Hitler was the most famous Christian of the 20th century.
SkinWalker said:"The greatness of Christianity did not lie in attempted negotiations for compromise with any similar philosophical opinions in the ancient world, but in its inexorable fanaticism in preaching and fighting for its own doctrine."
"....the personification of the devil as the symbol of all evil assumes the living shape of the Jew."
"This human world of ours would be inconceivable without the practical existence of a religious belief."
"I believe today that my conduct is in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator."
-Adolph Hitler, Mein Kampf.
Arete said:I was just wondering if anyone had any good information on demonology. Im doing a report on it. Ive done the obvious things like google and wiki but got poor results.
Jaster Mereel said:Hitler was not a Christian. Read even one biography of the man and you would know that he despised Christians. Learn something about History before you make such assertions. Nothing about the Nazi cult was even remotely Christian. It is very well known among actual historians of the Second World War that they actually revived ancient, Teutonic religious practices and glorified ancient, pre-christian germanic peoples.
It seems very clear that those two sites you posted are actually clearly biased, anti-christian lovefests. Either that, or they naively think that the rhetoric in Hitler's speeches was not designed to appeal to the German people, the vast majority of whom were, not surprisingly, Christians.
baumgarten said:I'm still waiting for you to back this assertion up. (FWIW, I have heard a lot of Christians express hatred for Islam; not so much from the Jews.)
So, as long as my zealous nature is not justified in the name of the divine, I'm fine in your book. (Hello October Revolution!) Or perhaps your argument has more to do with irrationality, of which apparently atheists are incapable. After all, if just anyone could behave and think irrationally, then you'd have no one to single out!
News flash: The Nazis (not the same thing as the Germans, by the way), as well as countless others, have shown themselves to be quite willing to hate and kill without apology. Did any figure of Nazi authority ever apologize for the atrocities for which they were responsible? There are still people who claim to be Nazis who want everyone unlike them killed or oppressed. The Catholic church has long shaped more peaceful doctrines for itself, on the other hand; so perhaps your characterization of these two organizations as apples and oranges is accurate.
Because he believed in the occult value of those artifiacts - like Boromir desired the One Ring. It's this desire (and in Boromir's case, his repentance) that showed his true character. The problem with a fanatic is that they can believe in the reality and usefulness of religion without actually adhering to any of its tenets. They may even (and usually do) believe that they act according to God's will. Did you think the false prophets and Christs that Jesus warned against would pretend to be atheists? They would come from inside the church!charles cure said:if hitler wasn't christian, why did he expend huge amounts of time and money trying to find christian artifacts like the holy grail, the ark of the covenant, the spear of destiny...etc. if he wasn't christian, don't you think he would have not believed any of these things even existed to be found? probably. he did however, despite your claims that he wasn't christian - search for all of these things throughout the war in the hopes that he would find an object that would give him the supernatural strength required to defeat his enemies. strange for a guy who just uses christian rhetoric.
Jenyar said:Because he believed in the occult value of those artifiacts - like Boromir desired the One Ring. It's this desire (and in Boromir's case, his repentance) that showed his true character. The problem with a fanatic is that they can believe in the reality and usefulness of religion without actually adhering to any of its tenets. They may even (and usually do) believe that they act according to God's will. Did you think the false prophets and Christs that Jesus warned against would pretend to be atheists? They would come from inside the church!
What is even stranger than someone who uses Christian rhetoric yet acts like a devil, is someone who believes that such a person still passes for a good example of Christianity. Don't you believe Matt. 7:15-23? I would question the Christianity of someone who makes a show of his Christianity in public, while he says in private:
"I begin to lose all respect for humanity when I think that some people on our side, ministers or generals, are capable of believing that we cannot triumph without the blessing of the Church. Such a notion is excusable in little children who have learned nothing else."
"Kerrl, with the noblest of intentions, wanted to attempt a synthesis between National Socialism and Christianity. I don't believe the thing's possible, and I see the obstacle in Christianity itself."
"Christianity is the worst of the regressions that mankind can ever have undergone, and it's the Jew who, thanks to this diabolic invention, has thrown him back 15 centuries. The only thing that would be still worse would be victory for the Jew through Bolshevism. If Bolshevism triumphed, mankind would lose the gift of laughter and joy. It would become merely a shapeless mass, doomed to grayness and despair." --
, as recorded by Martin Bormann between July 1941 and June 1942.
(Note: I am aware that some question the accuracy of the translated Table Talk (see the Wikipedia entry), and of the fact that Hitler never questioned his own interpretation of Christianity. He was definitely religious, and a Christian facade allowed him to rally "Christian" Germany (he tried to unite Catholics and Protestants under his cause) and to villify the Jews (he believed Jesus started the war against Jews, and wasn't actually a Jew). He seemed to regard ideological Christianity as a useful and necessary weakness of the German people, while practical Christianity - what he called "the Christianity of the catacombs" - would lead to their downfall. "I have not come into this world to make men better, but to make use of their weaknesses.")
SkinWalker said:The facts are: Hitler believed in the Christian god; and believed what he was doing was the work of god.
So the tired and worn argument that religious nutters keep tossing about that "since Hitler was atheist, atheists are bad" is not only an intellectual problem, but a pure deception on the part of Christians that use this argument. Both problems aren't in short supply among Christians, and I'm sure some Christians will continue to argue the Hitler/atheist point after this just to prove their lack of intellectual ability and the deceptions they're willing to stoop to.
Confutatis said:This is not a fact at all. I'm appalled at how frequently you spread ignorance as truth. Have you read Mein Kampf? I have.
Hitler was at best a mystic, but he was not a religious man. His views on spirituality were strongly influenced by Norse mythology as expressed in the operas of Richard Wagner. But above all, Hitler considered mythology important only because it helped strengthen the German's people sense of racial pride.
Confutatis said:This is not a fact at all. I'm appalled at how frequently you spread ignorance as truth.
I don't think SkinWalker read Mein Kampf. At least he didn't say he did.charles cure said:i think skinwalker quoted some of mein kampf that points to hitler's christianity.
I'm not talking about "evidence", I'm reporting what I heard from the horse's mouth. Nowhere in Mein Kampf, or in his public pronouncements, has Hitler made it clear that he cared about Christianity. Christianity was, in fact, too un-German for him. That is why he preferred Norse mythology, which for him seemed much more like a German religion.all the evidence of hitler's life points to his having been christian.
He didn't appeal to Christianity for that, he appealed to Norse mythology. He may have said something about Jews being responsible for Christ's death; he believed a leader should say whatever it had to be said to get people to do what he wanted them to do. He had a Minister of Propaganda! And he explains why in Mein Kampf.what you are saying is that his christianity was an elaborate facade or calculated lie in order to manipulate the people of germany into doing his bidding.
Hitler was not a pope. He didn't even go to church.well if that makes hitler not christian, then i've got a list of popes who weren't christian either.
Wagner was a Christian.Wagner wrote an opera about the holy grail too, remember?
Confutatis said:I'm not talking about "evidence", I'm reporting what I heard from the horse's mouth. Nowhere in Mein Kampf, or in his public pronouncements, has Hitler made it clear that he cared about Christianity. Christianity was, in fact, too un-German for him. That is why he preferred Norse mythology, which for him seemed much more like a German religion.
He didn't appeal to Christianity for that, he appealed to Norse mythology. He may have said something about Jews being responsible for Christ's death; he believed a leader should say whatever it had to be said to get people to do what he wanted them to do. He had a Minister of Propaganda! And he explains why in Mein Kampf.
Hitler was not a pope. He didn't even go to church.
Wagner was a Christian.
<img src="http://www.bloomington.in.us/~lgthscac/churchandstate.jpg">confused said:Hitler was not a pope. He didn't even go to church.
I don't think SkinWalker read Mein Kampf. At least he didn't say he did.
SkinWalker said:Do you want to measure dicks next?