Most of those who voted were professing Christians. The Nazi Party could not have survived or functioned unless it were at the very least tacitly supported by Christians. With ~ 95% of Germans professing to be Christian, the Nazi regime could not have risen to power if Christians rose up against it.Redbrickbear said:TexasScientist said:No, what I'm saying is you fail to recognize that most people living in Germany professed to being Christian, and those same people either outright supported the Nazi movement, or at minimum their complacence allowed the Nazi movement to flourish.Redbrickbear said:TexasScientist said:Redbrickbear said:TexasScientist said:See response to Assassin.Redbrickbear said:TexasScientist said:Except they were Christians. And the Catholic Church was in part supportive and at best complacent, many helping hide or facilitate the escape of war criminals.Assassin said:The German Evangelical Church was the one that helped the Nazis. However it was basically created by the Nazis. Hardly a good way to show that Christians persecuted the Jews. Almost every other church in Germany hated the Nazis. See Deitrich Bonhoffer is you want to know more.TexasScientist said:Explain that to the Native Americans. Or the Jews and others during the inquisitions. Or the 'heretical" scientists who presented evidence contrary to established church dogma. Or the Reformation, Crusades etc.historian said:TexasScientist said:That's an opinion poll, not research into which religion is most violent.Assassin said:What research says!! pic.twitter.com/OXQ0kXXrgN
— Emilia Henderson (@Emilia__writes) May 27, 2025
From the start, Christianity was spread through missionary activity at great personal risk by missionaries, like Paul, who generally ended as martyrs. In contrast, Muhammad spread Islam through ruthless conquest and his successors continued that policy for most of the past 1400 years.
With Christianity, violence is not the preferred method of outreach. With Islam it always has been. Naturally, there are plenty of exceptions but the contrasts are real and stark.
The plan was to always move against the Catholic Church
Atheism or some kind of revived Germanic paganism was the goal
I saw the response....and it was not accurate.
[TexasScientist said:
Except they were Christians. And the Catholic Church was in part supportive and at best complacent, many helping hide or facilitate the escape of war criminals.]
The highest ranking Nazis were essential atheists or playing with some form of neo-paganism.
The Catholic Church was not supportive of the Nazis in terms of its hieriarcy...."Pope Pius XI and Cardinal Pacelli (later Pope Pius XII), publicly criticized Nazi ideology, particularly its racism and totalitarianism, through encyclicals like Mit brennender Sorge" nor its rank and file voters.
Catholic majority areas consistently voted for other parties besides the Nazi party
The average German identified as being Christian throughout the Third Reich, and Church attendance remained relatively high during the 1930s and early 1940s. Military chaplains served in the Wehrmacht, and Christian burial rites were common for German soldiers. The idea that the Nazi state had completely shed Christian identity is belied by the fact that Nazism thrived in a society that still saw itself culturally and nationally as being Christian. To claim that Nazi Germany was not Christian ignores the reality of how the Germans religious identity was intertwined with the ideology and operations of the Third Reich.
And you are again confusing average Germans with the Nazi party.
Average Germans were of course overwhelmingly Christian in the 1930s (Europeans all over the continent were).
But the Nazi movement and upper level leadership was a fully modernist political movement that was atheistic/agnostic with strong neo-pagan factions.
And as was shown….Hitler and the leadership planned to move against organized Christianity once the war was won.
Replacing it with modern Scientific-atheism or some kind of revived volkish/Nordic Odin-ism
But average Germans were of course not the Nazi movement….average Germans never even voted for the Nazi party by majorities.
Hitler and the Nazis never even got to 40% of the general German vote before they overthrew the political system
For most of its history the Nazi party only had 8%-13% support levels
[Adolf Hitler's highest percentage of votes in a free and open national election in Germany was approximately 37%…. specifically, the Nazi Party (NSDAP) achieved this percentage in the July 1932 general election. Hitler also received around 36.8% of the vote in the 1932 German presidential election]
It was a minority political movement….further ruled by a small elite of Nazis subordinate to the Fuhrer (supreme leader)
I have acknowledged that the majority of Germans were Christian
You still think the majority of German Christians supported the Nazis….but of course that is not correct
The Nazis as a party never got more than 37% of the vote…so a full 63% of Germans never even voted for them ever…and did not support them. The Nazis overthrew German democracy and created a dictatorship. (Important fact to remember)
And German Catholics were of course even more opposed to voting for the Nazi party….there was almost no support in the Catholic voting community for their movement.
(By using your logic the majority of Russian orthodox Christians were somehow supporters of the Bolsheviks or complicit….even though in truth they were being ruled over by a dictatorial non-democratic communist movement that they never voted for.)
Yes. And Russian Orthodox Christians today are going along with the brutal and criminal war on Ukraine. Puten himself professes to be an Orthodox Christian, and has the support of the Orthodox Church. He has even alluded to being directed by God's will.

