious expertise.
In the thirties, Holding reminds us that Hitler, speaking for himself and the
Nazi regime, said that they "regard Christianity as the foundation of our
national morality." And Holding mentions how in 1933, during a Reichstag speech,
that Hitler vowed that there would be no interference with the Churches and
their "due influence" in education would be preserved. He clearly noticed that
Christianity is about things other than faith and love which is why he did not
fear it. He noticed it is a pile of holy hot air.
It is clear that the Nazis recognised Jesus Christ as God. Stressing Jesus as an
anti-Jewish God worked well in their scheme.
Holding at least would admit that whatever kind of Christianity Hitler promoted
it proves that faith in religion can distort and suppress the truth. For
example, his Jesus was excised of any Jewish connections. Religion is based on
faith and we all see dangers in faith and have met people with harmful faith but
it can happen that faith itself can hurt the religion. If you lie down with dogs
-
In 1926, Hitler gave the Nazi party the goal of doing Christian action. It seems
he was more concerned about that than Christian belief.
Holding points out how Goebbels was expelled from the Church for marrying a
divorced woman! He did not get even a slap on the wrist from the Church for his
belief in the right he had to eliminate Jews cruelly.
Hitler loved Romans 13 for it said that God puts all governments in place and
Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber wrote as follows to Hitler “As supreme head of
the German Reich you are, for us, the authority willed by God, the legal
superior, to whom we owe reverence and obedience.” The text says no power
exists except God sets it up. As Hitler had a remarkable and unlikely rise
to power you can only imagine the effect this text had on him and his followers.
His power was exceptional - no Roman Emperor Paul had in mind could compare.
Even if you just think of how medicine was good in Hitler's day and a disaster
for the Roman Emperors that counts too. Hitler must have thought about how
Paul could write that way if Jewish politicians and clerics who had the power
given by God murdered Jesus. He probably decided that Jesus chose for that
to happen to him to show how vile the Jews were and thus show that killing them
and disempowering them was self-defence.
Holding observes that nude and gay theatre and porn began to get popular in
the 20s but the Nazis suppressed these things harshly. That won them Christian
acclaim.
Holding argues that anti-semitism until the Nazis was religious but the Nazis
based it on racist grounds and used fake science to support their prejudices.
If he is right then religion is the reason for the success of the Nazi revised
anti-semitism. And the fact remains that Hitler was supported as a racist
by the Catholics and Protestants. So there is more than just fake science
going on. It does not matter what grounds the Nazis based their racism on,
the theological racism of the Christian faith paved the way for them and they
joined forces with such racism. For the Nazis all truth came from God which
means that their use of racist science fits the idea of it also being an
exercise in religious faith. Religion is not a bubble. And Holding overlooks the
fact that religion and Jesus and the Christian faith were endorsed as racist by
the Nazis. The Nazis simply took Christianity's anti-semitism a step further.
Holding mentions a group called German Christians and ended up with a quarter or
even a third of the Protestant Church membership. He estimates it could have had
15 million Germans involved in it. In the 1930's, it started to get top
influence in most theology departments in Germany. One of its preachers,
Reinhold Krause attacked the Old Testament and the apostle Paul. He even hated
the cross of Jesus for he seen it as Jewish! Some dropped the Old Testament in
their services. Some German Christians according to Holding took a different
approach. They used the Old Testament to denigrate the Jews. Holding tells us
that they cherished the bits that had God condemning the Jewish people. Holding
does not tell us that the violence commanded by God in the Old Testament and how
the Jews made it their Bible which reflects badly on them and indeed should was
part of the problem.
Holding quotes Bishop Ludwig Mueller, the bishop of the Evangelical Church of
Germany, saying in 1934 that rather than Christianity having come from Judaism
like a growth it appeared in opposition to it. "There is no bond between them,
rather the sharpest opposition." The fact of the matter is that for decades
after Jesus supposedly died, the place of worship for the Christians was the
Jewish synagogue. They were excommunicated and only then did Christianity start
to become a new religion. The Christians refused to sort things out with the
Jews so the Church began as a bigoted sectarian division and created the idea of
the Catholic Mass to which all were obliged to attend to on Sundays which erased
the obligation to attend synagogue and respect the Judaism that Jesus would have
loved and which he died for in the sense that he was trying to reform it but his
religious enemies could not tolerate. So they had him killed.
Holding talks as if the only thing stopping the Nazis from implementing a
Christian Holocaust was how unlike the Jews they were too numerous and a tiny
minority is easier to destroy. That is rubbish for the Nazis showed no interest
at all in killing Christians. The Christian faith's opposition to Judaism was
the reason it was not in the firing line.
Hitler Youth seems to have developed an anti-Christian strain to the degree that
members were told to see the clergy as traitors to their nation and the
Christian heritage they had been raised in as bad. But that is more about
political conflicts than religious ones. It does not prove that the Nazis were
against Christianity as a religion. Holding confesses that Catholic Youth
organisations grew under the Nazis which incredibly limited their activities to
religious ones! Holding gives away a lot here. The Nazis plainly saw
Christianity as no threat to their bigotry. No wonder Holding is able to tell us
that the Catholic Church in Germany made a "constant affirmation of loyalty to
the regime."
Holding states that the Nazi military wore belts reading God be with us and wore
the cross. He says the military in Germany before their time did the same thing
so they only carried on the tradition. But realising it was more than that he
tries to make out that under the positive Christian heresy God and the cross did
not mean truly Christian things! The fact remains that most wearing these things
would have taken the traditional view. There is no test to see how many of these
men believed the positive Christianity thing. These people were baptised as well
meaning that as long as they intended to be Christian, no matter how warped
their religious ideas were, they are to be classed as Christian. Holding
dismisses what Hitler said in 1941, "I am now as before a Catholic and will
always remain so." He argues that Hitler did not profess a Catholic faith and
that it is not usual for heretics and cultists and charlatans to call themselves
mainstream believers.
Hitler said that the German state, “must declare unfit for propagation all who
are in any way visibly sick or who have inherited a disease and therefore can
pass it on.” (It is not realised by believers that Jesus must have had the same
attitude if he thought sickness warranted him changing nature to instantly
curing the people.) This scientific racism and Darwinist outlook had no effect
until he combined it with Christian anti-Semitism.
Holding concludes, “It is not even remotely possible to blame authentic
Christian faith for the horrors of Nazi Germany. If anything, the conditions
demonstrate that it is only because of a weakened and undermined Christianity
that such horrors were permitted, and not acted against by the confessing
churches of mainstream Christianity.”
In 1927, Hitler was discussing religious violence with a priest. The priest claimed that Christianity helped eradiate the barbarism of Rome. Hitler responded by saying the Church was worse than pagan Rome. He listed crimes such as the destruction of the Aztecs and Incas, the slave industry and so on. It seems to me that Hitler was conditioned by his Christian upbringing to be defeatist about religious violence and hate. He knew the Church would always be bigger than any enterprise of his. He channelled that defeatism into antisemitism. He thought the Church would destroy Jews anyway so he did it himself. He did this in the knowledge that the Church disproportionately attacked Jews though it hated many groups and faiths. He knew it was there to stay for the New Testament scriptures were hateful towards the Jews and their ancestors.