“For almost twenty centuries . . . the
church was the archenemy of the
Jews—our most powerful and
relentless oppressor and the worlds’ greatest force
for the dissemination of Anti-Semitic beliefs and
the instigation of the acts of hatred. Many of the
same people who operated the gas chambers
worshiped in Christian churches on Sunday. . . .
The question of the complicity of the church in
the murder of the Jews is a living one. We must
understand the truths of our history.”
—Abraham Foxman, Anti-Defamation Leaguei
WAS HITLER FOLLOWING THE
TEACHINGS OF JESUS?
Most Christians would say that Adolf Hitler was not a
Christian because he did not follow the teachings of Jesus
nor did he understand the meaning of the New Testament
writings. Yet, in his own way, perverse though it was, he
saw the genocide of the Jewish people as a “sacred”
mission. Writing in Mein Kampf, Hitler said: “Today, I
believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the
Almighty Creator: by defending myself against the Jew, I
am fighting for the work of the Lord” [italics in the
original].” In addition, there are those who would allege
that it was not only Hitler’s personal “theology” but also
two thousand years of anti-Semitism by the church in the
name of Jesus that laid the foundation for the Holocaust.
Nazi anti-Judaism was the work of godless, anti-
Christian criminals. But it would not have been
possible without the almost two thousand years’ prehistory
of ‘Christian’ anti-Judaism. . . . —Hans Küngii
It is a painful but inescapable truth that anti-
Semitism, which seethes with hate, was spawned
and nourished by Christianity, which reveres a
Jewish prophet who preached love and compassion.
. . .Two thousand years of Christian anti-Judaism . . .
hardened hearts against Jews. . . .This mind-set,
deeply embedded in the Christian outlook, helps to
explain why so many people were receptive to anti-
Jewish propaganda. —Marvin Perryiii
From the standpoint of history, was it really Christian
teaching that supplied the fuel for the crematoria? Did
conservative Christian doctrine really pave the way for the
poison that filled the showers? Is there anything in
orthodox Christian theology that would lead Germany’s
church leaders to advocate murdering six million Jews?
Who were the heads of the church, the seminary
instructors, the spiritual leaders of Germany’s church in
the 1930s? What “religion” were they really teaching?
Could it be that a Germany that was leading the world in
art, physics and literature—producing Mahler and
Wagner, Uhlmann, Klaus Fuchs and Max Born—was
sending the world down the road of genocidal mania?
Could a Germany that was pioneering in the fields of
theology, religious study and biblical scholarship be
morally bankrupt? And how could those whose profession
was to study God’s Word and lead pastors into God’s
truth, based on the Hebrew Scriptures as well as the New
Testament, condone or even advocate Hitler’s demonic
course? Who were Hitler’s theologians? And what
“Christianity” did they teach?
BIRTH OF THE MODERN ERA
To understand the religious climate of a pre-Holocaust
Germany (circa 1930s) it is helpful to re-visit the seventeenth
century when the Modern Era dawned on Western Europe.
The Age of Reason, also known as the Enlightenment and the
Age of Rationalism,iv was a period in history when
philosophers emphasized the use of reason as the best method
of learning truth. Thinkers relied heavily on the scientific
method to discover truth in all disciplines. Philosophers
emphasized experimentation and careful observation.v These
modern thinkers believed that reason could be tested and was
therefore reliable, but revelation (which claims to be Godgiven)
was beyond testing and therefore unreliable. Many
believed that reason must “validate” the claims of the Bible for
those claims to be true. John Locke (1632-1704) asserted that
reason is “the candle of the Lord set up by Himself in men’s
minds” and “must be our final judge and guide in everything.”vi
The Age of Reason produced a generation of Bible
scholars known as Rationalists. They argued that only
through reason could we learn about God.
Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834)
Friedrich Schleiermacher, called the founder of Liberal
Protestantism, argued that God is unknowable. He taught that it is not possible to verify the
historical events described in the
Scriptures, such as the parting of
the Red Sea, the Exodus from
Egypt, or even the giving of the
Ten Commandments. Therefore,
according to him, faith is merely
a “religious feeling.” He wrote,
“. . . belief in God, and in
personal immortality, are not
necessarily a part of religion; one can conceive of religion
without God, and it would be pure contemplation of the
universe.”vii According to Schleiermacher, religious truth is
subjective; it is not derived from the Scriptures but rather
is relative to a person’s conscience. Consequently, religious
principles of right and wrong are merely interpretations
based on an individual’s perspective.
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)
The German philosopher
Friedrich Nietzsche carried reason’s
critique of religion much further.
In Thus Spake Zarathustra the
protagonist proclaimed, “God is
dead.” This was Nietzsche’s
dramatic way of alleging that most
people no longer believed in God.
He lamented that civilization was
left with a terrible void since religion no longer provided a
basis for making moral choices. He put forth the idea of
the übermensch (super human), who through his “will to
power” could bring down false ideals and moral codes of
his day. This übermensch could overcome nihilism by
creating new or better ideals.
CRITICIZING THE JEWISH
SCRIPTURES
By the late nineteenth century Liberal Protestant
Bible scholars regarded the historical accounts of both
Israel and the life of Jesus as inaccurate. In 1906 Albert
Schweitzer published The Quest for the Historical Jesus,
arguing that we can know very little about the real Jesus.
Jesus’ life, the New Testament and even the Torah were
cloaked in mythology.
Schweitzer claimed that
historians needed to “demythologize”
the Bible—strip
away the miracles and ask
questions such as “who really
wrote these books?” He
maintained that only an
historical method rather than
a religious one was needed to
get a verifiable biography of
Jesus. A scientific approach to the Bible was developed,
known as the historical-critical approach. In this
approach, readers attempted to reconstruct what they
believed was the original text. Important to note is that
this method denied divine inspiration, rejected miracles,
and presumed that the biblical text we have is a
composite of editions and alterations by various parties
with varying and unique interests.
Julius Wellhausen (1844-1918)
Julius Wellhausen was born in Westphalia, Germany.
He earned his doctorate in theology at the University of
Gottingen. After teaching theology for twelve years, he
resigned his position because he began to doubt the
authority of the Scriptures to teach religious truth. In
1882, he took a position at the University of Halle,
teaching Middle-Eastern and Semitic languages. He
applied the historical-critical approach to studying the
Jewish Bible. Wellhausen proposed the Documentary
Hypothesis, which argued that Moses did not write the
first five books of the Bible. Rather, Wellhausen suggested
that the Pentateuch is a composite originating from four
sources that he designated as J, E, P and D. J stood for
Jehovah and referred to those documents in which God is
identified by his four-letter name. E represented those documents in which God was referred to as Elohim. P
stood for the Priestly source used to identify those parts of
the Torah that Wellhausen believed had been added by the
Jewish priesthood. Finally, D stood for Deuteronomy,
referring to those portions of the text that were repeated in
the final book of the Torah. Wellhausen believed that the
D source possibly originated in the era of a late Judean
king. According to his hypothesis, different groups added
portions of text, with each redaction reflecting that source’s
human agenda and version of Israel’s history.
The Documentary Hypothesis quickly spread among
Bible scholars in Central Europe. It eventually crossed the
Atlantic and debuted at Union
Theological Seminary in New
York. Rabbinic scholars
immediately protested what they
perceived as an attack on the
holiest books in Judaism.
Solomon Schechter, the founder of
Conservative Judaism, stated his
concerns in a 1903 seminary
address titled “Higher Criticism—
Higher Anti-Semitism.” Schechter
believed that the Documentary Hypothesis would lead to
an attack on Judaism and ultimately an assault on the
Jewish people. Jewish historian Marc Zvi Brettler
summarized Schechter’s comments, which in hindsight
seem rather prophetic:
[He] equated Wellhausen’s approach with
“professional and imperial anti-Semitism,” calling it
an “intellectual persecution” of Judaism. viii
THE EVOLUTION OF RELIGION
As historical-critical tools sought to explain textual
origins, new theories such as those put forth in Darwin’s
Origin of the Species attempted to explain human origins
in purely scientific terms. Darwin alleged that humans
were evolved from more primitive animal species.
Theologians adopted his language and began explaining
religion in terms of evolutionary forces as well—the
“Evolution of Religion.” They reasoned that if modern
man evolved from more primitive species, many of which
are now extinct, then perhaps modern religion evolved
from primitive religions, such as Judaism. The corollary,
based on natural selection, was that the “primitive”
religion should also become extinct to make way for more
evolved religion. If the source of the Hebrew Scriptures
was not divine, then Judaism and her Scriptures were
merely the products of anthropological evolutionary
forces, acted out in ancient Semitic societies.
In 1875, Professor Robert Smith of Edinburgh,
Scotland delivered a series of lectures titled “The Religion
of the Semites.” Smith outlined the primitive origins of
the Jewish beliefs as follows:
We have seen that ancient
faiths must be looked
on as matters of
institution rather
than of doctrines
or formulated
beliefs, and that the
system of an antique
religion was part of the social
order under which its adherents lived . . .
broadly speaking, religion was made up of a series of
acts and observances, the correct performance of
which was necessary to secure the favour of the gods
or avert their anger.ix
In The History of Israel and Judah, Wellhausen
predicted that Judaism and the Jewish people would
become extinct:
The . . . emancipation [i.e. assimilation] of the Jews
must inevitably lead to the extinction of Judaism
wherever the process is extended beyond the
political to the social sphere. For the
accomplishment of this centuries may be required.x
Following this progression, Liberal Christianity would
take center stage.
Adolf von Harnack (1851-1930)
Adolf von Harnack, born in Estonia, earned his
doctorate at the University of Leipzig. He taught church history at the University of
Giessen and later at the
University of Berlin. Over time
he became convinced that Jesus
was not divine. The main focus
of Liberal Protestantism is the
fatherhood of God and the
brotherhood of man. As one of
its proponents, von Harnack
tried to show that Jesus was a
progressive teacher, but not divine. According to his
theories, the god of the Hebrew Scriptures was a tribal
war god, jealous for his subjects’ worship
and waging war on his enemies.
The Jewish belief that God
required an atonement for
sin was dismissed as
merely stemming from
the primitive semitic
belief in a tribal god who
demanded blood to satisfy his
wrath. Von Harnack maintained
that the Christian teaching that Jesus’ death
atoned for sin was Hebrew in origin, obsolete, and should
be discarded. Von Harnack’s views are not original. In the
second century, the Gnostic Marcion taught that the god of
the New Testament had defeated the war god of the Hebrew
Scriptures. Marcion and many Gnostics urged the church
to reject the Jewish Scriptures. Von Harnack asserted that:
To reject the Old Testament in the second century
perhaps was a mistake which the great Church
refused rightfully . . . but to conserve it after the
nineteenth century as a canonical text in
Protestantism, was the result of a religious and
ecclesiastical paralysis.xi
By 1930, Liberal Protestant church leaders in Germany
had come to believe that the Jewish people, like their
Bible, had served their purpose and therefore the Jewish
roots of Christianity were to be denied as well:
We must emphasize with all decisiveness that
Christianity did not grow out of Judaism but
developed in opposition to Judaism. When we
speak of Christianity and Judaism today, the two in
their most fundamental essence stand in glaring
contrast to one another. There is no bond between
them, rather the sharpest opposition. (Reich Bishop
Ludwig Muller, 1934)xii
Church leaders endeavored to remove all Jewish
influence from German society in both the political and
religious spheres. Alfred Rosenberg, publisher of Der
Stürmer, (the weekly Nazi newspaper most notorious for
its anti-Semitic cartoons) was the link between nineteenthcentury
Liberal Protestantism and Hitler’s twentiethcentury
Aryan agenda. Doris Bergen, professor of history
at Notre Dame explains:
Alfred Rosenberg dubbed the Old Testament a
collection of “stories of pimps and cattle traders”;
but the high school religion teacher and German
Christian agitator Reinhold Krause earned sustained
applause in November 1933, when he repeated that
phrase at a rally of twenty thousand people.xii
It was in this setting that Liberal Protestant pastors
founded the German Christian
Movement in 1932. They
wanted to create a “Reich” or
“state” church that all German
Protestant Christians would rally
around; their symbol was a
Christian cross with a swastika in
the middle. They did not hold to
a high view of Scripture;
conversely they were devoted to
eradicating Old Testament readings from their worship
services and they even altered the New Testament so as to
excise references to the Jewish people or worse, demonize
them. They did not want Jews to believe in Jesus either—
they saw all Jews as a cancer to be excised. Point nine of
the German Christian Movement’s 1932 platform stated:
In the mission to the Jews we see a serious threat to
our Volkstrum (race). That mission is an entryway for
foreign blood into the body of our Volk. . . . We reject missions to the Jews [because of ] . . . the
danger of fraud and bastardization [of the German
race].xiii
In 1939, they issued the Godesberg Declaration, which
said, “Christianity is the irreconcilable religious opposite
of Judaism.” The declaration also announced the
establishment of the Institute for Research into and
Elimination of Jewish Influence in German Church Life.xiv
CONSERVATIVE PROTESTANTS
RESPOND
Conservative Protestants maintained that both the
Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament were inspired
by God, and they were incensed by the platform of the
German Christian Movement and their advocacy for
altering the Scriptures. They contended there was nothing
“Christian” about the German Christian Movement.
They saw the movement’s agenda as a collapse both of
faith and Judeo-Christian morals. In 1934, theologically
conservative pastors and theologians founded the
Confessing Church, a movement broad enough to
include Lutheran, Reformed and United churches of
Germany. Committed to
resisting the downward tide of
the German Christian
Movement, their theological
underpinnings can be found in
the Barmen Declaration written
largely by Swiss Reformed
theologian Karl Barth. This
statement not only affirmed the
key doctrines of the Christian
faith, but also served as a protest against the Liberal
Protestant Church that embraced Hitler’s ideology. The
declaration repudiated any other doctrine as false that
made the church “an organ of the State” or that gave
religious status to “ruling powers.”
Notable Lutheran leaders such as Martin Niemoller
and Dietrich Bonhoeffer also had a hand in crafting the
Barmen Declaration. These theologians were devoted to
belief in the inspiration and authority of both the Hebrew
Scriptures and the New Testament. They were opposed
to Hitler and his perversion of the Scriptures.
Conservative German church leaders such as Bonhoeffer
publicly denounced Hitler and even plotted his
assassination. As a result, he and many in the Confessing
Church were executed. But the resistance was not
limited to theologians and church leaders.
Yad Vashem contains the records of over 18,000
individuals deemed “Righteous Gentiles.” These men and
women risked their own safety and that of their families to
oppose the Nazis and save Jewish lives. One of the most
well known among them was Corrie ten Boom, whose
story was told in the book The
Hiding Place. She and her family
held to a conservative Christian
theology and their faith led them
to risk hiding Jews in their home.
Eventually they ended up in a
concentration camp. Others, like
Diet Eman, joined the
underground and fought in the
Dutch resistance, risking their
lives to stop Hitler and save our people from his evil.
MAKING SENSE OF IT ALL
In looking back at the theology that marked the
Modern Era, it becomes apparent that era ended with the
Holocaust. Most historians conclude that the Holocaust
was the lid on its coffin. After all, the Modern Era failed
to lead humanity to a higher level but instead brought it to
the depths of degradation. And Liberal Protestantism,
which rejected the foundational beliefs of Christianity and
instead embraced Hitler’s ideology, was part and parcel of
that failure. Richard Harries, Bishop of Oxford, in his
popular work After the Evil—Christianity and Judaism in
the Shadow of the Holocaust, points out that Hitler’s
ideology “was not only not Christian, it was anti-
Christian.”xv
Though Hitler used Christian jargon to spout his
venom, his actions opposed the teachings of both the
Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament. He certainly
couldn’t embrace the promise made to the first Jew,
Abraham:
I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses
you I will curse. (Genesis 12:3)
Nor could Hitler acknowledge the words of the
psalmist that the Jewish people would be set apart as God’s
prized possession:
For the Lord has chosen Jacob to be his own, Israel
to be his treasured possession. (Psalm 135:4)
Nor could he admit that the New Testament makes God’s
commitment to the Jewish people clear:
Theirs [the Jewish people] is the adoption as sons;
theirs the divine glory, the covenants, the receiving
of the law, the temple worship and the promises.
Theirs are the patriarchs, and from them is traced
the human ancestry of Christ, who is God over all,
forever praised! (Romans 9:4, 5)
So what was Hitler’s personal theology? Did he see himself
as the übermensch (superman) espoused by Nietzsche 75 years
earlier, the precursor of the master race? Some, like William
Shirir, have indicated that Hitler was influenced by Nietzsche’s
philosophy. Writing in The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich,
Shirrer, points out: “Hitler often visited the Nietzsche museum
in Weimar and published his veneration for the philosopher by
posing for photographs of himself staring in rapture at the bust
of the great man.” Michael Kalish in his research paper,
“Friedrich Nietzsche’s Influence on Hitler’s Mein Kampf,”
makes a convincing case for this connection as well:
The underlying themes in Nietzsche and Hitler’s
philosophies are the importance of impulses and
action for self-preservation, the danger of the clever
Jew (i.e. the slave who has re-valuated strong as evil
and weak as good), and the prophesy of a new type
of man that will question the Jewish values and
return the glory of the blond beast.xvi
Hitler did not follow the biblical teachings of Christianity;
nor did he emulate those theologians who held to the
authority of the Scriptures. Instead, he burlesqued Christian
teachings, twisting them to his own purposes. By using
language that sounded familiar to Christians, he was able to
pose as an adherent to the religion when in actuality he was a
self-proclaimed pagan: “I am myself a heathen to the core.”xvii
Hitler took advantage of a time in which people had
learned to measure the Bible according to their own
thoughts and perspectives, rather than the other way
around. God was deemed unnecessary to religion. Reason
and science, both important disciplines, were revered
beyond anything that true reason or science would suggest
or even tolerate. And science and reason proved to be
cruel gods that produced heartless followers.
Hitler’s theologians got it wrong. Their theology was
fatally flawed. They denied the truth of the Hebrew and
New Testament Scriptures. They denied that the Jewish
people were special to God. They denied that Y’shua the Jew
was God’s way of salvation for all people. In their revised
Bible, John 4:22, which originally read, “Salvation is from
the Jews,” was changed to read, “Jews are our misfortune,” xviii
What a sad irony! In the end, Hitler’s theologians tragically
missed the mark by denying the very people whom God
chose to use to bring redemption, the Messiah Y’shua.
End Notes
- Abraham Foxman, Never Again: The Threat of Anti-Semitism (New York: Harper-Rowe, 2004) pp. 74-75.
- Hans Küng, On Being a Christian, Edward Quinn, Transl.
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1976) p. 169.
- Marvin Perry and Frederick Schweitzer, Antisemitism: Myth and Hate from Antiquity to the Present (New York: Palgrave, 2002) p. 3
- James Creech, “Age of Reason,” in World Book Encyclopedia (Chicago, IL:
World Book Inc., 2002), [CD-ROM Ed.].
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Quoted in Elie Kedourie, “Nationalism.” (Praeger University
Series, 1961) p. 26
- Marc Z. Brettler, How to Read the Bible (Philadelphia: Jewish
Publication Society, 2005) p. 4.
- Robertson Smith, Lectures on the Religion of the Semites, Lecture II
(London: Adam and Charles Black, 1894) p. 28.
- Julius Wellhausen, Sketch of the History of Israel and Judah, Third
Edition (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1891) pp. 201-203.
- Adolf Harnack, Marcion: Das Evangelium Von Fremden Gott, (Leipzig,
Germany: J.C. Hinrichs, 1921) p. 248.
- Doris L. Bergen, The Twisted Cross. (Chapel Hill, NC : University of North Carolina Press, 1996) p. 21.
- Doris L. Bergen, “Old Testament, New Hatreds: The Hebrew Bible and
Anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany,” Sacred Text, Secular Times: The Hebrew
Bible in the Modern World, Leonard Greenspoon and Bryan LeBeau, eds.
- (Omaha, NE: Creighton University Press, 2000) pp. 35-46.
- Bergen, The Twisted Cross, p. 24.
- Richard Harries, After the Evil (Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2003) p.14.
- http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/marcuse/ classes/133p/133p04papers/MKalishNietzNazi046.htm
- Harries, op.cit., p.14.
- Sussannah Herschel: “Nazifying Christian Theology,” Church
History, Dec. 1994, Vol. 63, p.595.