Saturday, July 6, 2019

What Is the Star of David in Judaism?

https://www.learnreligions.com/star-of-david-2076778

What Is the Star of David in Judaism?


MENU Home Search Ad Abrahamic / Middle Eastern Judaism What Is the Star of David in Judaism? The Significance of the Six-Pointed Star Share Flipboard Email Mel Curtis/The Image Bank/Getty Images by Ariela Pelaia Updated April 17, 2019 The Star of David is a six-pointed star made up of two equilateral triangles superimposed over each other. It also is known as a hexagram. In Hebrew, it is called the magen David (מָגֵן דָּוִד), which means the "shield of David." The Star of David doesn’t have any religious significance in Judaism, but it is one of the symbols most commonly associated with the Jewish people.  Origins of the Star of David The origins of the Star of David are unclear. We do know that the symbol hasn't always been associated exclusively with Judaism, but was used by Christians and Muslims at various points in history as well. Sometimes it was even associated with King Solomon instead of King David. The Star of David is not mentioned in rabbinic literature until the Middle Ages. It was during the latter part of this era that Kabbalists, the Jewish mystics, began to associate the symbol with a deeper spiritual meaning. One siddur (a Jewish prayer book) dated from 1512 in Prague displays a large Star of David on the cover with the phrase: "He will merit to bestow a bountiful gift on anyone who grasps the Shield of David." The Star of David was eventually cemented as a Jewish symbol when it became a favorite architectural decoration on Jewish buildings throughout the Middle Ages. According to German-born Israeli philosopher and historian Gershom Sholem, many Jews adopted this symbol in Eastern Europe in an effort to match the prevalence of the Christian cross.  Then, during World War II, when Hitler forced Jews to wear a yellow Star of David as a "badge of shame," the symbol became prominently cemented as a Jewish symbol. Jews were also forced to wear identifying badges during the Middle Ages, although not always a Star of David. Jews reclaimed the symbol, beginning with Zionists at the First Zionist Congress in 1897, where the Star of David was chosen as the central symbol of the flag of the future State of Israel. Today, the flag of Israel features a blue Star of David prominently in the middle of a white banner with two horizontal blue lines on the top and bottom of the flag. Likewise, many Jews wear jewelry that prominently features the Star of David today. What Is the David Connection? The symbol’s association with King David comes mostly from Jewish legend. For instance, there is a Midrash that says that when David was a teen he fought an enemy, King Nimrod. David's shield was composed of two interlocking triangles attached to the back of a round shield, and, at one point, the battle became so intense that the two triangles were fused together. David won the battle and the two triangles were henceforth known as magen David, the Shield of David. This story, of course, is just one of many. Symbolic Meanings There are several ideas about the symbolic meaning of the Star of David. Some Kabbalists thought that the six points represented God's absolute rule over the universe in all six directions: north, south, east, west, up, and down. Kabbalists also believed that the two triangles represented humanity’s dual nature—good and evil—and that the star could be used as protection against evil spirits. The structure of the star, with two overlapping triangles, has also been thought to represent the relationship between God and the Jewish people. The star that points up symbolizes God, and the star that points down represents Jews on Earth. Yet others have noticed that there are 12 sides on the triangle, perhaps representing the Twelve Tribes. Updated by Chaviva Gordon-Bennett. What Is a Cantor in the Jewish Faith? Who Is the Founder of Judaism? Tushuvah Is a Return to God Through Atonement for Sins Learn the Rabbi's Role in the Jewish Community The Meanings Behind Jewish Numbers Satan Is Not a Sentient Being In Judaism But a Metaphor for Evil Who Was Jesus According to Jewish Beliefs? What Is Judaism's Havdalah Ceremony? What Is the Jewish Practice of Kiddush? What Does Judaism Think About Sex? What's the Significance of Biblical Hebrew Names? What Does Jewish Law Say About Shoes? Biography of King David, Biblical Jewish Leader What Do Jews Believe Happens After We Die? How to Be a Modern-Day Mensch Understand the Symbolic Power of the Hamsa Hand Home Follow Us Facebook Flipboard Home East Asian Abrahamic/Middle East Indian Other Beliefs & Religions About Us Advertise Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Careers Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use Learn Religions is part of the Dotdash publishing family. ThoughtCo Verywell Family Verywell Mind The Spruce and more

The History of the Balfour Declaration

https://www.thoughtco.com/balfour-declaration-17781

The History of the Balfour Declaration

MENU Home Search Ad Humanities › History & Culture The History of the Balfour Declaration Share Flipboard Email Topical Press Agency / Getty Images by Jennifer Rosenberg Updated June 11, 2018 The Balfour Declaration was a November 2, 1917 letter from British Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour to Lord Rothschild that made public the British support of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The Balfour Declaration led the League of Nations to entrust the United Kingdom with the Palestine Mandate in 1922. Background The Balfour Declaration was a product of years of careful negotiation. After centuries of living in a diaspora, the 1894 Dreyfus Affair in France shocked Jews into realizing they would not be safe from arbitrary antisemitism unless they had their own country. In response, Jews created the new concept of political Zionism in which it was believed that through active political maneuvering, a Jewish homeland could be created. Zionism was becoming a popular concept by the time World War I began. World War I and Chaim Weizmann During World War I, Great Britain needed help. Since Germany (Britain's enemy during WWI) had cornered the production of acetone—an important ingredient for arms production—Great Britain may have lost the war if Chaim Weizmann had not invented a fermentation process that allowed the British to manufacture their own liquid acetone. It was this fermentation process that brought Weizmann to the attention of David Lloyd George (Minister of Ammunitions) and Arthur James Balfour (previously the Prime Minister but at this time the First Lord of the Admiralty). Chaim Weizmann was not just a scientist; he was also the leader of the Zionist Movement. Diplomacy Weizmann's contact with Lloyd George and Balfour continued, even after Lloyd George became prime minister and Balfour was transferred to the Foreign Office in 1916. Additional Zionist leaders such as Nahum Sokolow also pressured Great Britain to support a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Although Balfour, himself, was in favor of a Jewish state, Great Britain particularly favored the declaration as an act of policy. Britain wanted the United States to join World War I and the British hoped that by supporting a Jewish homeland in Palestine, the world Jewish community would be able to sway the U.S. to join the war. Announcing the Balfour Declaration Though the Balfour Declaration went through several drafts, the final version was issued on November 2, 1917, in a letter from Balfour to Lord Rothschild, president of the British Zionist Federation. The main body of the letter quoted the decision of the October 31, 1917, British Cabinet meeting. This declaration was accepted by the League of Nations on July 24, 1922, and embodied in the mandate that gave Great Britain temporary administrative control of Palestine. The White Paper In 1939, Great Britain reneged on the Balfour Declaration by issuing the White Paper, which stated that creating a Jewish state was no longer a British policy. It was also Great Britain's change in policy toward Palestine, especially the White Paper, that prevented millions of European Jews to escape from Nazi-occupied Europe to Palestine before and during the Holocaust. Learn Something New Every Day Discover surprising insights and little-known facts about politics, literature, science, and the marvels of the natural world. ONE-TAP SIGN UP The Balfour Declaration Foreign Office November 2nd, 1917 Dear Lord Rothschild, I have much pleasure in conveying to you, on behalf of His Majesty's Government, the following declaration of sympathy with Jewish Zionist aspirations which has been submitted to, and approved by, the Cabinet. His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country. I should be grateful if you would bring this declaration to the knowledge of the Zionist Federation. Yours sincerely, Arthur James Balfour CITE Article How Was the Formation of Israel Influenced by the Balfour Declaration? Article Biography of Golda Meir, Prime Minister of Israel Article U.S.-Israeli-Palestinian Relations Explained Article The Life of Gertrude Bell, English Explorer in Iraq Article Learn What Took Place in World War I's Aftermath Article Glossary of Holocaust Terms to Know Article Where Did Displaced Jews in Europe Go After the Holocaust? Article What Is Appeasement? Definition and Examples in Foreign Policy Article The Oslo Accords: Background and Derailment Article What Do People Mean When They Talk About "The Holy Land?" Article The Terrifying Religious and Political History of Anti-Semitism Article What to Know About The U.S. and Great Britain Special Relationship Article The Horrible Story of a Ship Filled With Jewish Refugees Being Torpedoed Article Why Woodrow Wilson's Plan for Peace Failed Article Prime Minister Robert Borden Led Canada Through World War I Article History of Multilateralism in Foreign Policy Home Learn Something New Every Day Discover surprising insights and little-known facts about politics, literature, science, and the marvels of the natural world. ONE-TAP SIGN UP Follow Us Facebook Flipboard Science, Tech, Math Humanities Languages Resources About Us Advertise Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Careers Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use ThoughtCo is part of the Dotdash publishing family. Verywell Family Verywell Mind The Balance Lifewire and more

The Story of the Septuagint Bible and the Name Behind It

https://www.thoughtco.com/the-story-of-the-septuagint-bible-119834

The Story of the Septuagint Bible and the Name Behind It

MENU Home Search Ad Humanities › History & Culture The Story of the Septuagint Bible and the Name Behind It Share Flipboard Email MUNICH, GERMANY - JULY 09: The Ottheinrich Bible is displayed during a photocall of the 'Bayerische Staatsbibliothek' on July 9, 2008 in Munich, Germany. The Ottheinrich Bible, the first illuminated courtly masterpiece, lavishly illustrated with sparkling gold and precious colours manuscript of the New Testament in German, written circa 1430 in Bavaria, almost 100 years before the seminal Bible translation by Martin Luther, the unusually large manuscript is incomparably the grandest surviving manuscript of the German vernacular Bible, as well as one of the most ambitious books of the northern renaissance. The Bible is expected to fetch in excess of 3 million Euro. Alexander Hassenstein / Getty Images by N.S. Gill's Ancient/Classical History Glossary Updated April 10, 2019 The Septuagint Bible arose in the 3rd century B.C., when the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, was translated into Greek. The name Septuagint derives from the Latin word septuaginta, which means 70. The Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible is called Septuagint because 70 or 72 Jewish scholars reportedly took part in the translation process. The scholars worked in Alexandria during the reign of Ptolemy II Philadelphus (285-247 B.C.), according to the Letter of Aristeas to his brother Philocrates. They assembled to translate the Hebrew Old Testament into the Greek language because Koine Greek began to supplant Hebrew as the language most commonly spoken by the Jewish people during the Hellenistic Period. Aristeas determined that 72 scholars took part in the Hebrew-to-Greek Bible translation by calculating six elders for each of the 12 tribes of Israel. Adding to the legend and symbolism of the number is the idea that the translation was created in 72 days, according to The Biblical Archaeologist article, "Why Study the Septuagint?" written by Melvin K. H. Peters in 1986. Calvin J. Roetzel states in The World That Shaped the New Testament that the original Septuagint only contained the Pentateuch. The Pentateuch is the Greek version of the Torah, which consists of the first five books of the Bible. The text chronicles the Israelites from creation to the leave-taking of Moses. The specific books are Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. Later versions of the Septuagint included the other two sections of the Hebrew Bible, Prophets and Writings. Roetzel discusses a latter-day embellishment to the Septuagint legend, which today probably qualifies as a miracle: Not only did 72 scholars working independently make separate translations in 70 days, but these translations agreed in every detail. Featured Thursday's Term to Learn. The Septuagint is also known as: LXX. Example of Septuagint in a Sentence The Septuagint contains Greek idioms that express events differently from the way they were expressed in the Hebrew Old Testament. The term Septuagint is sometimes used to refer to any Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible. Books of the Septuagint Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy Joshua Judges Ruth Kings (Samuel) I Kings (Samuel) II Kings III Kings IV Paralipomenon (Chronicles) I Paralipomenon (Chronicles) II Esdras I Esdras I (Ezra) Nehemiah Psalms of David Prayer of Manasseh Proverbs Ecclesiastes Song of Solomon Job Wisdom of Solomon Wisdom of the Son of Sirach Esther Judith Tobit Hosea Amos Micah Joel Obadiah Jonah Nahum Habakkuk Zephaniah Haggai Zechariah Malachi Isaiah Jeremiah Baruch Lamentations of Jeremiah Epistles of Jeremiah Ezekial Daniel Song of the Three Children Learn Something New Every Day Discover surprising insights and little-known facts about politics, literature, science, and the marvels of the natural world. ONE-TAP SIGN UP Susanna Bel and the Dragon I Maccabees II Maccabees III Maccabees Article What Is the True Translation of the Bible? Article History of the German Bible & Well-Known Passages Article Find Out What A Vulgate Is Article How Is Diego the Spanish Name for James? List 11 Biblical Figures You Should Know Article Biography of Moses, Leader of the Abrahamic Religions Article Hittites and the Hittite Empire List The 10 Best Study Bibles of 2019 List Studying the Bible as Literature Article "Comments on Genesis" by Elizabeth Cady Stanton from the Woman's Bible Article Who Was Saint Jerome? Article What Influenced the Spread of Early Christianity in North Africa Article How to Write Greek Letters With HTML List When Did Humans Figure Out How to Run the World - and One Another? Article Is the Bible Fact or Fiction? Article Ancient History: The United Monarchy of Israel and Judah Home Learn Something New Every Day Discover surprising insights and little-known facts about politics, literature, science, and the marvels of the natural world. ONE-TAP SIGN UP Follow Us Facebook Flipboard Science, Tech, Math Humanities Languages Resources About Us Advertise Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Careers Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use ThoughtCo is part of the Dotdash publishing family. Verywell Family Verywell Mind The Balance Lifewire and more

Biography of Moses, Leader of the Abrahamic Religions

https://www.thoughtco.com/who-was-moses-p2-118324

Biography of Moses, Leader of the Abrahamic Religions

MENU Home Search Ad Humanities › History & Culture Biography of Moses, Leader of the Abrahamic Religions Share Flipboard Email BlackAperture / Getty Images by N.S. Gill Updated May 23, 2019 Moses, if he existed, likely lived in Egypt during the dynastic New Kingdom, and he was an early leader of the Hebrews and one of the most important figures in Judaism. He is a significant patriarch of all the Abrahamic religions, those who use the Torah, Christian Old Testament, or Quran as sacred texts. Fast Facts: Moses Known For: Patriarch of the Torah, Christian Old Testament, and Quran.  Born: Land of Goshen, New Kingdom, Egypt.  Parents: Yocheved and Amram. Died: Mount Nebo, Moab. Spouse(s): Adoniah or Tharbis, an Ethiopian princess; Tzipporah the Midianite Children: From Tzipporah, Gershom and Eliezer. Early Life If there was a historical man named Moses, he would most likely have been born in Egypt (the "Land of Goshen") during the reign of Ramses II (ruled 1279–1213 BCE), pharaoh of the New Kingdom's 19th dynasty. According to the Torah, Moses was the youngest of three children born to Yocheved (sometimes spelled Jochebed) and Avram. Yocheved was the daughter of Levi; she married Avram, a grandson of Levi, which means Yocheved was also Avram's aunt. Moses' siblings were Aaron (the founder of the Hebraic priestly dynasty) and Miriam (an important prophetess). Pharaoh's Curse Not much else is available on Avram or Yocheved in the Torah itself, but Midrashim records—ancient rabbinical commentaries on the Torah—say that Yocheved was 130 years od when Moses was born, and that Avram divorced Yocheved while she was pregnant, so that their son Moses would escape the pharaoh's decree. According to Exodus, the pharaoh of Egypt decreed that all Hebrew boy babies were to be drowned at birth. Yocheved hid her newborn son for 3 months and then placed her baby in a wicker basket in the Nile River reeds. The baby cried and was rescued by one of the pharaoh's daughters who kept the baby. This legend is similar to one in the Mesopotamian story of Gilgamesh, when the Sumerian king Sargon I was placed in a reed basket and floated down the Euphrates river. In the Court of the Pharaoh Moses' sister the prophetess Miriam knew what would occur and was watching when the daughter of the pharaoh took the baby. Miriam came forward to ask the princess if she would like a Hebrew wet nurse for the infant. When the princess agreed, Miriam fetched Yocheved. Moses grew up in the palace as an adopted son of the pharaoh's daughter (identified the Midrash as Queen Bithia), but he went to see his own people when he grew up, and as an adult he may have been a governor working for Ramses II. During Ramses II's reign, Ethiopia was an Egyptian province, with an Egyptian governor named Mesui, who some scholars suggest was Moses. While in Ethiopia, Moses married an Ethiopian princess named Tharbis or Adonais. Learn Something New Every Day Discover surprising insights and little-known facts about politics, literature, science, and the marvels of the natural world. ONE-TAP SIGN UP When he witnessed an overseer beating a Hebrew, Moses struck the Egyptian and killed him, with the beaten Hebrew as a witness. The pharaoh learned that Moses was the murderer and ordered his execution. Moses fled to the land of Midian, where he married Tzipporah, daughter of Jethro. Their sons were Gershom and Eliezer. A Burning Bush In the land of Midian, Moses was tending a flock of sheep for his father-in-law when he saw a bush that was burning, but not being consumed by the flames. He approached the bush and first an angel and then God (or more properly Yahweh) himself spoke to him, telling him that he must return to Egypt and shepherd the Israelites out to Canaan, their promised land of milk and honey. Moses was convinced when Yahweh changed his staff to a snake, then gave him a new staff with which to lead his people. Moses returned to Egypt to seek the release of the Hebrews and to bring them to Canaan, but when he approached the pharaoh, Ramses refused to release the Hebrews. In retaliation, Yahweh imposed a series of 10 plagues, the last being the killing the firstborn of every Egyptian. Only after suffering through the beginning of the tenth plague, di the pharaoh relent, telling Moses he could take the Hebrews out of Egypt. However, after Moses and the Hebrews left, the pharaoh reversed his decision and had his men follow them. When they reached the Red Sea, Moses used his staff to part the waters and allow the Israelites to pass through the seabed. The Egyptian soldiers also entered the dry seabed, but once the Israelites had safely crossed Moses lifted his arms: the sea closed, and the Egyptian army was drowned. The Biblical Exodus During the 40-year journey of the Hebrews from Egypt to Canaan, Moses went to Mount Sinai to fast and commune with Yahweh for 40 days. There he received the 10 Commandments from Yahweh. While Moses was gone, his followers including Aaron became nervous that he would not return and built a golden calf. Moses told Yahweh that his followers had begun to leave, and Yahweh wanted to kill them, but Moses dissuaded him. But, when Moses saw the actual calf and altar he was so angry he hurled and shattered the two tablets holding the 10 Commandments; Moses made two more tablets and Yahweh inscribed them again. When the people complained they needed food in the desert, Yahweh fed the Israelites with manna, a substance "white like coriander seed and tasted like wafers made with honey" that rained down from the heavens, and quail. Death Near the end of the forty years, Yahweh informed Moses that only the new generation of Israelites would enter Canaan, and for that reason, Moses would never see the Promised Land. Moses climbed Mt. Abarim and saw Canaan on the horizon, but that was as close as he would come. Moses chose Joshua as the successor, and, at the ripe old age of 120, Moses climbed Mt. Nebo and died. Who was Moses? Much of this tale is legendary and full of miracles, the stuff of ancient religion. But the role of Moses in the Bible, to Jews, Christians, and Moslems, is rich and complex beyond the miracles. He is seen by all three as the leader of the Israelite people who shepherded them out of Egypt. He is the embodiment of Mosaic law—the one who interceded with Yahweh on behalf of his people, and the one who acted as judge on behalf of the sacred. He was a teacher and the founder of the cult and sanctuary of the ancient Hebraic religion. The last four books of the Torah—Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy—are primarily dedicated to the life and activities of Moses and his people. Exodus starts with the birth of Moses and Deuteronomy ends with his death and burial by Yahweh. Early interpretations of that circumstance suggested that Moses himself wrote the books of the Torah (or received them direct from Yahweh). Modern biblical scholars mostly agree that the five books were redacted from four independently written documents written long after Moses would have died. The Ptolemaic-era Egyptian historian Manetho mentions Moses—again long after Moses's death. There are other late historical references in the writings of the Roman historians Josephus, Philo, Apion, Strabo, Tacitus, and Porphyry. His story is told in the Bible in the book of Exodus and the ancient commentaries on the biblical text known as the midrashim. As Musa, he is also is a significant prophet in the Quran. The biblical scholar J. Van Seters, said it best, "The quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend." Sources Feldman, Louis H. "Josephus' Portrait of Moses." The Jewish Quarterly Review 82.3/4 (1992): 285–328. Print. ---. "Josephus' Portrait of Moses: Part Two." The Jewish Quarterly Review 83.1/2 (1992): 7–50. Print. Nigosian, S. A. "Moses as They Saw Him." Vetus Testamentum 43.3 (1993): 339–50. Print. Robinson, Marilynne. "Moses." Salmagundi 121/122 (1999): 23-46. Print. Römer, Thomas. "Moses Outside the Torah and the Construction of a Diaspora Identity." The Journal of Hebrew Scriptures 8.15 (2008): 1–12. Print. Van Seters, John. "Moses." The Encyclopedia of Religion. Ed. Eliade, Mircea. New York: Macmillan, 1987. 116. Print. Wineman, Aryeh. "Between Person and Metaphor: Moses in the Hasidic Homily-Literature." Hebrew Studies 59 (2018): 209–20. Print. List The 10 Egyptian Plagues in the Book of Exodus Article What Are the 12 Tribes of Israel? Article Why Was Baby Moses Left in a Basket in the Nile? List The Greatest Artifacts from Ancient Egypt List The 7 Eras of Ancient Jewish History Article The Story of the Septuagint Bible and the Name Behind It Article When was the Biblical Exodus? List The Periods of Egyptian History in Pictures Article Ancient History: The United Monarchy of Israel and Judah List 11 Biblical Figures You Should Know Article Chemosh: Ancient God of Moabites List The Rise and Fall of the Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms in Egypt Article What Is the True Translation of the Bible? Article Ancient Egypt: Battle of Kadesh Article The Major Events of Ancient Egypt's Old Kingdom Period Article Do You Know About the Female Pharaoh Hatshepsut of Egypt? Home Learn Something New Every Day Discover surprising insights and little-known facts about politics, literature, science, and the marvels of the natural world. ONE-TAP SIGN UP Follow Us Facebook Flipboard Science, Tech, Math Humanities Languages Resources About Us Advertise Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Careers Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use ThoughtCo is part of the Dotdash publishing family. Verywell Family Verywell Mind The Balance Lifewire and more

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Sejarah 10 Hukum Taurat

HEADLINEPolitik Uang Menurut Alkitab: Pandangan, Ajaran dan Hukumannya 06:58:42 amThursday 04th, July 2019 /29 May,2017 Home » Kristen » 10 Hukum Taurat Kristen Protestan dan Artinya 10 Hukum Taurat Kristen Protestan dan Artinya Sponsors Link Sebelum menyampaikan hukum Taurat, Yesus memperkenalkan diri kepada Musa sebagai YHWH. Disini, Allah mengikat diri dengan bangsa Israel melalui sebuah perjanjian. Perjanjian tersebut berisi tindakan penyelamatan yang dilakukan Tuhan kepada Israel. Bangsa Israel dituntut untuk mentaati seluruh perjanjian tersebut. Bukan hanya sebagai sebuah kewajiban saja, melainkan perbedaan Islam dan Kristen sebagai suatu ketaatan akan kebaikan Tuhan. ads Setelah itu, barulah dituliskan oleh nabi Musa pada dua loh batu. Perintah taurat satu hingga empat tertulis dalam loh batu satu. Sedangkan yang kelima hingga kesepuluh tertulis pada loh batu dua. Sepuluh Perintah taurat terdapat dalam dua Kitab Perjanjian Lama. Pertama, Keluaran 20:2-17. Kedua, Ulangan 5:6-21. Sepuluh Perintah Taurat tersebut tidak hanya diberlakukan pada bangsa Israel. Namun, juga berlaku pada semua umat Kristiani. Berikut adalah Perintah taurat beserta artinya: 1. Akulah Tuhan Allahmu, Jangan Ada Padamu allah Lain di Hadapan-Ku Tulisan “allah” kecil menandakan allah yang palsu. Tuhan Allah tidak menghendaki kita untuk memuja allah lain selain diri-Nya. Karena ada hukum Taurat Ialah yang menciptakan langit dan bumi. Jadi, kepada-Nya lah kita berkenan. Bukan kepada benda-benda gaib atau kekuatan mistis. Keluaran 20:2-3 “Akulah TUHAN, Allahmu, yang membawa engkau keluar dari tanah Mesir, dari tempat perbudakan. Jangan ada padamu allah lain di hadapan-Ku.” Arti hukum Allah yang pertama: Perkataan “ada padamu allah” memiliki arti bahwa kita tidak boleh meletakkan diri, menyandarkan diri, dan berharap pada kuasa lain. Karena kita sudah memiliki satu Allah. Yaitu Bapa yang ada di Sorga. Dialah satu-satunya Allah yang patut kita sembah dan muliakan. Dia Allah yang hidup yang membawa kita pada pembebasan Jadilah Anak Tuhan yang sejati. Jangan percaya pada kekuatan-kekuatan lain. Apalagi jika kamu harus meminta bantuan “mbah dukun” untuk memperoleh keselamatan hidup. Mintalah kepada Tuhan, maka akan diberikan juga padamu Namun, banyak kasus pemujaan berhala yang masih terjadi hingga saat ini. Hal ini dpaat kita lihat dari banyaknya agama yang tidak mempercayai adanya Tuhan. Bahkan masih ada orang yang menjadi seorang Atheis atau Agnostik. Padahal, kita sudah hidup di zaman yang modern. 2. Jangan Membuat Bagimu Patung yang Menyerupai Apapun yang Ada di Langit, di Bumi, dan di Dalam Bumi Pada zaman dahulu, banyak kekuatan mistis yang masih dipercayai oleh masyarakat. Hal ini juga berlaku hingga sekarang. Terutama di hukum Taurat pedalaman. Mereka masih sering menyembah pohon, batu, dan patung-patung. Mereka percaya kalau peran Gereja dalam masyarakat tersebut mampu memberikan perlindungan, keselamatan, dan kesejahteraan pada penduduk setempat. Penyembahan patung merupakan perbuatan menyimpang. Tidak dikehendaki oleh Tuhan Allah. Namun, manusia sangat mudah digoda oleh pacaran beda agama menurut Kristen dalam aksi kekuatan jahat. Seperti yang terjadi pada bangsa Israel. Mereka menyembah patung Dewi Kesuburan Astarte dalam rupa wanita telanjang. Patung ini digunakan sebagai “jampi” untuk meminta hasil panen yang baik dan merangsang kehamilan. Keluaran 20:4-6 “Jangan membuat bagimu patung yang menyerupai apapun yang ada di langit di atas, atau yang ada di bumi di bawah, atau yang ada di dalam air di bawah bumi. Jangan sujud menyembah kepadanya atau beribadah kepadanya, sebab Aku, Tuhan Allahmu, adalah Allah yang cemburu, yang membalaskan kesalahan bapa kepada anak-anaknya, kepada keturunan yang ketiga dan keempat dari orang-orang yang membenci Aku. Tetapi Aku menujukkan kasih setia kepada beribu-ribu orang, yaitu mereka yang mengasihi Aku dan yang berpegang pada perintah-perintah-Ku.” Arti dari perkataan dalam Kitab Suci di atas, antara lain: Dilarang mematungkan Allah dengan cara atau bentuk apapun itu Tidak melakukan kebaktian dengan cara yang salah. Misalnya sambil tiduran Dilarang menyembah berhala, terutama kepada patung, pohon, dan benda gaib lainnya 3. Jangan Menyebut Nama Tuhan Allahmu dengan Sembarangan Keluaran 3:14 “Firman Allah kepada Musa: “AKU ADALAH AKU.” Lagi firman-Nya: “Beginilah kau katakan kepada orang Israel itu: AKULAH AKU telah mengutus aku kepadamu.” Maksud perintah Tuhan yang ketiga, antara lain: Perintah yang ketiga ini sebagai pemberitahuan bahwa kita harus menghormati Tuhan. Kita harus menjaga kekudusan nama Tuhan. Sebutlah nama Tuhan di saat yang tepat, misalnya saat kita berdoa. Jangan pula menyebut nama Tuhan saat kita melakukan perbuatan dosa, dengan simbol Kristen menjadi arti yang penting dalam hidup kita. Sebagai umat Kristen, kita selalu dituntut untuk melindungi nama Tuhan. Terutama dalam segala bentuk penyalahgunaan. Jangan pernah menggunakan nama Tuhan untuk keuntungan diri sendiri. Utamakanlah untuk melakukan segala sesuatu demi kemuliaan nama Tuhan Sepuluh Perintah Taurat dikenal juga dengan sepuluh Firman Tuhan. Artinya ialah satu kumpulan yang berisi tentang etika yang harus dilakukan dalam menjalankan hidup sebagai Kristen. Sepuluh Perintah Taurat ini disampaikan Allah kepada bangsa Israel melalui Nabi Musa.  Pada zaman dulu, bangsa Israel terus menerus diperbudak oleh Mesir. Karena kasih-Nya, Yesus datang untuk menolong bangsa Israel. Hingga pada akhirnya, bangsa Israel masih melihat mujizat Tuhan Yesus dalam keluar dari tanah Mesir dan bebas dari namanya perbudakan. 4. Ingatlah dan Kuduskanlah Hari Sabat / Hari Tuhan ads Ulangan 5:15 “Sebab haruslah kau ingat, bahwa engkaupun dahulu budak di tanah Mesir dan engkau dibawa keluar dari sana oleh TUHAN, Allahmu dengan tangan yang kuat dan lengan yang teracung; itulah sebabnya Tuhan, Allahmu, memerintahkan engkau merayakan Hari Sabat.” Maksud dari perkataan tersebut, antara lain: Kita sebagai umat Kristiani menyediakan waktu yang dikhususkan untuk Tuhan Menyediakan waktu untuk merenungkan makna dan tujuan hidup kita di hadapan Tuhan agar kita dapat menemukan rancangan atau renungan Tuhan didalamnya Jangan lupa untuk pergi beribadah dan melakukan cara berdoa yang benar dengan setiap hari  dan setiap minggu. Selain itu, ikutilah kegiatan keagamaan untuk menguduskan nama Tuhan Keluaran 20:8-11 “Ingatlah dan kuduskanlah hari Sabat. Enam hari lamanya engkau akan bekerja dan melakukan segala pekerjaanmu, tetapi hari ketujuh adalah hari Sabat, TUHAN, Allahmu; maka jangan melakukan sesuatu pekerjaan, engkau atau anakmu laki-laki, atau anakmu perempuan, atau hambamu laki-laki, atau hambamu perempuan, atau hewanmu atau orang asing yang di tempat kediamananmu. Sebab enam hari lamanya TUHAN menjadikan langit dan bumi, laut dan segala isinya, dan Ia berhenti pada hari ketujuh; Itulah sebabnya TUHAN memberkati hari Sabat dan menguduskannya.” 5. Hormatilah Ayahmu dan Ibumu Kita dituntut untuk menghormati sesama manusia. Namun, sesama pertama yang perlu kita hormati adalah kedua orang tua. Mengapa? Karena merekalah yang telah berjasa membesarkan kita hingga sekarang. Mereka yang telah berjuang untuk menafkahi dan memenuhi apa yang kita inginkan Orang tua adalah orang yang paling mengerti kondisi kita Kedua orang tua diutus Allah untuk merawat anaknya. Mereka memenuhi apa yang diperintahkan Allah kepadanya. Maka dari itu, kita harus menghormati orang tua dengan sungguh-sungguh Orang tua adalah orang yang pertama kali berhubungan dengan kita sewaktu kita dilahirkan Namun, pada zaman sekarang, banyak anak yang kurang menghormati kedua orang tuanya. Mereka berkata kasar dan membohongi kedua orang tua untuk kesenangan sendiri. Apakah kamu tipikal anak yang demikian? Jika “iya”, berubahlah. Ingatlah kalau orang tua telah sangat berjasa dalam hidupmu saat ini. Keluaran 20:12 “Hormatilah ayah dan ibumu, supaya lanjut umurmu di tanah yang diberikan TUHAN, Allahmu, kepadamu.” 6. Jangan Membunuh Makna kebangkitan Yesus dalam perkataan ini terdapat dalam Keluaran 20:13 “Jangan Membunuh”. Apa yang harus kita lakukan pada perintah Tuhan yang keenam ini? Sebagai seorang Kristiani, kita harus menghargai hidup sesama kita yang lain. Kita dituntut untuk tidak merencanakan perbuatan jahat untuk menghancurkan sesama Jangan merencanakan pembunuhan yang disengaja maupun tidak disengaja Menghindari melakukan perbuatan keras, apalagi jika perbuatan tersebut mematikan sesama Tidak melakukan tindakan euthanasia alias mempercepat kematian manusia untuk menghilangkan kesakitan yang dideritanya. Hal ini hanya diizinkan jika orang yang menderita kesakitan dan keluarga setuju untuk melakukan euthanasia Manusia adalah Anak Tuhan yang mulia. Manusia adalah rupa dan gambaran Tuhan Allah sendiri. Walaupun temanmu kerap kali menyakiti hatimu, janganlah rencanakan perbuatan jahat kepadanya. Melainkan ampunilah dia, seperti Allah telah mengampuni dosamu terlebih dahulu. Matius 6:14-15 “Karena jikalau kamu mengampuni kesalahan orang, Bapamu yang di Sorga akan mengampuni kamu juga. Tetapi jikalau kamu tidak mengampuni orang, Bapamu juga tidak akan mengampuni kesalahanmu.” Sponsors Link 7. Jangan Berzinah Perintah Allah yang ketujuh ini terdapat dalam Kitab Keluaran 20:14 “Jangan Berzinah.” Apa yang dikehendaki Allah kepada kita pada perintah yang ketujuh ini? Agar manusia selalu menjaga kesucian dirinya, termasuk menjaga kesucian tubuhnya. Karena anggota tubuh kita digunakan untuk memuji dan memuliakan nama Tuhan. Bukan untuk melakukan perbuatan cabul alias seksual Menjauhi perbuatan cabul. Karena perbuatan ini sangat dibenci oleh Tuhan. Terlebih lagi jika keduanya belum terikat sebagai suami isteri Jangan berzinah dengan orang lain. Terlebih lagi ketika kamu sudah berkeluarga. Hormatilah pasanganmu, dan cintailah dia. Seperti yang telah kamu ucapkan dalam janji pernikahan di hadapan Tuhan Menjauhkan diri dari perbuatan dan perkataan yang mengarah kepada pornografi. Berkatalah sewajarnya tanpa mengandung unsur yang tidak senonoh Dilarang untuk mengingini isteri atau suami orang lain Perbuatan tentang zinah ini ditujukan kepada seluruh umat manusia. Terutama kepada mereka yang berpacaran dan memiliki keluarga. Hormatilah pasanganmu. Dengan demikian, kamu juga telah mengormati Tuhan. Karena pasanganmu itu adalah Anak Tuhan yang mulia. Efesus 5:22-23 “Hai isteri, tunduklah kepada suamimu seperti kepada Tuhan. Karena suami adalah kepala isteri, sama seperti Kristus adalah kepala jemaat. Dialah yang menyelamatkan tubuh.” Efesus 5:25-26 “Hai suami, kasihilah isterimu sebagaimana Kristus telah mengasihi jemaat dan telah menyerahkan diri-Nya baginya untuk menguduskannya, sesudah Ia menyucikannya dengan memandikannya dengan air dan firman.” 8. Jangan Mencuri Pernahkah kamu mencuri? Apa yang kamu curi? Sebagai manusia, kita kerap kali berpikir kalau mencuri ialah perbuatan wajar. Apalagi makna paskah sangat menjadi penting dalam bagi kehidupan kita. Kalau yang dicuri ialah barang-barang kecil. Misalnya uang Rp 2.000 atau mengambil beng-beng dari kedai lalu lupa membayarnya. Kita sering menyepelekan perintah yang kedelapan ini. Hal ini terbukti dari banyaknya tindakan pencurian yang terjadi saat ini. Cara yang digunakan pun semakin modern. Barang yang dicuri pun jumlahnya sangat besar. Apakah kamu tidak takut perbuatanmu akan dicatat di buku dosa nanti? Arti dari perintah “Jangan Mencuri”, antara lain: Kita harus selalu menghargai apa yang menjadi hak orang lain. Toh kamu juga mempunyai hak yang nantinya kamu terima. Kamu hanya perlu bersabar saja Selalu mensyukuri apa yang kita miliki. Walaupun jumlah yang kita miliki tidak sebanding dengan orang lain, senantiasalah untuk bersyukur Mensyukuri apa yang diberikan Tuhan kepadamu. Namun, kamu tidak selalu menerima ini. Kamu sering membandingkan kepunyaanmu dengan orang lain. Bahkan kamu berencana untuk mengambil milik orang dengan cara mencuri. JANGAN lakukan itu! Syukuri apa yang ada. Masih banyak orang lain yang hidupnya jauh di bawah kamu. Sponsors Link 9. Jangan Mengungkapkan Saksi Dusta Tentang Sesamamu Perintah ini terdapat dalam Kitab Keluaran 20:16. Hal ini tidak hanya menyuruh kita untuk tidak memfitnah. Namun, sejarah agama Kristen selalu mengingatkan juga selalu untuk berkata jujur. Terutama jika kejujuran tersebut sangat dibutuhkan di meja pengadilan. Sayangnya, banyak orang yang sangat sulit untuk jujur. Ia rela berbohong kepada dirinya sendiri dan kepada orang lain. Hal ini dilakukan karena meterialitas. Ya, apalagi kalau bukan uang. Sebagai manusia, kita sering menjatuhkan sesama kita hanya demi uang. Kita merendahkan nama baik dan martabatnya untuk barang berbentuk kertas tersebut. Yang paling parahnya, kita sampai melupakan Tuhan yang selalu melihat dan mengamati perbuatan kita. Perbuatan seperti apa yang dituntut dalam perintah Tuhan nomor sembilan ini? Selalu berkata jujur. Ingat, kejujuran itu mahal harganya. Biarlah kamu dibenci orang karena kejujuran yang kamu lakukan. Dibenci oleh manusia lebih baik ketimbang dibenci oleh Tuhan Allah Selalu menjaga dan memperjuangkan kebenaran. Tolaklah bayaran ketika seseorang memintamu untuk berbohong. Uang itu dicari dengan cara yang benar, bukan dengan cara licik seperti berbohong “Mulutmu adalah harimaumu”. Jagalah mulut kita sebaik-baiknya. Berkatalah apa adanya. Jangan melebih-lebihkan atau menguranginya. Kalau kamu tidak menjaga mulutmu, bukan hanya orang lain saja yang akan rugi. Akan tetapi, kamu juga akan dirugikan Jagalah hubunganmu dengan sesama. Terutama yang berkaitan dengan nasib hidupnya. Walaupun berkata jujur itu sangat sulit, berlatihlah dari sekarang. Ingat “Allah bisa karena biasa”. Dengan membiasakan hidup jujur, maka ini akan menjadi kebiasaanmu hingga tua nanti. 10. Jangan Mengingini Rumah Sesamamu, Jangan Mengingini Isterinya, Atau Apapun yang Menjadi Milik Sesamamu Perintah yang terakhir ini sifatnya batiniah, yaitu berkaitan dengan keinginan. Kalau kamu tidak bisa menguasai diri atas keinginan dan hawa nafsumu, kamu tidak akan selamat. Mengapa? Karena kamu harus tahu tujuan hidup orang Kristen dan tidak akan pernah puas atas apa yang kamu miliki saat ini. Kamu selalu merasa kekurangan lagi dan lagi. Yang harus dilakukan manusia pada perintah kesepuluh ini, antara lain: Mampu menguasai keinginan. Karena dengan demikian, kamu tidak akan pernah bermaksud untuk menginginkan milik orang lain. Karena kamu telah bersyukur atas segala sesuatu yang kamu miliki. Dapat menyeralaskan tindakan dengan kata hati nurani. Sebab kejahatan bukan hanya sebuah tindakan saja. Namun, juga sesuatu yang berpangkal dari hati nurani Mampu mengasah moral. Karena kita tahu kalau mengingini milik sesama melanggar kode etik Dapat mengatur keinginan lahiriah maupun keinginan batiniah Namun, banyak manusia yang melanggar perintah Tuhan yang terakhir ini. Karena keegoisan manusia dan sifatnya yang tidak mau kalah. Hingga manusia tersebut sering jatuh ke dalam dosa. Ingatlah, jika kamu sudah punya satu, jangan pernah ingin punya dua. Kalau satu saja sudah cukup, mengapa harus punya dua? Itulah 10 perintah Allah yang harus kita taati dalam hidup. Hiduplah sesuai dengan perintah dan ajaran Tuhan. Hindarilah untuk melakukan perbuatan menyimpang. Apalagi jika perbuatan tersebut melanggar perintah Tuhan. Semoga artikel 10 perintah Allah ini mampu menambah pengetahuanmu tentang agama Kristen. Artikel Lainnya Sponsors Link FBTwitterWALinePinterestG+LinkedIn hukum taurat, kristen, Kristen Protestan, sepuluh hukum taurat RELATED POSTS Doa Sebelum Bekerja di Kantor yang Memuliakan Nama Tuhan 3 Doa Bangun Tidur Menurut Kristen Sebelum Memulai Hari Tantangan dan Dinamika Etos Kerja Kristen Yang Beragam Paling Mujarab! Doa Kristen Untuk Ujian Skripsi Bagi Mahasiswa Tingkat Akhir 6 Ayat Alkitab Tentang Kekerasan Terhadap Perempuan yang Wajib Diketahui Umat Kristiani 40 Hari Setelah Meninggal Menurut Kristen: Arti, Ajaran dan Pandangannya Bolehkah Membaca Alkitab Saat Haid? Apakah Dosa Atau Tidak? Golput Menurut Kristen: Pandangan, Hukum Golput, dan Ajarannya 5 Hukum Rentenir Menurut Agama Kristen Yang Harus Dijauhi 4 Hukum Operasi Plastik Menurut Agama Kristen yang Sering Terlupakan Previous Next Oleh : sari Kategori : Kristen SEARCH search this site... RECENT POSTS RECENT 5 Doa Kristen Untuk Orang Yang Membenci Kita Singkat dan Jelas 02 July, 2019 3 Doa Kristen Untuk Pertunangan Penuh Keyakinan Besar Kepada Allah 02 July, 2019 4 Ayat Alkitab Untuk Motivasi Pelayanan Dari Tuhan Untuk UmatNya 27 June, 2019 Spiritualitas Kristiani: Arti, Konsep, Sifat, dan Tanda-Tandanya 26 June, 2019 Sejarah Sekolah Minggu Di Indonesia yang Menarik untuk Anda Baca! 26 June, 2019 SHARING KRISTEN Tentang Kami | Hubungi Kami Informasi di web ini hanya bersifat informasi dan tidak untuk menggantikan pendapat ahli atau profesional. 2017 © Copyright tuhanyesus.org. All Right Reserve World Wide Ketentuan Layanan | Kebijakan Privasi | Disclaimer | Cookies Term Of Use | Adchoices TO TOP ↑

Monday, July 1, 2019

Return to Nazareth

INSIGHT from (Matthew 2:19-23)
THE RETURN TO NAZARETH
"Why is Messiah often referred to as Yahshua of Nazareth?"
Jewish Messiah was referred to as “Yahshua of Nazareth” for several reasons. For one thing, in Bible times people were often identified by their native area or place of residence. The man who carried Yahshua’ cross when He was no longer able to, for example, was called Simon of Cyrene, noting his name and his place of residence (Luke 23:26). This distinguishes him from all other Simons and from all other residents of Cyrene who were not named Simon. Although Bethlehem was the place of Yahshua’ birth, Nazareth was the place where Yahshua had lived until He began His public ministry, and therefore He is said to be “of Nazareth.”
Matthew 2:23 tells us that Joseph settled his family in Nazareth—after returning from Egypt where he had fled to protect Yahshua from Herod—in order to fulfill “what was said through the prophets: ‘He will be called a Nazarene.’” The words here are not found in any of the books of the Old Testament, and there has been much difficulty in ascertaining the meaning of this passage. Most commentators agree that the prophecies respecting the coming Messiah were that He was to be of humble origin and would be despised and rejected (Isaiah 53; Psalm 22) and that the phrase “he shall be called” means the same as “He shall be.” When Matthew says, therefore, that the prophecies were “fulfilled,” his meaning is that the predictions of the prophets that the Messiah would be of a low and despised condition and would be rejected, were fully accomplished in His being an inhabitant of Nazareth.
The phrase “Yahshua of Nazareth” is first used in the Bible by Phillip who, after being called by Yahshua to follow Him, told Nathanael, "We have found him of whom Moses in the Law and also the prophets wrote, Yahshua of Nazareth, the son of Joseph" (John 1:45). By calling Him Yahshua of Nazareth, Phillip may also have been making a statement about the lowliness of His birth. The character of the people of Nazareth was such that they were despised and condemned. Nathanael’s response, “Can anything good come from Nazareth?” (John 1:46) would seem to indicate such. To come from Nazareth, therefore, or to be a Nazarene, was the same as to be despised, or to be esteemed of low birth. The Messiah who would come to save His people would be “a root out of dry ground, having no form or comeliness” (Isaiah 53:2). He would be “despised and rejected of men” from whom men hid their faces and “esteemed him not” (Isaiah 53:3).
Yahshua of Nazareth was born and grew up in humble circumstances, but His impact on the world has been greater than anyone ever born before or since. He came to “save His people from their sins” (Matthew 1:21),
Isaiah 53:2-3
He grew up before him like a tender shoot,
and like a root out of dry ground.
He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to him,
nothing in his appearance that we should desire him.
He was despised and rejected by mankind,
a man of suffering, and familiar with pain.
Like one from whom people hide their faces
he was despised, and we held him in low esteem.
LEARN TO LISTEN and LET HIS BLESSINGS FLOW <3

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

Christian Scandal in Nazi Germany

Home Popular Straight Talk Church Scandals Archive Authors Books Church and State Press challenging religious privilege in public life ArchiveBeliefChurch ScandalsStraight TalkVatican and Democracy The Great Scandal: Christianity’s Role in the Rise of the Nazis Facebook Twitter By Gregory Paul | 11 October 2003 Free Inquiry magazine Together with interior minister Wilhelm Frick (second from the right) and propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels (far right), Catholic bishops Franz Rudolf Bornewasser (Bishop of Trier) and Lugwig Sebastian (Bishop of Speyer) raise their hands in the Nazi salute at an official ceremony in Saarbrucken City Hall marking the reincorporation of the Saarland into the German Reich. “You know what happens when atheists take over—remember Nazi Germany?” Many Christians point to Nazism, alongside Stalinism, to illustrate the perils of atheism in power.[1] At the other extreme, some authors paint the Vatican as Hitler’s eager ally. Meanwhile, the Nazis are generally portrayed as using terror to bend a modern civilization to their agenda; yet we recognize that Hitler was initially popular. Amid these contradictions, where is the truth? A growing body of scholarly research, some based on careful analysis of Nazi records, is clarifying this complex history.[2] It reveals a convoluted pattern of religious and moral failure in which atheism and the nonreligious played little role, except as victims of the Nazis and their allies. In contrast, Christianity had the capacity to stop Nazism before it came to power, and to reduce or moderate its practices afterwards, but repeatedly failed to do so because the principal churches were complicit with—indeed, in the pay of—the Nazis. Most German Christians supported the Reich; many continued to do so in the face of mounting evidence that the dictatorship was depraved and murderously cruel. Elsewhere in Europe the story was often the same. Only with Christianity’s forbearance and frequent cooperation could fascistic movements gain majority support in Christian nations. European fascism was the fruit of a Christian culture. Millions of Christians actively supported these notorious regimes. Thousands participated in their atrocities. What, in God’s name, were they thinking? Before we can consider the Nazis, we need to examine the historical and cultural religious context that would give rise to them. Christian Foundations Early Christian sects promoted loyalty to authoritarian rulers so long they were not intolerably anti-Christian or, worse, atheistic. Christian anti-Semitism sprang from one of the church’s first efforts to forge an accommodation with power. Reinterpreting the Gospels to shift blame for the Crucifixion from the Romans to the Jews (the “Christ killer” story) courted favor with Rome, an early example of Christian complicity for political purposes. Added energy came from Christians’ anger over most Jews’ refusal to convert.[3] Christian anti-Semitism was only intermittently violent, but when violence occurred it was devastating. The first outright extermination of Jews occurred in 414 c.e. It would have innumerable successors, the worst nearly genocidal in scope. At standard rates of population growth, Diaspora Jewry should now number in the hundreds of millions. That there are only an estimated 13 million Jews in the world[4] is largely the result of Christian violence and forced conversion.[5] Anti-Semitic practices pioneered by Catholics included the forced wearing of yellow identification, ghettoization, confiscation of Jews’ property, and bans on intermarriage with Christians. European Protestantism bore the fierce impress of Martin Luther, whose 1543 tract On the Jews and Their Lies was a principal inspiration for Mein Kampf.[6] In addition to his anti-Semitism, Luther was also a fervent authoritarian. Against the Robbing and Murdering Peasants, his vituperative commentary on a contemporary rebellion, contributed to the deaths of perhaps 100,000 Christians and helped to lay the groundwork for an increasingly severe Germo-Christian autocracy.[7] With the Enlightenment, deistic and secular thinkers seeded Western culture with Greco-Roman notions of democracy and free expression. The feudal aristocracies and the churches counterattacked, couching their reactionary defense of privilege in self-consciously biblical language. This controversy would shape centuries of European history. As late as 1870, the Roman Catholic Church reaffirmed a reactionary program at the first Vatican Council. Convened by the ultraconservative Pope Pius IX (reigned 1846–1878), Vatican I stridently condemned modernism, democracy, capitalism, usury, and Marxism.[8] Anti-Semitism was also part of the mix; well into the twentieth century, mainstream Catholic publications set an intolerant tone that later Nazi propaganda would imitate. Anti-Semitism remained conspicuous in mainstream Catholic literature even after Pope Pius XI (reigned 1922–1939) officially condemned it. Protestantism, too, was largely hostile toward modernism and democracy during this period (with a few exceptions in northern Europe). Because Jews were seen as materialists who promoted and benefited from Enlightenment modernism, most Protestant denominations remained anti-Semitic. With the nineteenth century came a European movement that viewed Judaism as a racial curse. Attracting both Protestant and Catholic dissidents within Germanic populations, Aryan Christianity differed from traditional Christianity in denying both that Christ was a Jew and that Christianity had grown out of Judaism.[9] Adherents viewed Christ as a divine Aryan warrior who brought the sword to cleanse the earth of Jews.[10] Aryans were held to be the only true humans, specially created by God through Adam and Eve; all other peoples were soulless subhumans, descended from apes or created by Satan with no hope of salvation.[11] Most non-Aryans were considered suitable for subservient roles including slavery, but not the Jews. Spiritless yet clever and devious, Jews were seen as a satanic disease to be quarantined or eliminated. During the same years neopagan and occult movements gained adherents and incubated their own form of Aryanism. Unlike Aryan Christians, neopagan Aryans acknowledged that Christ was a Jew—and for that reason rejected Christianity. They believed themselves descended from demigods whose divinity had degraded through centuries of interbreeding with lesser races. The Norse gods and even the Atlantis myth sometimes decorated Aryan mythology. Attempting to deny that Nazi anti-Semitism had a Christian component, Christian apologists exaggerate the influence of Aryan neopaganism. Actually, neopaganism never had a large following. German Aryanism, whether Christian or pagan, became known as “Volkism.” Volkism prophesied the emergence of a great God-chosen Aryan who would lead the people (Volk) to their grand destiny through the conquest of Lebensraum (living space). A common motto was “God and Volk.” Disregarding obvious theological contradictions, growing numbers of German nationalists managed to work Aryanism into their Protestant or Catholic confessions, much as contemporary adherents of Voudoun or Santería blend the occult with their Christian beliefs. Darwinian theory sometimes entered Volkism as a belief in the divinely intended survival of the fittest peoples. Democracy had no place, but Nietzschean philosophy had some influence—a point Christian apologists make much of. Yet Nietzsche’s influence was modest, as Volkists found his skepticism toward religion unacceptable.[12] Though traceable to the ancient world, atheism first emerged as a major social movement in the mid-1800s.[13] It would be associated with both pro- and antidemocratic worldviews. Strongly influenced by science, atheists tended to view all humans as descended in common from apes. There was no inherent anti-Semitic tradition. Some atheists accepted then-popular pseudoscientific racist views that the races exhibited varying levels of intellect due to differing genetic heritages. Some went further, embracing various forms of eugenics as a means of improving the human condition. But neither of these positions was uniquely or characteristically atheistic. “Scientific” racism is actually better understood as a tool by which Christians could perpetuate their own cultural prejudices—it was no accident that the races deemed inferior by Western Christian societies and “science” were the same! When we seek precursors of Nazi anti-Semitism and authoritarianism, it is among European Christians, not among the atheists, that we must search. Following World War I, the religious situation in Europe was complex. Scientific findings about the age of the Earth, Darwin’s theory of evolution, and biblical criticism had fueled the first major expansion of nontheism at Christianity’s expense among ordinary Europeans. The churches’ support for the catastrophic Great War further fueled public disaffection, as did (in Germany) the flight of the Kaiser, in whom both Protestant and Catholic clergy had vested heavily.[14] But religion was not everywhere in retreat: postwar Germany experienced a Christian spiritual renaissance outside the traditional churches.[15] Religious freedom was unprecedented, but the established churches enjoyed widespread state support and controlled their own education systems. They were far more influential than today. Roughly two-thirds of Germans were Protestant, almost all of the rest Catholic. The pagan minority claimed at most 5 percent. Explicit nontheism was limited to an intellectual elite and to committed socialists. Just 1.5 percent of Germans identified themselves as unbelievers in a 1939 census, which means either that very few Nazis and National Socialist German Worker’s Party supporters were atheists, or that atheists feared to identify themselves to the pro-theistic regime. Most religious Germans detested the impiety, secularism, and hedonistic decadence that they associated with such modernist ideas as democracy and free speech. If they feared democracy, they were terrified by Communism, to the point of being willing to accept extreme counter-methods. Thus it was a largely Christian, deeply racist, often antidemocratic, and in many respects dangerously primitive Western culture into which Nazism would arise. It was a theistic powder keg ready to explode. Nazi Leaders, Theism, and Family Values SS officers at Auschwitz in 1944. From left: Richard Baer, who became the commandant of Auschwitz in May 1944; Josef Mengele, commandant of Birkenau; Josef Kramer, hidden; and the former commandant of Auschwitz Rudolf Höss, foreground; the man on the right is unidentified. (Photo: AP) According to standard biographies, the principal Nazi leaders were all born, baptized, and raised Christian. Most grew up in strict, pious households where tolerance and democratic values were disparaged. Nazi leaders of Catholic background included Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, Reinhard Heydrich, and Joseph Goebbels. Hitler did well in monastery school. He sang in the choir, found High Mass and other ceremonies intoxicating, and idolized priests. Impressed by their power, he at one time considered entering the priesthood. Rudolf Hoess, who as commandant at Auschwitz-Birkinau pioneered the use of the Zyklon-B gas that killed half of all Holocaust victims, had strict Catholic parents. Hermann Goering had mixed Catholic-Protestant parentage, while Rudolf Hess, Martin Bormann, Albert Speer, and Adolf Eichmann had Protestant backgrounds. Not one of the top Nazi leaders was raised in a liberal or atheistic family—no doubt, the parents of any of them would have found such views scandalous. Traditionalists would never think to deprive their offspring of the faith-based moral foundations that they would need to grow into ethical adults. So much for the Nazi leaders’ religious backgrounds. Assessing their religious views as adults is more difficult. On ancillary issues such as religion, Party doctrine was a deliberate tangle of contradictions.[16] For Hitler consistency mattered less than having a statement at hand for any situation that might arise. History records many things that Hitler wrote or said about religion, but they too are sometimes contradictory. Many were crafted for a particular audience or moment and have limited value for illuminating Hitler’s true opinion; in any case, neither Hitler nor any other key Nazi leader was a trained theologian with carefully thought-out views. Accuracy of transcription is another concern. Hitler’s public speeches were recorded reliably, but were often propagandistic. His private statements seem more likely to reflect his actual views, but their reliability varies widely.[17] The passages Christian apologists cite most often to prove Hitler’s atheism are of questionable accuracy. Apologists often brandish them without noting historians’ reservations. Hitler’s personal library has been partly preserved, and a good deal is known about his reading habits, another possible window onto Hitler’s beliefs.[18] Also important, and often ignored by apologists, are statements made by religious figures of the time, who generally—at least for public consumption—viewed Hitler as a Christian and a Catholic in good standing. Meanwhile, the silent testimony of photographs is irrefutable, much as apologists struggle to evade this damning visual evidence. Despite these difficulties, enough is known to build a reasonable picture of what Hitler and other top Nazis believed. Hitler was a Christian, but his Christ was no Jew. In his youth he dabbled with occult thinking but never became a devotee. As a young man he grew increasingly bohemian and stopped attending church. Initially no more anti-Semitic than the norm, in the years before the Great War he fell under the anti-Semitic influence of the Volkish Christian Social Party and other Aryan movements. After Germany’s stunning defeat and the ruinous terms of peace, Hitler became a full-blown Aryanist and anti-Semite. He grew obsessed with racial issues, which he unfailingly embedded in a religious context. Apologists often suggest that Hitler did not hold a traditional belief in God because he believed that he was God. True, Hitler thought himself God’s chosen leader for the Aryan race. But he never claimed to be divine, and never presented himself in that manner to his followers. Members of the Wehrmacht swore this loyalty oath: “I swear by God this holy oath to the Führer of the German Reich and the German people, Adolf Hitler.” For Schutzstaffel (S.S.) members it was: “I pledge to you, Adolf Hitler, my obedience unto death, so help me God.” Hitler repeatedly thanked God or Providence for his survival on the western front during the Great War, his safe escape from multiple assassination attempts, his seemingly miraculous rise from homelessness to influence and power, and his amazing international successes. He never tired of proclaiming that all of this was beyond the power of any mere mortal. Later in the war, Hitler portrayed German defeats as part of an epic test: God would reward his true chosen people with the final victory they deserved so long as they never gave up the struggle. Reich iconography, too, reveals that Nazism never cut its ties to Christianity. The markings of Luftwaffe aircraft comprised just two swastikas—and six crosses. Likewise the Kreigsmarine (German Navy) flag combined the symbols. Hitler participated in public prayers and religious services at which the swastika and the cross were displayed together. Hitler openly admired Martin Luther, whom he considered a brilliant reformer.[19] Yet he said in several private conversations that he considered himself a Catholic. He said publicly on several occasions that Christ was his savior. As late as 1944, planning the last-ditch offensive the world would know as the Battle of the Bulge, he code-named it “Operation Christrose.” Among his Nazi cronies Hitler criticized the established churches harshly and often. Some of these alleged statements must be treated with skepticism,[20] but clearly he viewed the traditional Christian faiths as weak and contaminated by Judaism. Still, there is no warrant for the claim that he became anti-Christian or antireligious after coming to power. No reliably attributed quote reveals Hitler to be an atheist or in any way sympathetic to atheism. On the contrary, he often condemned atheism, as he did Christians who collaborated with such atheistic forces as Bolshevism. He consistently denied that the state could replace faith and instructed Speer to include churches in his beloved plans for a rebuilt Berlin. The Nazi-era constitution explicitly evoked God. Calculating that his victories over Europe and Bolshevism would make him so popular that people would be willing to abandon their traditional faiths, Hitler entertained plans to replace Protestantism and Catholicism with a reformed Christian church that would include all Aryans while removing foreign (Rome-based) influence. German Protestants had already rejected a more modest effort along these lines, as will be seen below. How Germans as a whole would have received this reform after a Nazi victory is open to question. In any case, Hitler saw himself as Christianity’s ultimate reformer, not its dedicated enemy. Top: A German soldier in winter uniform on motorcycle. Bottom: The inscription on the German soldier’s belt buckle translates “God With Us”. Hitler was a complex figure, but based on the available evidence we can conclude our inquiry into his personal religious convictions by describing him as an Aryan Volkist Christian who had deep Catholic roots, strongly influenced by Protestantism, touched by strands of neopaganism and Darwinism, and minimally influenced by the occult. Though Hitler pontificated about God and religion at great length, he considered politics more important than religion as the means to achieve his agenda. None of the leaders immediately beneath Hitler was a pious traditional Christian. But there is no compelling evidence that any top Nazi was nontheistic. Any so accused denied the charge with vehemence. Reich-Führer Himmler regularly attended Catholic services until he lurched into an increasingly bizarre Aryanism. He authorized searches for the Holy Grail and other supposedly powerful Christian and Cathar relics. A believer in reincarnation, he sent expeditions to Tibet and the American tropics in search of the original Aryans and even Atlantians. He and Heydrich modeled the S.S. after the disciplined and secretive Jesuits; it would not accept atheists as members.[21] Goering, least ideological among top Nazis, sometimes endorsed both Protestant and Catholic traditions. On other occasions he criticized them. Goebbels turned against Catholicism in favor of a reformed Aryan faith; both his and Goering’s children were baptized. Bormann was stridently opposed to contemporary organized Christianity; he was a leader of the Church Struggle, the inconsistently applied Nazi campaign to oppose the influence of established churches.[22] The Nazis championed traditional family values: their ideology was conservative, bourgeois, patriarchal, and strongly antifeminist. Discipline and conformity were emphasized, marriage promoted, abortion and homosexuality despised.[23] Traditionalism also dominated Nazi philosophy, such as it was. Though science and technology were lauded, the overall thrust opposed the Enlightenment, modernism, intellectualism, and rationality. It is hard to imagine how a movement with that agenda could have been friendly toward atheism, and the Nazis were not. Volkism was inherently hostile toward atheism: freethinkers clashed frequently with Nazis in the late 1920s and early 1930s. On taking power, Hitler banned freethought organizations and launched an “anti-godless” movement. In a 1933 speech he declared: “We have . . . undertaken the fight against the atheistic movement, and that not merely with a few theoretical declarations: we have stamped it out.” This forthright hostility was far more straightforward than the Nazis’ complex, often contradictory stance toward traditional Christian faith. Destroying Democracy: a Political-Religious Collaboration As detailed by historian Ian Kershaw, Hitler made no secret of his intent to destroy democracy. Yet he came to power largely legally; in no sense was he a tyrant imposed upon the German people. The Nazi takeover climaxed a lengthy, ironic rejection of democracy at the hands of a majority of German voters. By the early 1930s, ordinary Germans had lost patience with democracy; growing numbers hoped an authoritarian strongman would restore order and prosperity and return Germany to great-power status. Roughly two-thirds of German Christians repeatedly voted for candidates who promised to overthrow democracy. Authoritarianism was all but inevitable; at issue was merely who the new strongman would be. What made democracy so fragile? Historian Klaus Scholder explains that Germany lacked a deep democratic tradition, and would have had difficulty in forming one because German society was so thoroughly divided into opposing Protestant and Catholic blocs. This division created a climate of competition, fear and prejudice between the confessions, which burdened all German domestic and foreign policies with an ideological element of incalculable weight and extent. This climate erected an almost insurmountable barrier to the formation of broad democratic center. And it favored the rise of Hitler, since ultimately both churches courted his favor—each fearing that the other would complete the Reformation or the Counter-Reformation through Hitler.[24] Carefully plotting his strategy, Hitler purged some of the Volkish Nazi radicals most belligerent toward the traditional Christian churches. In this way he lessened the risk of ecclesiastical opposition. At the same time, he knew that the presence of both Catholics and Protestants among the Nazi leadership would ease churchmen’s fears that the Party might engage in sectarianism. Though it had many Catholic leaders (including Hitler), the Nazi Party relied heavily on Protestant support. Protestants had given the Party its principal backing during the years leading up to 1933 at a level disproportionate to their national majority.[25] Evangelical youth was especially pro-Nazi. It has been estimated that as many as 90 percent of Protestant university theologians supported the Party. Indeed, the participation of so many respected Protestants gave an early, comforting air of legitimacy to the often-thuggish Party. So did the frequent sight of Sturmabteilung (S.A.) units marching in uniform to church. As German life between the wars grew more desperate, some Protestant pastors explicitly defended Nazi murders of “traitors to the Volk” from the pulpit. Antifascist Protestants found themselves marginalized. The once-unlikely topic of Volkist-Protestant compatibility became the leading theological subject of the day.[26] This is less surprising when we consider that Volkism and German Protestantism were both strongly nationalistic; Lutheranism in particular had German roots. This mirage of harmony enticed Hitler into a naïve attempt to unite the German Protestant churches into a single Volkish body under Nazi control. Launched shortly after the Nazis came to power, this project failed immediately. The evangelical sects proved as unwilling as ever to get along with one another, though much of their clergy eventually Nazified. Catholicism and the Nazi Takeover Ironically—but, as we shall see, for obvious reasons—Chancellor Hitler had greater initial success reaching accommodation with Roman Catholic leaders than with the Protestants. The irony lay in the fact that the Catholic Zentrum (Center) Party had been principally responsible for denying majorities to the Nazis in early elections. Although Teutonic in outlook, German Catholics had close emotional ties to Rome. As a group they were somewhat less nationalistic than most Protestants. Catholics were correspondingly more likely than Protestants to view Hitler (incorrectly) as godless, or as a neo-heathen anti-Christian. Catholic clergy consistently denounced Nazism, though they often undercut themselves by preaching traditional anti-Semitism at the same time. Even so, and despite Catholicism’s minority status, it would be German Catholics and the Roman Catholic Church whose actions would at last put total power within the Nazis’ reach. Though it was not without antimodernists, the Catholic Zentrum party had antagonized the Vatican during the 1920s by forming governing coalitions with the secularized, moderate Left-oriented Social Democrats. This changed in 1928, when the priest Ludwig Kaas became the first cleric to head the party. To the dismay of some Catholics, Kaas and other Catholic politicians participated both actively and passively in destroying democratic rule, and in particular the Zentrum. The devoutly Catholic chancellor Franz von Papen, not a fascist but stoutly right-wing, engineered the key electoral victory that brought Hitler to power. Disastrously Papen dissolved the Reichstag in 1932, then formed a Zentrum-Nazi coalition in violation of all previous principles. It was Papen who in 1933 made Hitler chancellor, Papen stepping down to the vice chancellorship. The common claim that Papen acted in the hope that the Nazis could be controlled and ultimately discredited may be true, partly true, or false; but without Papen’s reckless aid, Hitler would not have become Germany’s leader. The church congratulated Hitler on his assumption of power. German bishops released a statement that wiped out past criticism of Nazism by proclaiming the new regime acceptable, then followed doctrine by ordering the laity to be loyal to this regime just as they had commanded loyalty to previous regimes. Since Catholics had been instrumental in bringing Hitler to power and served in his cabinet, the bishops had little choice but to collaborate. German Catholics were stunned by the magnitude and suddenness of this realignment. The rigidly conformist church had flipped from ordering its flock to oppose the Nazis to commanding cooperation. A minority among German Catholics was appalled and disheartened. But most “received the statement with relief—indeed with rejoicing—because it finally also cleared the way into the Third Reich for Catholic Christians” alongside millions of Protestants, who joined in exulting that the dream of a Nazi-Catholic-Protestant nationalist alliance had been achieved.[27] The Catholic vote for the Nazis increased in the last multi-party elections after Hitler assumed control, doubling in some areas, inspiring a mass Catholic exodus from the Zentrum to the fascists. After the Reichstag fire, the Zentrum voted en masse to support the infamous Enabling Act, which would give the Hitler-Papen cabinet executive and legislative authority independent of the German Parliament. Zentrum’s bloc vote cemented the two-thirds majority needed to pass the Act. Why did the church direct its party to provide the critical swing vote? It had its agenda, as we shall see below. Deal Making with the Devil Even after the Enabling Act, Hitler’s position remained tenuous. The Nazis needed to deepen majority popular support and cement relations with a skeptical German military. Hitler needed to ally all Aryans under the swastika while he undermined and demoralized regime opponents. What would solidify Hitler’s position? A foreign policy coup: the Concordat of 1933 between Nazi Germany and the Vatican. Above, Cardinal Secretary of State, Eugenio Pacelli (later to become Pope Pius XII) signs the Concordat between Nazi Germany and the Vatican at a formal ceremony in Rome on 20 July 1933. Nazi Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen sits at the left, Pacelli in the middle, and the Rudolf Buttmann sits at the right. The national and international legitimacy Hitler would gain through this treaty was incalculable. Failure to secure it after intense and openly promoted effort could have been a crushing humiliation. Hitler put exceptional effort into the project. He courted the Holy See, emphasizing his own Christianity, simultaneously striving to intimidate the Vatican with demonstrations of his swelling power. Catholic apologists describe the Concordat of 1933 as a necessary move by a church desperate to protect itself against a violent regime which forced the accord upon it—passing over the contradiction at the heart of this argument. Actually, having failed in repeated attempts to negotiate the ardently desired concordat with a skeptical Weimar democracy, Kaas, Papen, the future Pius XII (who reigned 1939–1958), the sitting Pius XI, and other leading Catholics saw their chance to get what they had been seeking from an agreeable member of the church—that is, Hitler—at an historical moment when he and fascism in general were regarded as a natural ally by many Catholic leaders.[28] Negotiations were initiated by both sides, modeled on the mutually advantageous 1929 concordat between Mussolini and the Vatican. Now Zentrum’s pivotal role in assuring passage of the Enabling Act can be seen in context. It was part of the tacit Nazi-Vatican deal for a future concordat.[29] The Enabling Act vote hollowed Zentrum, leaving little more than a shell. Thus, a clergy far more interested in church power than democratic politics could take control on both sides of the negotiating table. In a flagrant conflict of interest, the devout Papen helped to represent the German state. Concordat negotiations were largely held in Rome, so that Kaas could leave his vanishing party yet more rudderless. Papen, Kaas, and the future Pius XII worked overtime to finalize a treaty that would, among other things, put an end to the Zentrum. In negotiating away the party he led, Kaas eliminated the last political entity that might have opposed the new Führer.[30] Nor did the Vatican protect Germany’s Catholic party. Contrary to the contention of some, evidence indicates that the Vatican was pleased to negotiate away all traces of the Zentrum, for which it had no more use save as a bargaining chip. In this the Holy See treated Zentrum no differently than it had the Italian Catholic party, which it negotiated away in the Concordat with Mussolini. Hitler sought to eliminate Catholic opposition in favor of obligatory loyalty to his regime. For its part, the church was obsessed with its educational privileges,[31] and especially with securing fresh sources of income. It would willingly sacrifice political power to protect them. As both sides worked in haste to produce a treaty that would normally have required years to complete, Hitler took masterful advantage of Vatican over eagerness. Filled with “certainty that Rome neither could nor would turn back, [Hitler] was now able to steer the negotiations almost as he wanted. The records prove he exploited the situation to the full.”[32] Indeed, Hitler was so confident that he had the Church in his lap that he went ahead and promulgated his notorious sterilization decree before the Concordat’s final signing. Hitler’s project for involuntary sterilization of minorities and the mentally ill was an direct affront to Catholic teaching. But as Hitler surmised, not even this provocation could deflect the Holy See in its rush toward the Concordat. Because ordinary Catholics largely supported the Nazis, the party even felt free to use violence against the remaining politically active Catholics, frequently disrupting their rallies. Signed on July 20, 1933, the Concordat was a fait accompli, the negotiations having been conducted largely in secret. Most German bishops gave their loyal, though impotent, approval to the pact that would strip away their power. A few bishops objected, criticizing the Nazi regime’s lack of morality (but never its lack of democracy). The Concordat was a classic political kickback scheme. The church supported the new dictatorship by endorsing the end of democracy and free speech. In addition it bound its bishops to Hitler’s Reich by means of a loyalty oath. In exchange the church received enormous tax income and protection for church privileges. Religious instruction and prayer in school were reinstated. Criticism of the church was forbidden. Of course, nothing in the Concordat protected the rights of non-Catholics. If Catholic officials were disappointed with the Concordat’s terms, they did not show it, sending messages of congratulation to the dictator. In Rome, a celebratory mass followed the treaty’s signing by Papen and the future Pius XII amid great pomp and circumstance. In Germany, the church and the Berlin government held a joint service of thanksgiving that featured a mix of Catholic, Reich, and swastika banners and flags. The musical program mixed hymns with a rousing performance of the repugnant Nazi anthem “Horst Wessel”—which was set, by the way, to the traditional hymn “How Great Thou Art.” All of this was projected by loudspeaker to the enthusiastic crowd outside; as most German Catholics welcomed the Concordat, the thanksgiving service drew far more than Berlin’s cathedral could hold. Scholder comments that “anyone who saw things from the Roman perspective could come to the conclusion that . . . the treaty was . . . an indescribable success for Catholicism. Even a year before, the Holy See had only been able to dream of the concessions which the concordat contained. . . . On the Catholic side the concordat was accordingly described as ‘something very great,’ indeed as nothing short of a ‘masterpiece.’”[33] Catholic response was so exuberant that Hitler felt it necessary to defend himself to Protestant clerics and Nazi radicals who viewed this sudden amity with Rome as a betrayal. The practical results of the collaboration were clear enough. Most Catholics “soon adjusted to the dictatorship”[34]; indeed they flocked to the Party. Post-Concordat voting patterns suggest that Catholics, on average, even outdid Protestants in supporting the regime, further undermining any efforts by the clergy to challenge Nazi policies. In any case much of the Catholic clergy was Nazifying. Even the idiosyncratic S.S. welcomed Catholics, who would ultimately compose a quarter of its membership. The Concordat’s disastrous consequences cannot be exaggerated. It bound all devout German Catholics to the state—the clergy through an oath and income, the laity through the authority of the church. If at any time the regime chose not to honor the agreement, Catholics had no open legal right to oppose it or its policies. Opponents of Nazism, Catholic and non-Catholic, were further discouraged and marginalized because the church had shown such want of moral fiber and consistency. Apologists have insisted that the church had no choice but to accept the Concordat for the modest protections it provided. But those provisions were never needed. Major Protestant denominations suffered no more than Catholicism, though the Protestant churches lacked protective agreements and had snubbed Hitler’s early attempt to unite them. Apologists make much of Vatican “resistance” to Nazism, but the net effect of Vatican policy toward Hitler was collaborative. Indeed, the 1933 Concordat stands as one of the most unethical, corrupt, duplicitous, and dangerous agreements ever forged between two authoritarian powers. Perhaps the Catholic strategy was to outlast the Nazi’s frankly popular tyranny rather than try to bring it down. But the Catholic Church made no attempt to revoke the Concordat and its loyalty clause during the Nazi regime. Indeed, the 1933 Concordat is the only diplomatic accord negotiated with the Nazi regime that remains in force anywhere in the world. Germany’s Protestant sects were too decentralized to be coopted by a single document. To this extent Protestants who disputed Nazi policies could be said to enjoy a more favorable position than Catholics. But opposition was rare among Protestants too. Hitler cynically courted the major denominations even as they cynically courted him. Most smaller traditional Christian sects did little better. For example, Germany’s Mormons and Seventh-Day Adventists bent over backwards to accommodate National Socialism.[35] Christian Comfort with the Rising Regime Catholics and Protestants at first embraced the new German order. Germany was regaining international prestige, the economy improving thanks to growing overseas support.[36] Industrialists like Henry Ford invested heavily in the new Reich. German Christians also looked to the Nazis for a revival of “Christian” values to help counter the rise of nontheism. Most welcomed the Nazis’ elimination of chronic public strife by terrorizing, imprisoning, and killing the fast-shrinking German Left. The leftists had long been despised by traditionalists, who composed four fifths of the population. The state purged a far higher proportion of atheists than traditional Christians. In newspapers and newsreels the Nazis proudly publicized their new concentration camps. Reports sanitized the camps’ true nature, but no one could mistake that they were part of a new police state—to which most German followers of Jesus raised no objection. The very high rate of “legal” executions reported in the press also met with mass indifference or positive approval. Far from being hapless victims, the great bulk of German Christians joined, eagerly supported, collaborated with, or accommodated to a greater or lesser degree, the new tyranny. Hitler: the Popular Oppressor Apologists for Christian conduct during the Nazi era imagine that the regime suppressed dissent ruthlessly, no matter whom—or how many—it needed to slaughter to achieve its ends. Hitler’s regime is portrayed as Stalinesque in its response to dissent. This simplistic view reveals a failure to understand the complicated actuality of a popular terror state. The keyword is popular: Hitler was Europe’s most popular leader, and his goal was universal Aryan support. The Party obsessively tracked public opinion, something never seen in the USSR.[37] Before the war, foreign tourism was encouraged; Hitler knew most Germans would speak well of the Reich to visitors, in sharp contrast to the USSR, whose leaders prudently feared interaction between foreigners and a citizenry of dubious loyalty. During most of the Reich, any unprovoked attempt to liberate Germany would have met fierce majority resistance. Though there were assassination attempts, the top Nazis had little to fear from ordinary Germans.[38] Hitler’s personal security was shockingly lax; Goering regularly drove his open convertible around Berlin. If the apologists were right, we should expect the Gestapo to have been a massive organization, relentlessly searching out and crushing widespread dissent. Analysis of surviving Gestapo records reveals that in fact it was surprisingly small.[39] Germany’s Christian population being largely satisfied, there was little resistance to suppress. Most cases the Gestapo handled were initiated by ordinary citizens looking to settle petty disputes and had no ideological content. The Führer had been successful in buying off his Aryans with false egalitarian prosperity, stolen Jewish wealth, and his refusal to put Deutschland on a full war footing until well into the war. During the early war years civilians were under much tighter control in submarine-blockaded England than in Germany. Since nearly all Aryans were Protestant and Catholic, Hitler had to keep both sects reasonably happy, and he did. After all, the main focus of Nationalist Socialism was to make the divinely favored Aryan Volk, both Protestant and Catholic, thrive in order to transform the German population into a unified machine of domination over the lesser peoples. Contrary to Catholic apologists, the nominally Catholic Hitler had not the slightest desire to slaughter masses of the very Aryan people to whom he belonged, and whom he wanted to elevate to supreme power. Leaving aside the fact that doing so would have been ideological and racial suicide, the record makes clear that Hitler’s intention was to reform and standardize Aryans’ political, social, and ultimately their religious beliefs, not to purge them or to kill off groups of Aryans. Doing that would have grossly violated Nazi doctrine, undermined the myth of Aryan solidarity, grievously weakened the state, and risked religious civil war. Disloyalty of the Catholic third of the population would have been disastrous to a modest-sized nation trying to expand its resources in preparation for epic wars of conquest; it was this fact, not the Concordat, that would be the main constraint on Nazi actions. For that reason, apologist claims that thousands or millions of Catholics and Protestants would have joined the Jews had they protested Nazis policies are false. The proof is found in the historical record. Rosenstrasse: the Power of Resistance Far from exercising absolute power at home, Hitler often discontinued, modified, or concealed initiatives that threatened his regime’s precious popular approval. Stout public objection could and repeatedly did alter Nazi behavior. Flummoxed when the Protestant churches refused to unite, Hitler deferred his grand effort to reform German Christianity to a dreamlike utopian future. Later attempts by Nazi authorities to hamper church activities were often frustrated by sizeable demonstrations.[40] When Party elements stripped Bavarian schools of their crucifixes without Hitler’s approval, vigorous protests by, among others, the mothers of schoolchildren quickly brought about their replacement.[41] When Hitler denounced Protestant opposition bishops Hans Meiser and Theophil Wurm and ordered their ouster, public anger boiled over. One protest drew 7,000 demonstrators. Hitler reversed course and reinstated Meiser and Wurm with fulsome praise. Strong opposition to the mass killing of the mentally disabled circa 1941 drove it further underground, saving many lives, even though this program too enjoyed the Führer’s approval. This is not to say that protesters courted no danger. Opposition figures were frequently harassed, sometimes killed. But the top Nazis knew how limited their power was. When regime officials contemplated forcing the removal of Muenster’s Catholic bishop, Clemens Galen, Goebbels warned that the “the population of Muenster could be regarded as lost during the war if anything were done against the bishop . . . [indeed] the whole of [the state] of Westphalia.”[42] Though Galen suffered harassment, he remained active throughout the war and held his office. In occupied countries from Norway to Italy, residents successfully opposed Nazi racial policies and saved hundreds of thousands of Jews. In Denmark, political and ecclesiastical leaders forcefully protested Nazi policies; the whole nation worked under the noses of the Gestapo to save almost all of Denmark’s Jews. Neither leaders or citizens suffered severe retaliation. French bishops who opposed Nazi actions against Jews likewise survived the war. Most extraordinary and telling is the Rosenstrasse incident.[43] Some 30,000 Jews lived openly in Germany as the spouses of Christians. Nine in ten such marriages remained intact despite ceaseless harassment. Oriented toward family values as they were, the Nazis could not decide how to handle these Jews without violating the sanctity of marriage. Early in 1943, Goebbels, then in charge of Berlin, decided it was time to cleanse the capital by rounding up these last Jews. Hitler agreed. Some 2,000 Jewish men from mixed marriages were seized and taken to a large downtown building on the Rosenstrasse, from which they would be deported to the camps. For a week their Gentile wives stood in the winter cold, chanting “We want our husbands back!” Ordinary Germans sometimes joined them. All told, the protests involved about 6,000 people. They continued in the face of S.S. and Gestapo threats, even threats to use machine guns. They continued though British bombers pounded the city by night. But the Nazis dared not fire upon these defenseless, unorganized Aryan women. Berliners saw the protests directly. Foreign diplomats spread word of it to the world press. The British Broadcasting Company broadcast the story back into Germany. What was the outcome of Nazi Germany’s only mass demonstration to save Jews? The 2,000 Jewish husbands were released with Hitler’s approval. Two dozen who had already been sent to Auschwitz were returned. Jewish-Christian couples continued to live openly and survived the war. They would comprise the great majority of German Jewish survivors. Goebbels later commented to an associate that the regime relented “in order to eliminate the protest from the world, so that others didn’t begin to do the same.” Sadly, this strategy was successful: during the rest of the war, no similar action would ever be taken in defense of Jews in general. Nor does this exhaust the catalogue of successful opposition. When Goebbels called for mass employment of housewives in war industries, also early in 1943, refusal was widespread. Again, reprisals were rare, partly because of the regime’s established emphasis on traditional roles for women. On a broader scale, Germans who refused to participate in atrocities—even if they were soldiers, party members, or S.S. men—almost never suffered retaliation. This was so well known that, after the war, Nazis accused of war crimes were forbidden to claim fear of retaliation as a defense. These incidents suggest that the Nazi regime was at root cowardly, happy to pick on the weak and disorganized but intimidated by public demonstrations. When it came to the Volk, Nazi leaders preferred propaganda, education, persuasion, and social pressure to terror. They knew that terror worked best when its objective was supported by many and opposed by few. Only toward the end of the war was widespread domestic terror resorted to in Germany, and it was often ineffective. Clearly ordinary citizens could oppose and alter state policy, all the more so if powerful nongovernemental institutions supported them.[44] As Sarah Gordon comments, the “failure of German churches to speak out against racial persecution is a disgrace . . . because the Nazis feared the propaganda or political power of the churches, it is almost certain that church leaders could have spoken out more vehemently against racial persecution.”[45] The apologist claim that Germany’s traditional Christians were impotent in the face of Nazi terror is an exaggeration on a scale that Goebbels might have appreciated. As the wives of Berlin discovered, Christians had the power to protect the lives and well-being of others and the potential to confound Hitler and his minions. Had they wished to, they need only have applied it. Gregory Paul is an independent researcher interested in informing the public about little known yet important aspects of the complex interactions between religion, secularism, culture, economics, politics and societal conditions. His scholarly work has appeared in Evolutionary Psychology, Journal of Religion and Society, The Journal of Medical Ethics, Philosophy and Theology. Popular essays are at Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post/On Faith, Edge and one of the most widely read Washington Post op-eds (5/29&30/11). Coverage of Paul’s research has appeared in Newsweek, USA Today, The Guardian, London Times, LA Times, MSNBC, FoxNews. 1. Nazism and fascism are considered secular, atheistic, or both, in, among other sources, David Barrett, George Kurian, and Todd Johnson, eds., World Christian Encyclopedia: A Comparative Study of Churches and Religions in the Modern World (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001). 2. Seminal studies by mainstream, nonpolemical researchers include Robert Gellately, Backing Hitler: Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001); Ian Kershaw, Hitler: 1889–1936: Hubris (New York: W W Norton, 1998) and Hitler: 1936–1945: Nemesis (London: Allen Lane, 2000); Klaus Scholder, The Churches and the Third Reich vols. 1 and 2 (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1979 [English version, 1988]); Nathan Stoltzfus, Resistance of the Heart: The Rosenstrasse Protest and Intermarriage in Nazi Germany (New York: W.W. Norton, 1997); Beth Griech-Polelle, Bishop von Galen: German Catholicism and National Socialism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002); and Sarah Gordon, Hitler, Germans, and the “Jewish Question” (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984). Also see John Patrick Michael Murphy, “Hitler Was Not an Atheist,” Free Inquiry 19, no. 2 (Spring 1999). 3. See James Carroll, Constantine’s Sword: The Church and the Jews (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2001) and David Kertzer, The Pope Against the Jews: The Vatican’s Role in the Rise of Modern Anti-Semitism (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2001). 4. http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Judaism/jewpop.html. 5. Viewed in the context of more than 1,500 years of Christian violence against Jews, the enormity of the Holocaust may as much reflect the large populations and relatively advanced technologies of the time as it does the virulence of Nazi anti-Semitism. Other Christian groups might have done the same thing earlier, had the technical means and a large enough pool of potential victims been available. 6. Nowadays Islamic anti-Semites reprint Luther’s work. 7. Prior to World War I, many religious Germans viewed dying for the Fatherland as being on a par with Christian martyrdom; reluctance to die in battle was considered blasphemous. 8. After Vatican I, the Roman Catholic clergy was required to take an oath against modernity. 9. Aryan Christianity continues to exist; contemporary U.S. examples include Christian Identity, Aryan Nation, and other extremist racist sects. 10. In Aryan Christian doctrine, Christ was non-Semitic because he did not have a Jewish father. His assault on the Temple was taken as evidence of his anti-Semitism. Christianity’s false association with Judaism was blamed on St. Paul. 11. Thus the extremist Christian term mud people. Jews’ lack of a soul was held to explain their supposed lack of interest in spirituality and the afterlife and their focus on material gain. 12. For example, the Catholic Volkist Dietrich Eckart, later a friend and mentor to Hitler, wrote in 1917 that “to be an Aryan and to sense transcendence is one and the same thing,” yet described Nietzsche as the “crazy despiser of our religious foundations.” 13. Gregory Paul, “The Secular Revolution of the West: It’s Passed America By—So Far,” Free Inquiry 22, no. 3 (Summer 2002). 14. Ibid. 15. See Scholder vol. 1., p.12. 16. Richard Steigmann-Gall, The Holy Reich: Nazi Conceptions of Christianity 1919–1945 (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2003) is the first attempt to detail the religious beliefs of the Nazis. 17. Christian defenders frequently cite Table Talk, which presents some of Hitler’s most vehement anti-Christian statements. But mainstream historians find Table Talk unreliable. It consists of private conversations recorded in the 1940s by two secretaries, one of whom later said that “no confidence” should be placed in the final volume because the compiler—Bormann, even by Nazi standards a deceptive opportunist and much more anti-Christian than Hitler—destroyed the original transcripts. Still, even as presented in Table Talk, Hitler usually attacks Judeo-Christianity, not Christ. Hitler lauds Christ as a divine Aryan. 18. Timothy Ryback, “Hitler’s Forgotten Library,” Atlantic Monthly 29, no. 4 (May 2003), expresses naïve surprise at how interested Hitler was in reading about religion. Oddly, Ryback’s conclusion, that Hitler saw himself as God, is contrary to the quote Ryback cites in support of his hypothesis. 19. The regime put an original edition of On the Jews and Their Lies on display and celebrated Luther’s 450th birthday in 1933 on massive scale. 20. See Steigman-Gall. 21. Neopaganism was far more prevalent in the S.S. than in German society as a whole; even according to Party statistics, paganism never claimed more than 5 percent of the general population. 22. See Steigman-Gall. 23. Contrary to common belief, the Nazis never operated state sex-for-procreation facilities. On the other hand, Nazi “culture” was not exceptionally prudish; home movies of the era show young women lying topless on the beach, and kitsch nudity was common in Nazi art. 24. Scholder vol. 1, p. 130. 25. See Scholder vols. 1 and 2, Kershaw pp. 488-90 and 324, and Gellately p. 14, whose Backing Hitler is a precedent-setting historical examination based in part on examination of surviving Gestapo records. Religion was not a primary focus of the study, but what Gellately includes on this topic is damning. See also Gordon, who gives a balanced account of church collaboration and resistance. 26. See Scholder vol. 1, pp. 37-51 and 74-87. 27. Ibid., p. 253. 28. Ronald Rychlak, “Goldhagen v. Pius XII,” First Things, June/July 2002, pp. 37–54, offers a typically convoluted example of pro-Vatican spin when he asserts that the concordat “was a Nazi proposition. The Nazis accepted terms that the Church had previously proposed to Weimar, but which Weimar had rejected.” 29. See Scholder vol. 1, p. 241. 30. Ibid., pp. 241-43. 31. A concordat already negotiated with Bavaria gave the church control of the schools. 32. Scholder vol. 1, p. 386. 33. Ibid., p. 405. 34. Gellately, p. 14. 35. See Christine Elizabeth King, The Nazi State and the New Religions (New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 1982). 36. Hitler and his fellow thugs had no idea how to run a modern economy. The Nazi economic “miracle” was a Potemkin-village scheme kept going, prior to the takeovers of other nations, by selling off Germany’s gold reserves and taking out international loans that could never be paid back. 37. See Gellately. 38. Hitler missed by minutes being killed by a bomb a few months after invading Poland. Pope Pius XII sent the Führer his “special personal congratulations.” 39. See Gellately, p. 39. 40. See Griech-Polelle, pp. 36-37. 41. Nazi politics were as peculiar as its theology. Hitler avoided committing himself on tangential issues to protect his popularity and keep his options open. This, coupled with Hitler’s harsh survival-of-the-fittest view of power, fueled chronic, often vicious intraparty battles that contributed to the chaos of the regime. In “working towards the Führer,” party functionaries often went beyond what Hitler wanted done, at least in the short term; the Bavarian crucifix debacle is a good example of this tendency. 42. Cited in Gellately, Kershaw, p. 429, and Gordon. 43. See Stoltzfus, pp. 209-57. 44. Hitler fared little better in international affairs; even when he was master of continental Europe, his power had limits. His supposed ally Franco politely told the vexed Führer to take a hike when he pressed for Spain to enter the war against the allies. Hitler found himself forced to negotiate with the Vichy French government he had helped to install over the same matter, and it too refused to budge. 45. Gordon, p. 261. Nazi War Criminal and Roman Catholic Cardinal Stepinac Christopher Hitchens – Hitler, Fascism and the Catholic Church Geoffrey Robertson QC: Pope Pius XII did everything to help the Nazis, and nothing to save the Jews Be sure to ‘like’ us on Facebook 24 COMMENTS david4445 April 16, 2016 at 2:32 pm Good article but I disagree with painting atheists and the non-religious as completely innocent. I believe that millennia of antisemitism rooted in Christianity led to the Holocaust but that doesn't mean that atheists and the non-religious were not influenced by this prejudice, were not prejudiced themselves. The treatment of people of African descent as subhuman has its roots in religion but that doesn't mean that an atheist can't be a racist or in the past, even a slave trader. Reply Kathy Heyne August 16, 2017 at 3:29 am Over two thirds of the world's population self identify as deists. All the atheist whataboutery in the world won't change that fact. There's a hell of a lot of violence in the world and fully two thirds of it is perpetrated by people of faith. It's simple, inescapable maths. If the situation ever reverses and atheists become the majority- the two thirds- then we'll talk, eh? For now, all atheists can do is watch the faithful piss on The Golden Rule and despair. We simply don't have the numbers to effect change. Reply Leo biglang-awa March 20, 2019 at 12:57 am Correction! It should be Pseudo-Christianity's or Romanists' (a more suttle than title than RCC) role in the Rise of Nazis. So the world may know whom Hitler got his blessings from during the Holocaust. True Christianity will not allow Inquisition and mass murder of innocents even if they are heretics. Reply Dravida Aryan June 24, 2019 at 5:58 am Please do not include inherently intolerant genocidal racist child-raping dogmatic religions of the desert with "all" religions of the world tag. Evidence-based discourse please. Reply Peter Grafström April 28, 2016 at 6:28 pm The most important aspect of this dark period is that Wall Street and London financed the nazi rise and manipulated the scenario so people would see a saviour in Hitler. And that has little to do with the church. Moreover the nazis themselves praised a british agent of influence, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, for being the pathbreaker for nazism. Indeed he urged the germans towards the ultimate solution. British ideas about racial superiority was the origin of the nazi world view. Who was this Houston who spent many decades in this manner? Probably a round table agent. The deep state. Alfred Milner was in search for someone like Hitler to defend the idea of a racially based empire and Chamberlain found his man. And their circles were not particularly religious. This sort of info is censored not only in Britain but in Germany as well. Reply A. Colin Flood May 13, 2016 at 2:08 pm A masterful and informative piece, this article repeats the German myth that WWI reparations were onerous, unfair and led to the rise of Nazism. This is factually false. It is Nazi propaganda, unsupported by the truth. Germany’s war reparations were NOT large. They were normal. The payments were cut in HALF. Germany STOPPED paying them anyway and then spent far more on military escalation for war. The actual causes of German fascism were far more complex that a simple debt for damage done. After his failed coup release in 1924, “Hitler gained popular support by attacking the Treaty of Versailles and promoting Pan-Germanism, antisemitism, and anti-communism with charismatic oratory and Nazi propaganda…Nazism arose from pan-Germanism, the Völkisch German nationalist movement and the anti-communist Freikorps after World War I… Hitler’s aggressive foreign policy is considered to be the PRIMARY cause of the outbreak of World War II in Europe.” This mistaken attitude is the direct result of blatant Nazi propaganda, which has entered our nomenclature. Nazis promoted this complaint after WW 1 to further their party dreams of rebuilding German military might. The original penalty (almost one trillion dollars in today’s currency), was cut in half in 1924 and 1929, then spread out over 59 years. Yet with the collapse of their economy in 1931, Hitler’s Nazis stopped paying reparations altogether. “Germany paid roughly 20 billion gold marks worth of reparations between 1921 and 1932, roughly 2.4 percent of Germany’s national income during that period. As Mantoux pointed out, immediately after repudiating the reparations, the new Nazi government began a re-armament program which consumed a significantly larger percentage of national income than reparations ever had.” It is not unusual for the aggressive, and yet losing, side in a war to pay reparations. It is strange for the attacked and yet successful victors to adopt the aggressor’s excuse for provocation as reasonable and rational. Hitler, the Nazi Party and Germany planned to take over Europe. Paying for the previous failed attempt was NOT the cause for making a second one. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1315869/Germany-end-World-War-One-reparations-92-years-59m-final-payment.html Reply Leo biglang-awa March 20, 2019 at 12:38 am Correction! IT should be Psuedo-Christianity or Catholism' Role in the Rise of Nazi, because Catholism is not Christianism. Reply sentient christian May 30, 2016 at 8:49 am It was obviously NOT Christianity that supported the Nazi’s, it was the #Catholic so called church. Please correct your headline. thank You. Reply sszorin May 20, 2017 at 8:09 am Actually it was people like you who supported the nazis. Reply Kathy Heyne August 16, 2017 at 3:05 am And there is the problem with religion in a nutshell. Division. My way is the right way: the rest of you are wrong. A quick reminder for the faithful, because after a millenia or two you're all still too busy fighting amongst yourselves for supremacy to understand it, let alone practise it: " So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets." ( Matthew 2:17 ) "What is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow: this is the whole Torah; the rest is the explanation; go and learn"( Hillel the Elder 100 BCE) " “None of you has faith until he loves for his brother or his neighbor what he loves for himself.”[Sahih Muslim, Book 1, Number 72] Reply VT December 1, 2018 at 2:03 am Most of the Protestant churches supported the Nazis, offering weekly Sunday prayers for them and for the fuhrer. Reply Kimberly Dodson June 25, 2019 at 1:45 am That is correct, they were not Christians but Catholics, who actually defy the laws of Christianity, they have killed many Christians because they would not cow down to their false teachings. Reply sszorin May 20, 2017 at 8:10 am The article is an example of genocidal mindset – a perfect example why men like Lenin, Hitler, Mao, Churchill, Roosevelt and a few israeli prime ministers could engage in genocides and be cheered on by their subjects. Reply Lars Arne H December 2, 2018 at 3:16 pm The cahtolic church belive in the pope, Mary etc – but not in Jesus as saivior alone. We all know the contact between the Vatican and the 3. reich. Reply Carolyn December 4, 2018 at 4:10 pm Lets please not forget the horrific genocide that we perpetrated against the Native Americans when taking over this land in the name of God and County. The percentages of natives killed are actually greater than the percentages of Jews killed in the German holocaust. We wrote history to make ourselves heroes and to this day have not fully acknowledged or apologized for what was done. At least the Germans at this point are trying to make amends. Very sad!! Reply Rs January 17, 2019 at 5:22 am What can the author say about the hundreds of Catholic martyrs killed by the Nazi regime? Reply Ray May 15, 2019 at 3:53 am Another world is possible. Socialism or Barbarism Reply Avinash June 25, 2019 at 6:43 am Hitler was a national socialist and a christian. He was a christian socialist. his german autobiography had hakencruz not swastika. Reply Mike Cain May 17, 2019 at 12:15 am What I read is Pappen was appointed by Hindenberg to watch Hitler, Hitler received about 31% of the vote. Pappen signed the concordat for Hindenberg. The concordat had been in negotiation for years. Hitler broke the accord, The pope had an encyclical sent into Germany, which was seized by Hitler and the printers were sent to prison. Another tract by the pope was ready to be sent by he died. You did not mention this. Cornwall is quoted but I believe he has retracted his book. Have you read the myth of Hitler's pope? If the people in Poland had rescued the Jewish people there, they the non-Jewish Poles would have been slaughtered. The Vatican had diplomatic relations which countries which were brutal colonial powers, not just with Germany. You left out a lot in your essay. I am not denying the role of the Catholic Church in Nazi Germany. Reply David May 17, 2019 at 5:31 am Where is the mention of MARTIN NIEMOLLER ? Crickets ? Reply Geoff Johnson June 23, 2019 at 6:53 pm No mention of Pastor Dietrich Bonhoffer executed for involvement in a plot to assassinate Hitler and the other leading nazis with a bomb. Reply Akaran June 24, 2019 at 9:43 am Please correct Hakenkreuz translation to Hooked Cross (English) for once. The missionary propaganda using Nazis as a tool to discredit and guilt trip Hindus for conversions to Christianity has gone too long without being challenged. Here’s the link for your consideration and possible rebuttal, if you feel the need to do so. https://swarajyamag.com/ideas/swastika-is-hindu-and-the-hooked-cross-is-nazi-the-rest-is-conspiracy Reply Michael Odom June 24, 2019 at 3:51 pm No surprise about Christianity, specifically the organized Roman Catholic Church, bending to the power of the Nazis. I remember as a child how weak Pious X!! was by turning his head to the immoral, grossly unhumane acts of Hilter's Germany. Had the church asserted the immorality of the Nazis by overtly opposing them history might have taken a different turn re WWII. But the Church and the Nazis, down deep, were two of kind as far as exerting control over society==both were authoritarian and totalitarian in nature and structural form and to have all-out opposition between the two would not have made sense politically. It would have been like asking the Italian mafia to step down to the Russian mafia! Further, unfortunately the Church was not sympathetic with the plight of the Jews–a scandalous atrocity since many Christians are the decendents (physically and theologically) of the Jewish people. There-in lies the true cause of the historical anomoly…Most Christians in the world sat, and still today, sit idly by while dictators and demagogues defy every decent Christian value and greedily assert a power they have no God-given right to. Reply Kimberly Dodson June 25, 2019 at 1:41 am First of all, Those are NOT Christians pictured there, they are Catholics, and it is no surprise when you consider their role in the killing of Christians in the first few centuries to try and establish their doctrines and abolish Christs. Today's Catholic example shows they are not Christian now either. Christians are followers of Christ. These are false teachers. Reply LEAVE A REPLY Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. POST COMMENT SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER Subscribe SIGN OUR PETITION Petition to the UN in support of human embryonic stem cell research signed by 31 Nobel Laureates FEATURED VIDEOS “Whose Choice?” A Pro-Abortion Film (VIDEO) Vatican Control of World Health Organization Policy: An Interview with Milton P. Siegel (VIDEO) RECOMMENDED Belief You Need To Consider The Possibility Your Religion Is Mythology Christian Right Watch Evangelicals: God Sent Trump to Be King Church Scandals 3 Ways Christianity Was Largely Responsible For The Holocaust Belief Alan Turing: Gay Man who Saved the World yet Died in Disgrace THE TRUTH SEEKER The “Final Days” of Religion HELP SUPPORT CHURCH AND STATE Please consider donating to Network for Church Monitoring! All donations however small are used to keep this Church and State website up and running, and are greatly appreciated. Church and State highlights the importance of secular government. We cover church-state separation, Christian Right, population, futurism, atheism, free speech and other issues. This website is an initiative of Network for Church Monitoring, a non-profit-making company limited by guarantee (No. 7496571) registered in England. Registered Office: Suite 101, 254 Pentonville Road, London N1 9JY. POPULAR How the “prosperity gospel” convinces poor people to give everything to grifty millionaire preachers You Need To Consider The Possibility Your Religion Is Mythology The Great Scandal: Christianity’s Role in the Rise of the Nazis TRENDING NOW Oklahoma Republican Declares That Rape Is The ‘Will Of God’ It’s Time to Start Calling Evangelicals What They Are: The American Taliban Organized Religion: A Tool for Ignorance, Power and Control Fair Use NoticeContact us © 2019 Network for Church Monitoring