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The First Christian Martyrs of Rome
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Posted on 06/30/2005 7:29:47 AM PDT by Salvation

The First Christian Martyrs of Rome

In front of St Peter'sThe Vatican Basilica of St. Peter (shown at right), the burial place of the Apostle, is a prime destination for pilgrims to Rome. Another important memorial of Peter, one of many in the city, is not so well known.

The Church of St.Peter in Chains was built by the Empress Eudoxia in the 5th century on the western slope of the Esquiline Hill, not far from the Colosseum and the Roman Forum, to house the prison chains that held Peter, the Apostle. Many modern visitors find the chains questionable, of course, and usually turn to the tangible beauty of Michelangelo's statue of Moses, located in the same church. Chains that held the Apostle Peter. Really!

Site of the Roman Prefecture

Whatever one thinks of them, Eudoxia (pictured at right) chose a good place to house the chains. The Roman Prefecture, where justice was still being dispensed even in Eudoxia's day, once stood just south of the church. Rome's main prison was there, where suspected criminals were tortured, questioned and judged. At a spot not far away the condemned were summarily beheaded or strangled.

From the second half of the 1st century till the early 4th century, many Christians were convicted and executed in this area. For this reason the church, now surrounded by modern office buildings and shops, is holy ground for believers. It recalls many early Christian martyrs, especially those who died in the first great persecution of Christians by the Emperor Nero around 67, which claimed the lives of the Apostles, Peter and Paul.

next: Nero's persecution



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Continued: Christian martyrs of Rome
Nero's Persecution 64-67 A.D.

Rome burnsNero's persecution was occasioned by an early morning fire on July 19, 64. It broke out in a small shop by the Circus Maximus and spread rapidly to other regions of Rome, and raged for nine days, destroying much of the city. This was the worst in a series of fires that beset the crowded city -- more than a million people, packed tightly into apartment blocks of wooden construction, among narrow streets and alleyways. Only two areas escaped the fire; one of them, the Transtiberum region, Trastevere, across the Tiber River, had a large Jewish population.

Nero was at his seaside villa in Anzio when the blaze began, but he delayed returning to the city. They say that when he heard the news, he began composing an ode comparing Rome to the burning city of Troy (illustration above). His indifference to the suffering caused by the tragedy stirred resentment among the people. Rumors began that he himself set the fire in order to rebuild the city with his own plans.

NeroTo stop the rumors, Nero decided to blame someone else, and he chose a group of renegade Jews called Christians, who had caused trouble before, and already had a bad reputation in the city. Earlier, about the year 49, the Emperor Claudius had banished some of them from Rome for starting upheavals in the Jewish synagogues of the city with their disputes about Christ.

Nero's Raging Sword

"Nero was the first to rage with Caesar's sword against this sect," wrote the early-Christian writer, Tertullian. "To suppress the rumor," the Roman historian Tacitus says, "Nero created scapegoats. He punished with every kind of cruelty the notoriously depraved group known as Christians." Just how long the process went on and how many were killed, the Roman historian does not say.

 

next: the early Christians of Rome


1 posted on 06/30/2005 7:29:48 AM PDT by Salvation
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To: All

Continued: Christian martyrs of Rome
The Early Christians of Rome

Who were the early Roman Christians? Most of them came from the large community of about 50,000 Jewish merchants and slaves who had strong ties to their mother city of Jerusalem. Even before Peter and Paul arrived in Rome, Jewish-Christians, clearly identified as followers of Jesus Christ, were found among the city's Jews. Indeed, these were the founders of the church at Rome; the apostles were among its foundation stones.

By the time of the fire Rome's Jewish-Christians had become alienated from the larger Jewish community and were beginning to separate from it. Where they lived and met was well known. The authorities, following the usual procedure, seized some of them, brought them to the Prefecture and forced them by torture to give the names of others.

"First, Nero had some of the members of this sect arrested. Then, on their information, large numbers were condemned -- not so much for arson, but for their hatred of the human race. Their deaths were made a farce." (Tacitus)

Mass Executions

Instead of executing the Christians immediately at the usual place, Nero executed them publicly in his gardens nearby and in the circus. "Mockery of every sort accompanied their deaths. Covered with the skins of beasts, they were torn by dogs and perished, or were nailed to crosses, or were doomed to the flames and burnt, to serve as a nightly illumination, when daylight had expired." (Tacitus)

Most thought Nero went too far. "There arose in the people a sense of pity. For it was felt that they (the Christians) were being sacrificed for one man's brutality rather than to the public interest." (Tacitus)

 

next: martyrdom of Peter and Paul


2 posted on 06/30/2005 7:30:26 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

Continued: Christian martyrs of Rome
Martrydom of Peter and Paul

Quo vadis, Domine?Late in the persecution, the apostles Peter and Paul, were martyred. An unquestioned tradition among early Christian communities -- affirmed today by many historians and archeologists -- says that Peter met his death at Nero's circus on the Vatican and Paul was beheaded along the Via Ostia near the place where Constantine later built a church in his honor. Details of their martyrdom are unknown, but like others they must have been arrested, put in chains, questioned, and sentenced before being executed.

There are later legends, of course. One says they were imprisoned in the Mamertime Prison, near the Capitoline Hill, where they converted and baptized their jailers. Peter escaped and fled along the Via Appia until he reached the place where the chapel, Domine, Quo Vadis? now stands. There he met Jesus coming into the city. "Where are you going, Lord?" Peter asked. When Jesus told him he was going to join those suffering, the apostle turned to embrace the same fate.

The Ordeal of a Frightened Church

Legends like these have dubious historical value, but do they suggest something about the early persecution?

The Christians of Rome, considered part of the city's Jewish community in the middle of the 1st century, enjoyed the extensive privileges bestowed on the Jews by the Romans at that time; they must have felt safe and secure, until Nero's arbitrary attack. Their troubles with Claudius around 49 were only minor. How shocking Nero's sudden blow! Certainly brave martyrs emerged in the persecution, but in those chaotic days how many wavered or fell?

One wonders if the story of a frightened Peter, fleeing in fear, then regaining strength for his ordeal, was a lesson in hope for Christians who, taken by surprise, wavered, fled in terror, denied and betrayed?

next: words for a persecuted Church


3 posted on 06/30/2005 7:31:22 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

Continued: Christian martyrs of Rome
Words for a Persecuted Church: The Gospel of Mark

Christ, crucifiedMany scholars believe the Gospel of Mark was finally formulated in Rome during the turbulent years of Nero's persecution, before the fall of Jerusalem in 70. Most likely it was written for Rome's Christians, reeling from persecution and wondering what new troubles lay ahead.

Central to Mark's Gospel is his story of the Passion of Jesus, in which the Lord experiences a stark, brutal martyrdom that cannot be explained. How appropriate for a church wrestling with the mystery of absurd, unmerited suffering caused by a mad, capricious emperor. More than other Gospels do, Mark portrays Peter in weakness, a disciple who fails his Master and then awaits his mercy. Does he remind the Christians of Rome that their church is not made up of the strong, but the weak and the fallen as well?

For hard times, Mark's Gospel proclaims the hard, uncompromising message of Jesus Crucified, who calls his disciples to follow him to the Cross.

The First Letter of Peter

Other contemporary New Testament writings offer a similar message to the Roman community and Christians of the wider church. Like Mark's Gospel, the 1st Letter of Peter, written in Rome and perhaps sent to Jewish Christians in Asia Minor threatened with persecution, calls for standing firm in suffering, even unjust, absurd suffering.

"Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example that you should follow in his footsteps. He committed no sin and no deceit was found in his mouth. When he suffered he did not threaten; instead he handed himself over to the one who judges justly." (1 Peter 2, 21-23)

In the letter there is no thought that those who follow Jesus abandon the place where they are when suffering comes. Whether slave, or wife or husband, they are not to flee -- always a temptation for those who have been hurt. Rather, they are to stay where they are and "maintain good conduct among the Gentiles," (1 Peter 2:12) "give honor to all, love the community, honor the king."(1 Peter 2:17)

In the years following the persecution, Jewish Christians fled from Jerusalem before advancing Roman legions, and Christians elsewhere, seeing Nero's reign as a sign of the last times, washed their hands of this world and waited for the end.

But the Christians of Rome stayed in their city and built their church. Where many of them suffered, they and their neighbors worked to rebuild the city's burnt-out structures. Here they toiled for the coming of the Kingdom of God.

We celebrate the memory of these, our ancestors in faith, on June 30th, following the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul.

 

next: are they Peter's chains?


4 posted on 06/30/2005 7:32:14 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

Continued: Christian martyrs of Rome
Are they Peter's chains?

Chains

A final note. What about the chains in the Church of St.Peter on the Esquiline Hill? Some authorities believe the chains may actually come from the ancient prison of the Prefecture nearby. If that is so, could they have once held the apostle after all? And if not Peter, perhaps a believer like him, who shared his fate?

What signs shall we, Christians of the 21st century, leave as evidence of our belief?

beginning of article


5 posted on 06/30/2005 7:33:21 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

**Peter escaped and fled along the Via Appia until he reached the place where the chapel, Domine, Quo Vadis? now stands. There he met Jesus coming into the city. "Where are you going, Lord?" Peter asked. When Jesus told him he was going to join those suffering, the apostle turned to embrace the same fate.**

Our priest mentioned this last night in the Mass of Sts. Peter and Paul.


6 posted on 06/30/2005 7:36:47 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: nickcarraway; sandyeggo; Siobhan; Lady In Blue; NYer; american colleen; Pyro7480; sinkspur; ...
Saint of the Day Ping!

Please notify me via FReepmail if you would like to be added to or taken off the Saint of the Day Ping List.

7 posted on 06/30/2005 7:45:29 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All
American Catholic’s Saint of the Day

June 30, 2005
First Martyrs of the Church of Rome
(d. 68)

There were Christians in Rome within a dozen or so years after the death of Jesus, though they were not the converts of the “Apostle of the Gentiles” (Romans 15:20). Paul had not yet visited them at the time he wrote his great letter in a.d. 57-58.

There was a large Jewish population in Rome. Probably as a result of controversy between Jews and Jewish Christians, the Emperor Claudius expelled all Jews from Rome in 49-50 A.D. Suetonius the historian says that the expulsion was due to disturbances in the city “caused by the certain Chrestus” [Christ]. Perhaps many came back after Claudius’s death in 54 A.D. Paul’s letter was addressed to a Church with members from Jewish and Gentile backgrounds.

In July of 64 A.D., more than half of Rome was destroyed by fire. Rumor blamed the tragedy on Nero, who wanted to enlarge his palace. He shifted the blame by accusing the Christians. According to the historian Tacitus, a “great multitude” of Christians was put to death because of their “hatred of the human race.” Peter and Paul were probably among the victims.

Threatened by an army revolt and condemned to death by the senate, Nero committed suicide in 68 A.D. at the age of 31.

Comment:

Wherever the Good News of Jesus was preached, it met the same opposition as Jesus did, and many of those who began to follow him shared his suffering and death. But no human force could stop the power of the Spirit unleashed upon the world. The blood of martyrs has always been, and will always be, the seed of Christians.

Quote:

From Pope Clement I, successor of St. Peter: “It was through envy and jealousy that the greatest and most upright pillars of the Church were persecuted and struggled unto death.... First of all, Peter, who because of unreasonable jealousy suffered not merely once or twice but many times, and, having thus given his witness, went to the place of glory that he deserved. It was through jealousy and conflict that Paul showed the way to the prize for perseverance. He was put in chains seven times, sent into exile, and stoned; a herald both in the east and the west, he achieved a noble fame by his faith....”

“Around these men with their holy lives there are gathered a great throng of the elect, who, though victims of jealousy, gave us the finest example of endurance in the midst of many indignities and tortures. Through jealousy women were tormented, like Dirce or the daughters of Danaus, suffering terrible and unholy acts of violence. But they courageously finished the course of faith and despite their bodily weakness won a noble prize.”



8 posted on 06/30/2005 7:51:11 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

The Church in China!


9 posted on 06/30/2005 8:01:14 AM PDT by RobbyS (chirho)
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To: Salvation

Faith-sharing bump.


10 posted on 06/30/2005 8:01:50 AM PDT by Ciexyz (Let us always remember, the Lord is in control.)
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To: Salvation

The Persecution of the Christian Churches by the Nazis

Important Nuremberg Document Made Public

It is well-known that Hitler, his advisors as well as other Nazi leaders were immersed in the occult. In simple terms, they were magicians, adepts of Satan, and they were probably demon-possessed. Hitler’s mesmerizing speeches, the pagan symbols used by the Nazis (the swastika is a symbol of the revolving sun, fire, infinity and magic), their obsession with death and killing testify to this. Hitler is said to have been a member of the secret satanic Thule Society. He read books dealing with occultism and mysticism, practiced black magic and believed himself to be the Antichrist. The Nazi leadership was forced to participate in initiation rites and Satanic ceremonies. Moreover, Hitler demanded oaths of loyalty and worship from the multitudes.

Hitler’s involvement in the occult has been the subject of a number of books, mostly English, published in the last few years. We do not wish to elaborate on this subject. The fact that uncompromising real Christians and Christian Churches were persecuted as a consequence of the Nazis’ hatred of God and His children, is less known and less publicized. But a report of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), America’s first central intelligence agency, prepared in 1945 for the Nuremberg War Crimes prosecutors, documents the persecution of the Christian Churches by the Nazis and it is posted now on the Internet site of the Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion. See The Nazi Master Plan, Annex 4: The Persecution of the Christian Churches (108 pages, Adobe Acrobat format).

The report “describes, with illustrative factual evidence, Nazi purposes, policies and methods of persecuting the Christian Churches in Germany and occupied Europe.”

Overview of the OSS report entitled “The Persecution of the Christian Churches”

National Socialism by its very nature was hostile to Christianity and the Christian Churches. Indications of this fact can be found in the speeches and writings of Nazi leaders, especially in Alfred Rosenberg’s book, entitled Myth of the Twentieth Century, the most important book of Nazi ideology after Hitler’s Mein Kampf.

Christianity was incompatible with National Socialism, since it “could not be reconciled with the principle of racism, with a foreign policy of unlimited aggressive warfare, or with a domestic policy involving the complete subservience of Church to State. Since these were fundamental elements of the National Socialist program, conflict was inevitable.” The result was the Nazis’ systematic persecution of the Christian Churches in Germany and in the occupied areas throughout the period of the National Socialist rule.

The goal of the Nazis was to minimize the influence of the Christian Churches without declaring an open war on them and without adopting a radical anti-Christian policy officially. (This could be due to the fact that the Nazis came to power in a basically Christian country and continent, and an open war against Christianity would have meant the fall of the Nazis.)

Policies Adopted by the Nazis in the Persecution of the Christian churches

Germany

In Germany they adopted the policy of “gradual encroachment”, which meant that they pretended to be good friends of the Churches at first, then gradually deprived them of all opportunity to affect public life; persecuted those Christians and priests who criticized the Nazi regime and sent many of them to prisons or concentration camps. This plan had been established even before the Nazis came to power.

The Catholic Church

Before the Nazis came to power, the relationship between them and the German Catholic Church was bitter. In their speeches, the Nazi leaders attacked the Catholic Church. Catholic bishops in turn considered the Nazi movement anti-Christian and forbade the clergy to participate in ceremonies where the Nazis were officially represented. Catholic priests spoke out against National Socialism and denied Nazis the sacraments and church burials. Catholic journalists criticized National Socialism in Catholic newspapers.

After the Nazis came to power in 1933, they wanted to liquidate the political opposition, especially the Communists, and they sought an ally in the Church for this. To gain the support of Catholics, the Nazi government forbade anti-religious and anti-Church propaganda and closed secular schools. In return they requested Catholics to refrain from political activity. The Catholic hierarchy then lifted all restrictions imposed on members of the Church adhering to the Nazi movement, and as a result many Catholics joined the Nazi Party.

On July 8, 1933, a Concordat was signed in Rome between the Holy See and the German Reich. Under this treaty, the freedom and the rights of the German Catholic Church, its organizations and its schools were guaranteed. In exchange they had to promise loyalty to the Reich government and had to withdraw from the political scene. The negotiations were conducted in secret over the heads of German Catholics and bishops. The Center Party, a political organization of the Catholic Church, was forced to “voluntarily” dissolve itself.

After the consolidation of the regime, the relations between the Nazi state and the Catholic Church worsened. The Nazis resumed their campaign against Christianity and stripped the Church of all its more important rights. The opposition of the Catholic Church to the Nazi movement grew. Nazism was branded as an enemy of Christendom. The Nazis sent many priests and Christians to prisons and concentration camps and persecuted the Church in other ways, too. In March 1937, Pope Pius XI issued an encyclical entitled “Mit Brennender Sorge” (With Deep Anxiety) and in it denounced the violations of the Concordat by the Nazi state and described the actions of the Nazi government against the Church as “intrigues which from the beginning had no other aim than a war of extermination”.

The Evangelical Church

To gain control over the German Evangelical Church, which had a democratic constitution, the Nazis imposed a centralized organ of administration on it, headed by a Reich Bishop, whose election was controlled by the Nazis. In this way the Nazis succeeded to plant their own man into the bishop’s seat. As a consequence, the freedom of the pastors became limited and religious associations were dissolved. But the attempt to control the Evangelical Church by these means failed, because some bishops refused to yield to pressure. They were placed under house arrest. Opposition in the Church succeeded in uniting a large part of Evangelicals in protest against the Reich Bishop, who did not resign, but faded from the scene. He was gradually superseded by other agencies of Nazi control.

In 1935, Evangelical churches were deprived of their right to sue before the regular courts, thus of protection in civil courts. A new administrative court was set up for church matters except questions of faith and worship, whose president was a Nazi appointee. Moreover, Hitler created a Reich Ministry for Ecclesiastical Affairs, which was empowered to issue ordinances. This meant Nazi control over the entire Church administration. Church leaders addressed a memorandum to Hitler denouncing the anti-Christian acts of the government. The majority of the ministers who attacked Hitler and the Nazis in their speeches and writings were silenced by being put into concentration camps or by being prohibited to speak or write.

The Christian Sects

“Certain of the smaller Christian sects, especially the Jehovah’s Witnesses (Ernste Bibelforscher) and the Pentecostal Association (Freie Christengemeinde) were particularly objectionable from the Nazi standpoint because of their advanced pacifist views. Since they were without important influence at home or abroad, it was possible to proceed against them more drastically than against the larger Christian Churches. Both groups were therefore declared illegal and there were times when almost no adherent of either group was outside a concentration camp.”

Incorporated and Occupied Areas

In incorporated areas, local Churches were feared primarily as potential centers of national resistance to German domination. They were severely persecuted. In occupied areas, where the Churches cooperated with the occupying authorities, such as Slovakia, they were favored. In countries where the local churches supported national resistance, such as Poland and Norway, they were persecuted.

Methods Used to Implement the Policy of Persecution

Interference with the Central Institutions of Church Government

The Direct Seizure of Central Institutions of Church Government

This was the case with the German Evangelical Church, as we have discussed above. In the case of the Norwegian National Church, a state Church to which 98.6% of the Norwegian population adhered, the Nazis placed pro-Nazis in charge of its central organization after they invaded Norway. As a result, almost all Norwegian pastors resigned their public office and salaries on Easter Sunday 1942.

Interference with the Normal Operation of Central Institutions of Church Government

In the case of the Catholic and some Protestant Churches, the Nazis were unable to gain control of their central governing institutions, therefore they tried to prevent those institutions from operating. Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Pentecostal Association were declared illegal, their members were persecuted and sent to concentration camps. The central governing organ of the German Confessionals, a Church made up of protesting Evangelicals, was declared illegal.

Another method to control Christian Churches was the imposition of financial control on their operation. The principal Christian Churches of Germany were supported financially by state collected church taxes. To control these Churches, it was sufficient to deprive them of all other sources of revenue and to impose state restrictions on the expenditure of state collected funds. For example, state controlled finance departments were set up for the German Evangelical Church in 1937. At the same time, severe restrictions were placed on the right of churches and other organizations to solicit contributions.

Nazis also interfered in the communication within churches. The telephone conversations of the bishops were under constant surveillance by the police. In some cases their offices were raided by the Gestapo.

Interference with the Persons of the Clergy and of Lay Workers

Systematic propaganda campaigns were carried out against the clergy to depict them in an unfavorable light. Church leaders were frequently attacked, mobbed and insulted by the SA, the SS, the Hitler Youth and other Nazi organizations. Many Catholic and Protestant ministers were removed from office, arrested, imprisoned or sent to concentration camps for their pacifism and criticism of the Nazis. The Nazis didn’t want to “create martyrs”, nevertheless they murdered a large number of Christians.

Interference with the Activities of the Clergy

The Closing of Church Buildings

Used primarily in the incorporated and occupied territories, such as western Poland and Norway.

Interference with Freedom of Speech and Writings

All discussion of the Church question in the press, in pamphlets or in books was prohibited by the Minister of Education in 1934. The next year, professors of theology in the universities were ordered not to participate in the church dispute. In 1935 the Propaganda Ministry imposed censorship before publication on all church periodicals and on all writings and pictures multigraphed for distribution. In 1937 the Reich Minister for Ecclesiastical Affairs threatened to confiscate or prohibit any printed pastorals.

A few cases: on Palm Sunday, 14 March 1937, the Papal Encyclical letter about the situation of the Catholic Church in Germany, “Mit Brennender Sorge” (With Deep Anxiety) was read in most Catholic churches in the Third Reich. The Nazis retaliated by closing the printing offices, seizing the duplicating machines, confiscating the copies and arresting people who distributed or transcribed the text. Similar measures were taken against the Encyclical of October 1939 by Pius XII (Summi Pontificatus), pastoral letters which dealt with Catholic principles of education and the hardships of Catholic organizations, or complained about restriction set on the freedom of the Church. In 1936 a Catholic Sunday paper was suspended because it printed a sermon entitled “The Threat to Catholic Faith.” An Evangelical pastor’s memorandum entitled “The State Church is Here” was confiscated in 1935. In 1937, three Evangelical Christian leaders issued a declaration in which they protested against a Nazi demand that the German nation give up the Christian faith. Nazis closed the printing shop and confiscated printed copies of this declaration. Evangelical leaders issued a manifesto against the New Paganism of Alfred Rosenberg. When the pastors “read this Manifesto from their pulpits, some 700 of them were arrested, 500 to be put in prison and 200 under house arrest. When the ministers continued nevertheless to read the Manifesto, fanatical Nazi governors made use of the concentration camp.”

Interference with the Educational Functions of the Clergy

The Nazis wanted to eliminate the Gospel, the clergy and the Christian influence from education. Principal elements:

The Closing of Theological Seminaries. Cases: in 1939 the theological faculties of the University of Munich and the University of Graz were closed. The lesser seminaries in Austria were all closed. In 1938 the theological faculty at the University of Innsbruck, a seminary connected with this faculty, and the theological faculty in Salzburg was closed. In March 1944, the last remaining independent theological school in Norway was closed.

The Closing of Denominational Schools. Before the Nazis came to power, the majority of private and public elementary schools in Germany were denominational schools. The Concordat guaranteed the right to maintain Catholic denominational schools and to establish new ones, and to employ only Catholic teachers in these schools. Religious orders and congregations were entitled to establish and conduct private schools. In spite of this, the Nazis tried to eliminate all religious influences from education. They targeted secondary schools directed by religious orders at first. Catholic orders and congregations had altogether 12 secondary schools for boys and 188 for girls, which were gradually eliminated. The c 1600 teachers who were members of religious orders were eliminated from the c 400 public elementary schools for girls in 1937. In 1938 the Ministry of Interior in Vienna deprived all private schools in Austria of public recognition and rights, then closed them finally. In 1939 the Bavarian Ministry of Public Instruction forbade the clergy to teach in secondary schools. In Bavaria and other districts, most of the denominational primary schools were converted into National Community Schools. “At the time of the outbreak of the war, the abolition of the Catholic denominational schools was complete.”

Elimination of Religious Instructions From Other Schools. Religious instruction was provided, for those who wished it, in the public schools under the Weimar Republic. The continuation of this system was guaranteed by the Concordat, but the Nazis set to eliminate this as rapidly as possible: religious instruction was curtailed in schools, teachers were influenced to refuse the teaching of religion and Catholic religious text books were vetoed. “At the time of the outbreak of the war denominational religious instruction had practically disappeared from Germany’s primary schools.”

Interference with Christian Organizations

Catholic organizations were protected under the Concordat. But the Nazis quickly began to suppress the activities of both Catholic and Protestant Church organizations. After the occupation of Austria, all Catholic associations were dissolved in that country. The same was attempted in Germany, but gradually. The organizations affected were the following:

Religious orders

The Concordat guaranteed the foundation and protection of any number of Catholic religious orders and congregations, the free selection of their members, their pastoral activity, education, affairs and administration. These guarantees were violated in many cases. Franciscan Friars were closed in Germany. In Austria different religious orders were dissolved or their properties confiscated, such as the society of Christ the King, the old abbeys of Goettweig, Admont, Engelzell, the nuns of Eggenberg and Mariazel, a Benedictine foundation, Franciscan friars, Cistercians.

The Youth Movement

Christian youth organizations exerted Christian influence over the youth of Germany and they were rivals to the Hitler Jugend, therefore the Nazis wanted to abolish them. On December 17, 1933 by the order of the Reich Bishop, the entire Evangelical Youth Movement with more than 700,000 members was placed under the leadership of the leader of the Hitler Youth. The Catholic Youth movement was protected by the Concordat, but the Nazis began a campaign to destroy it through restrictions and persecution. A decree issued in 1933 forbade simultaneous membership in the Hitler Youth and in denominational youth organizations. In 1935, all not purely religious activity was forbidden to denominational youth associations. “Every method of propaganda and coercion was employed in order to bring all German youngsters into the Hitler Youth and to prevent them from joining denominational organizations. Finally the Catholic Youth associations were simply forbidden in entire districts of the Reich. Physical terrorization did the rest… By 1938, in almost all districts of the Reich, the Catholic Youth Associations had been dissolved.”

Other Church Organizations

The Catholic Workers Associations and other adult organizations were put under pressure. For example, the head of the German Labor Front forbade simultaneous membership in the Labor Front and in denominational professional organizations. After a few years these Catholic organizations were forbidden, district by district, and some of them ended by self-dissolution, such as the Catholic Teachers Organization, Catholic student fraternities, etc.

Organizations Bearing Particular Responsibility in Connection with the Persecutions

In the persecution of the German Evangelical Church, the principal part was played by the Reich Bishop and his collaborators on the Spiritual Council before 1935, then by the Reich Ministry for Ecclesiastical Affairs. The German Evangelical Church's chief legal and administrative department, the Church Chancery, was also responsible. Financial control over this Church was maintained by its state controlled finance departments. The group called German Christians, renamed Luther Christians in 1938, played an important part in the persecution of the German Evangelical Church. Lesson: as there are wolves among the sheep, so were there traitors among Christians during the Nazi regime, especially top-level leaders, who sold out to the Nazi regime and took part in the persecution of Christians and lower priests.

Unreligious organizations responsible for the persecution of Christians: Reich Education Ministry; Reich Propaganda Ministry, which issued orders for the censorship of Church publications and was responsible for the systematic campaign of defamation waged against the German clergy; Reich Ministry of the Interior, which was the principal agency for direct government action in Church affairs prior to the creation of the Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs and which issued orders curtailing freedom of discussion; the police forces controlled by the Ministry of Interior; the Gestapo, that is the political police; the SS, the SA and the Hitler Youth, which were responsible for most of the acts of intimidation and violence against the clergy and laity beside the police; the German occupation authorities in occupied areas, such as Norway and Poland, where the persecution of the Christian Churches was the most severe.


11 posted on 06/30/2005 9:10:00 AM PDT by Smartass (Si vis pacem, para bellum - Por el dedo de Dios se escribió)
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To: Smartass
And it can happen again.

First They Came for the Jews

First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.
Pastor Martin Niemöller

Community and individuality are not opposites. People cannot survive on their own. When the odds are stacked against you, you must rally with the oppressed and hated.

When a growing oppressive regime is taking hold, you must act, otherwise you will soon face your enemy alone and hopeless.

Strength of community is a strength as much as individualism, as long you are willing to face weaknesses in your own community. Ignoring slacking values will mean that you will be rallied against by those you oppress.

Niemöller affirms we must rally against unhealthy organized regimes. We must also stay vigilant with those that appear to be good natured, as all organisation attracts corruption. Niemöller also warns us that if it is you who are corrupt, then you will face a stronger combined force of foe!
Vexen Crabtree

12 posted on 06/30/2005 9:17:46 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

I'm bummed that those pictures didn't hang around. Guess I'll have tot 'Property" them and post them after each section.


13 posted on 06/30/2005 9:18:58 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation



14 posted on 06/30/2005 9:20:53 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All



15 posted on 06/30/2005 9:22:34 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

16 posted on 06/30/2005 9:24:57 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

17 posted on 06/30/2005 9:26:38 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All

18 posted on 06/30/2005 9:27:37 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Smartass
One such martyr from the Nazi concentrations camps was Blessed Titus Brandsma.

“He who wants to win the world for Christ must have the courage to come in conflict with it.”

Titus Brandsma

Titus Brandsma, 0. Carm. was declared Blessed by Pope John Paul, II on November 1985. Since then, the promotion of his cause for sainthood has been in progress. An Interprovincial Committee of Carmelites exists, here in the United States, to educate and inform the Body of Christ as to its progress.

Titus Brandsma, Dutch priest, educator, journalist and modern mystic, has much to say to Twenty-first Century Christians. His joyful countenance in the face of chronic illness and finally, at the torturous hands of the Nazi’s, is a study in humankind’s sharing of its portion of the Cross of Christ. The frail, bookishlooking clergyman with the big cigar, labeled “That dangerous little friar” by his enemies, was able to perform heroic acts of suffering, followed by forgiveness, because his faith and trust in God was so firmly rooted in prayer. Unlike Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, who made a deliberate commitment of her life as an atonement for sin, Father Brandsma did not seek martyrdom, yet when he was thoroughly convinced it was God’s Will, he was able to accept humiliation and even death.

Quotes From Fellow Prisoners at Dachau

“He has been beaten terribly in Dachau. His little jacket was covered with blood but ‘it’s not worth troubling about.’ With a few words he silenced any further comment. Then he would reflect for a few quiet moments and offer some thoughts from Teresa of Avila to whoever would listen to him.” — Brother Raphael Tijhuis, 1946, a Carmelite who was with Titus in the concentration camp, which Brother Raphael survived.

“The ‘Kretiner aus Holland’ [the cretin from Holland] has in the short time that he was with us often been severely beaten, so that his face was covered over with blood. But he kept up his courage, and his spirit could simply not be broken.” — H. A. C. Jansen

“His spirit could simply not be broken. Any thought of revenge was far from him: thus he could say his Our Father in silence while in the presence of his attackers.” — R. Höppener

“His person and words always bespoke such a calm, such an abandon and so much good hope that one can never forget this venerable person.” — Dr. Joseph Kentenich, 1954

“When Professor Brandsma joined us, Dachau was at the time such a hell as it perhaps never had been before or would be afterwards. His short stay in Dachau was a true martyrdam. Yet he remained always cheerful and happy, a support for all of us.” — P. v. Genuchten

“Simple and unobstrusive among the 1200 priests of Dachau... a perpetual smile, filled with patience and inner calm, a smile of mystical serenity in the midst of all the suffering he had to undergo.” — Othmarus, A Capuchin

“Fr. Titus knew of no feelings of hate, he was all love. There was no favoritism with him. When I returned home I said immediately to my mother: That man will be canonized one day.” — P. Verhulst


"Not my will but Thine be done!"
Fr. Brandsma was heard to speak this prayer while the Nazis performed their experiments on him.
19 posted on 06/30/2005 10:18:20 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (If this isn't the End Times it certainly is a reasonable facsimile...)
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To: Salvation
“All that is required for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing”
"Liberals prefer "therapy and understanding" for terrorists instead of retaliation"

20 posted on 06/30/2005 11:02:03 AM PDT by Smartass (Si vis pacem, para bellum - Por el dedo de Dios se escribió)
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