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The Cross vs. the Swastika
Boundless ^ | 1/26/02 | Matt Kaufman

Posted on 01/26/2002 1:14:46 PM PST by Paul Ross

The Cross vs. the Swastika

Boundless: Kaufman on Campus 2001
 

The Cross vs. the Swastika
by Matt Kaufman

I vividly remember a high school conversation with a friend I’d known since we were eight. I’d pointed out that Hitler was essentially a pagan, not a Christian, but my friend absolutely refused to believe it. No matter how much evidence I presented, he kept insisting that Nazi Germany was an extension of Christianity, acting out its age-old vendetta against the Jews. Not that he spoke from any personal study of the subject; he just knew. He’d heard it so many times it’d become an article of faith — one of those things “everyone knows.”

Flash forward 25 years. A few weeks ago my last column (http://www.boundless.org/2001/regulars/kaufman/a0000528.html) refuted a number of familiar charges against Christianity, including the Christianity-created-Nazism shibboleth. Even though I only skimmed the subject, I thought the evidence I cited would’ve been hard to ignore; I quoted, for example, Hitler’s fond prediction that he would “destroy Christianity” and replace it with “a [pagan] religion rooted in nature and blood.” But sure enough, I still heard from people who couldn’t buy that.

Well, sometimes myths die hard. But this one took a hit in early January, at the hands of one Julie Seltzer Mandel, a Jewish law student at Rutgers whose grandmother survived internment at Auschwitz.

A couple of years ago Mandel read through 148 bound volumes of papers gathered by the American OSS (the World War II-era predecessor of the CIA) to build the case against Nazi leaders on trial at Nuremberg. Now she and some fellow students are publishing what they found in the journal Law and Religion(www.lawandreligion.com), which Mandel edits. The upshot: a ton of evidence that Hitler sought to wipe out Christianity just as surely as he sought to wipe out the Jews.

The first installment (the papers are being published in stages) includes a 108-page OSS outline, “The Persecution of the Christian Churches.” It’s not easy reading, but it’s an enlightening tale of how the Nazis — faced with a country where the overwhelming majority considered themselves Christians — built their power while plotting to undermine and eradicate the churches, and the people’s faith.

Before the Nazis came to power, the churches did hold some views that overlapped with the National Socialists — e.g., they opposed communism and resented the Versailles treaty that ended World War I by placing heavy burdens on defeated Germany. But, the OSS noted, the churches “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.” Thus, “conflict was inevitable.”

From the start of the Nazi movement, “the destruction of Christianity was explicitly recognized as a purpose of the National Socialist movement,” said Baldur von Scvhirach, leader of the group that would come to be known as Hitler youth. But “explicitly” only within partly ranks: as the OSS stated, “considerations of expedience made it impossible” for the movement to make this public until it consolidated power.

So the Nazis lied to the churches, posing as a group with modest and agreeable goals like the restoration of social discipline in a country that was growing permissive. But as they gained power, they took advantage of the fact that many of the Protestant churches in the largest body (the German Evangelical Church) were government-financed and administered. This, the OSS reported, advanced the Nazi plan “to capture and use church organization for their own purposes” and “to secure the elimination of Christian influences in the German church by legal or quasi legal means.”

The Roman Catholic Church was another story; its administration came from Rome, not within German borders, and its relationship with the Nazis in the 1920s had been bitter. So Hitler lied again, offering a treaty pledging total freedom for the Catholic church, asking only that the church pledge loyalty to the civil government and emphasize citizens’ patriotic duties — principles which sounded a lot like what the church already promoted. Rome signed the treaty in 1933.

Only later, when Hitler assumed dictatorial powers, did his true policy toward both Catholics and Protestants become apparent. By 1937, Pope Pius XI denounced the Nazis for waging “a war of extermination” against the church, and dissidents like the Lutheran clergyman Martin Niemoller openly denounced state control of Protestant churches. The fiction of peaceful coexistence was rapidly fading: In the words of The New York Times (summarizing OSS conclusions), “Nazi street mobs, often in the company of the Gestapo, routinely stormed offices in Protestant and Catholic churches where clergymen were seen as lax in their support of the regime.”

The Nazis still paid enough attention to public perception to paint its church critics as traitors: the church “shall have not martyrs, but criminals,” an official said. But the campaign was increasingly unrestrained. Catholic priests found police snatching sermons out of their hands, often in mid-reading. Protestant churches issued a manifesto opposing Nazi practices, and in response 700 Protestant pastors were arrested. And so it went.

Not that Christians took this lying down; the OSS noted that despite this state terrorism, believers often acted with remarkable courage. The report tells, for example, of how massive public demonstrations protested the arrests of Lutheran pastors, and how individuals like pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer (hanged just days before the war ended) and Catholic lay official Josef Mueller joined German military intelligence because that group sought to undermine the Nazis from within.

There is, of course, plenty of room for legitimate criticism of church leaders and laymen alike for getting suckered early on, and for failing to put up enough of a fight later. Yet we should approach such judgments with due humility. As Vincent Carroll and David Shiflett write in their book Christianity on Trial (to repeat a quote used in my last column), “It is easy for those who do not live under a totalitarian regime to expect heroism from those who do, but it is an expectation that will often be disappointed. . . . it should be less surprising that the mass of Christians were silent than that some believed strongly enough to pay for their faith with their lives.”

At any rate, my point is hardly to defend every action (or inaction) on the part of German churches. In fact, I think their failures bring us valuable lessons, not least about the dangers of government involvement in — and thus power over — any churches.

But the notion that the church either gave birth to Hitler or walked hand-in-hand with him as a partner is, simply, slander. Hitler himself knew better. “One is either a Christian or a German,” he said. “You can’t be both.”

This is something to bear in mind when some folk on the left trot out their well-worn accusation that conservative Christians are “Nazis” or “fascists.” It’s also relevant to answering the charge made by the likes of liberal New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd: “History teaches that when religion is injected into politics — the Crusades, Henry VIII, Salem, Father Coughlin, Hitler, Kosovo — disaster follows.”

But it’s not Christianity that’s injected evil into the world. In fact, the worst massacres in history have been committed by atheists (Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot) and virtual pagans (Hitler). Christians have amassed their share of sins over the past 2,000 years, but the great murderers have been the church’s enemies, especially in the past century. It’s long past time to set the historical record straight.


Copyright © 2002 Focus on the Family. All rights reserved. International copyright secured.
When Matt Kaufman isn’t writing his monthly BW column, he serves as associate editor of Citizen magazine.

The complete text of this article is available at http://www.boundless.org/2001/regulars/kaufman/a0000541.html


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist; crevolist
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To: Ol' Sparky
Hitler and the Nazis practiced evolution...

How does one "practice" evolution?

101 posted on 01/27/2002 6:12:47 PM PST by Junior
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To: Ol' Sparky
You have no evidence for this lame fairy tale.

There is a lot more evidence for evolution than a few cryptic paragraphs in an ancient religious text...

102 posted on 01/27/2002 6:23:22 PM PST by Junior
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To: Junior
There is a lot more evidence for evolution than a few cryptic paragraphs in an ancient religious text...

I don't think you meant what you wrote.

103 posted on 01/27/2002 7:03:50 PM PST by AndrewC
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To: livius
I don't think he meant "moral ideal." What Hitler was referring to was the clergy's ceremonial leadership position that impressed him so much as a child. Later, as dictator, he constantly attempted to produce spectacles and events that would emulate and replace religious ceremonies in the life of the German people.

An illuminating passage from his "Mein Kampf" describes his viewpoint on religion (and science for that matter)

Mein Kampf


The political leader should not estimate 
the worth of a religion by taking some of its shortcomings 
into account, but he should ask himself whether there be 
any practical substitute in a view which is demonstrably 
better. Until such a substitute be available only fools 
and criminals would think of abolishing the existing 
religion. 

Undoubtedly no small amount of blame for the present 
unsatisfactory religious situation must be attributed to 
those who have encumbered the ideal of religion with 
purely material accessories and have thus given rise to an 
utterly futile conflict between religion and science. In 
this conflict victory will nearly always be on the side of 
science, even though after a bitter struggle, while 
religion will suffer heavily in the eyes of those who 
cannot penetrate beneath the mere superficial aspects of 
science. 


104 posted on 01/27/2002 7:25:33 PM PST by AndrewC
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To: Junior
I'm getting weary of the Hitler analogies on FR.

An example a common method of argument: Clinton believes in highway construction. Hitler believed in autobahn construction. Hitler is a Nazi. Therefore, Clinton is a Nazi.

This is guilt by association.

Not only is this a logical fallacy, it diverts the debate onto Hitler and Nazism. Also, it does violence to civilized discussion on FR, and makes further discussion unproductive in a thread.

105 posted on 01/27/2002 8:43:34 PM PST by Gladwin
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To: Junior
I didn't mean to imply that you were doing this Junior. I am just complaining about other posters who do this (and you know who you are).
106 posted on 01/27/2002 8:45:31 PM PST by Gladwin
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To: PatrickHenry;Ol' Sparky
Your post was fine, but in time you will learn that with a guy like Ol' Sparky, he will probably ignore what you say and go on repeating his dogma. The evolution/creationism threads are full of people like that. It's frustrating, but don't let it get to you.

My theory is that Ol' Sparky is really Bob Enyart, trying to drum up some callers for his Internet radio show.

What say, OM?

107 posted on 01/28/2002 12:32:31 AM PST by jennyp
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To: Gladwin; jennyp; junior; longshadow; vaderetro
Clinton believes in highway construction. Hitler believed in autobahn construction.

Poor ol' Darwin is getting a really bad deal. It's not Darwin upon whom all the world's evils can be blamed, it's that arch-demon Thomas Edison! Think about it. Ever since he invented the electric light, and his evil followers have been using it -- polluting the divine darkness -- we've suffered communism, fascism, and a really sickening increase in teen pregnancy. And the public schools have fallen apart too. We must fight the evil of the electric light. Join me, freepers, in my holy and righteous cause!

108 posted on 01/28/2002 3:02:47 AM PST by PatrickHenry
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To: PatrickHenry
I've seen the light! Thomas Edison invented electric lights. Hitler used electric lights. Therefore, electric lights are evil, and Thomas Edison inspired Hitler. It is so obvious, and it has been in front of our faces all along.
109 posted on 01/28/2002 5:24:26 AM PST by Gladwin
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To: Gladwin
I've seen the light! Thomas Edison invented electric lights. Hitler used electric lights. Therefore ...

Wow! I missed that one. I'm totally convinced now. Only the truly Satanic would deny what is so obvious.

110 posted on 01/28/2002 6:01:28 AM PST by PatrickHenry
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To: jennyp
I know Bob. If you want to prove this absurd fairy tale call him. What are AFRAID of Jenny? Enyart made an utter fool of Michael Shermer, who morons like idolize. He sells tapes of debates with Eugenie Scott, one of the leading "experts" of evolution (and you don't sell the tape if you lose the debate). 1-800-8enyart. Between 9 and 10 p.m. ET. Let the world hear you at www.kgov.com and provide ONE piece of evidence for evolution. You'll have all the time you need.

If you don't call, can we assume you know that you'd get your ass handed to you?

111 posted on 01/28/2002 9:47:45 AM PST by Ol' Sparky
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To: Gladwin
What a dumb reponse. Darwinism was the driving force behind Hitler's desire to create a master race and to exterminate the inferior and weaker in German society. Highway construction had no impact on Clinton's Presidency.
112 posted on 01/28/2002 9:49:33 AM PST by Ol' Sparky
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To: Ol' Sparky
Highway construction had no impact on Clinton's Presidency.

Without highways there would be no trailers. Without trailers there would be no trailer parks. Without trailer parks there would be no trailer trash. Without trailer trash there would be no Paula Corbin Jones. Without...

113 posted on 01/28/2002 9:54:39 AM PST by AndrewC
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To: headsonpikes
Unless the ones linking Naziism to Christianity are secretly in Aryan drag.

Seriously, this wouldn't surprise me one bit.

114 posted on 01/28/2002 9:56:20 AM PST by rdb3
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To: Junior
That's the typical BS from evolutionists. There is really a lot of evidence. Provide ONE piece of evidence. There is NO fossil record of macroevolution and there should be MILLIONS of transitional fossils.

Evolution is based on the idea that the earth is going from disorder to order, "evolving" and improving. The Second Law of Thermodynamics as well as all other applicable scientific laws completely contradict evolution. The earth is going from order to disorder, using up all available energy and will eventually die out. The evolutionist is forced to come up with another lame theory -- a non-existent law -- that cancels out the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

No one in the right mind can imagine the duckbilled platypus or dolphins and whales evolving.

Evolution is based on the theory of massive, beneficial mutations. Almost all recorded mutations in human history have been detrimental.

Evolution is as absurd as the theory of global warming. In fact, more absurd. It's pseudo-science with evidence forced on a nation by God-haters that are desperate.

115 posted on 01/28/2002 9:56:53 AM PST by Ol' Sparky
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To: Junior
How does one practice Darwin's theory of evolution? By adopting his racist ideas about race superiority and carrying out Darwin's ideas on "survival of the fitest."
116 posted on 01/28/2002 9:58:46 AM PST by Ol' Sparky
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To: AndrewC
Good point! I hadn't thought of that...
117 posted on 01/28/2002 10:01:22 AM PST by Ol' Sparky
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To: Gladwin
Electric light bulbs didn't influence Edison into committing mass murder. Darwin's racism and his ideas on survival of the fitest where the foundation of Hitler's desire to exterminate the handicapped and elderly and to create a master race.
118 posted on 01/28/2002 10:06:41 AM PST by Ol' Sparky
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To: Junior
"How does one 'practice' evolution?"

Get selected sexually. lol

119 posted on 01/28/2002 10:08:06 AM PST by headsonpikes
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To: Ol' Sparky
Thomas Edison invented electric lights. Hitler used electric lights while planning his mad pogroms. Therefore, electric lights are evil, and Thomas Edison inspired Hitler.

Charles Darwin invented evolution. Hitler used evolution while planning his mad pogroms. Therefore, evolution is evil, and Charles Darwin inspired Hitler.

120 posted on 01/28/2002 10:12:25 AM PST by Gladwin
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