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Who Needs Enemies? Jews and Judaism in Anti-Nazi Religious Discourse

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Stephen R. Haynes
Affiliation:
an associate professor in the Department of Religious Studies at Rhodes College.

Extract

The so-called German Church Struggle has been a subject of scholarly study and popular interest for several decades. For obvious reasons, the minority of Germans who opposed the Nazis in word or in deed have become compelling symbols of courage and resistance, human reminders of the auspicious role religion can play in situations of political crisis. Rarely, however, has the discourse of anti-Nazi resistance been analyzed in terms of its assumptions concerning Jews, their role in Germany, or their historical destiny. When these assumptions are illuminated, it is apparent that despite their opposition to National Socialism and its encroachment in the affairs of the church, Christian resistors to Nazism transmitted concepts of Jews and Judaism that did little to ameliorate, and often exacerbated, the anti-Semitic environment in interwar Germany,

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 2002

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References

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55. In Ibid., 197.

56. In Ibid., 223.

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65. Ibid., 179, 180, 196.

66. Wilhelm Rehm, cited in Ibid., 113.

67. Ibid., 112. In 1935 Tübingen New Testament professor Adolf Schlatter called Judaism an ally of the Nazi state in its struggle against Christianity. “It cannot be denied,” Schlatter opined, “that, in the German Reich, the situation for his [the Jew's] ideology was never so favorable as now.” Schlatter went on to associate Judaism with both “Nordic racism” and notions of community based in “the compulsion of the blood” (Ibid., 104). The Vienna paper Gerechtigkeit responded to Schlatter's text, asking: “Does he really believe that he can struggle successfully [against the Nazi state] if he mocks, ridicules, and slanders other victims of National Socialism who are persecuted, tormented, and oppressed even more than the Protestants loyal to the confession?” (105).

68. Ibid., 85, 144.

69. Ibid., 68.

70. In Mosse, , Nazi Culture, 258Google Scholar. Cardinal Faulhaber's Advent sermons have been characterized in the recent Catholic document “We Remember: A Reflection on the Shoah” as “clearly express[ing] rejection of the Nazi anti-Semitic propaganda.” While it is quite true that in these sermons Faulhaber denied the religious significance of racial thinking, reaffirmed Jesus' Jewishness, and defended the Old Testament, Faulhaber's homilies contain the same ambivalence toward Jews that is reflected in early Protestant anti-Nazi writings. Faulhaber is especially careful to distinguish between the people of Israel before the death of Christ and after, when “Israel was dismissed from the service of Revelation”: “She had not known the time of her visitation. She had repudiated and rejected the Lord's Anointed, had driven Him out of the city and nailed Him to the Cross. Then the veil of the Temple was rent, and with it the covenant between the Lord and His people. The daughters of Sion received the bill of divorce, and from that time forth Assueras wanders, forever restless, over the face of the earth. Even after the death of Christ the Jews are still a ‘mystery,’ as St. Paul says (Rom. xi, 25); and one day, at the end of time, for them too the hour of grace will strike (Rom. xi, 26).” Commenting on these sermons, Mosse writes that “these remarks, though they may be well founded from the standpoint of Christian theology, must be read against the accelerating policy of excluding Jews from German life” (Nazi Culture, 239).

71. “Luther und das Alte Testament,” Junge Kirche (1937)Google Scholar, cited in Gerlach, , And the Witnesses Were Silent, 112.Google Scholar

72. See the “principles” drafted in accordance with the 1939 Gotesberg Declaration cited in Ibid., 182.

73. In Ibid., 165.

74. Katharina Staritz, a Confessing Church vicar, writing in 1941. In Ibid., 170.

75. In Ibid., 201, 204.

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82. The term “Heimkehr Israels” goes back at least to the seventeenth-century German theologian Spener. I am indebted to Professor Erich Geldbach for this observation.

83. Rose, , German Question/Jewish Question, 23.Google Scholar

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85. Robertson, , No Rusty Swords, 223Google Scholar. See also the use of the phrase “Aryan descent” in the chapter of The Bethel Confession on “The Church and the Jews” (No Rusty Swords, 242). In September 1933 New Testament scholars Wilhelm Brandt and Rudolf Bultmann opposed introduction of the Aryan Paragraph in the church while conceding the state's right to do “what it considers proper for the sake of the Volk.” The same year the German Church council published a memorandum entitled “The Church and the Jewish Question in Germany,” probably written by theologian Walter Künneth. The document affirmed that state measures to restrict Jews were necessary “to protect the German people.” See Gerlach, , And the Witnesses Were Silent, 37, 54.Google Scholar

86. Robertson, , No Rusty Swords, 226–27Google Scholar. In section two of the essay, Bonhoeffer writes that “the Jewish problem is not the same for the church as it is for the state.” Bonhoeffer invoked the term Judenfrage again in 1935 in a lecture to members of the Confessing Church. According to surviving notes, Bonhoeffer's lecture on “The Interpretation of the New Testament” included these comments: “The service of the church has to be given to those who suffer violence and injustice. The Old Testament still demands right-dealing of the state, the New Testament no longer does so. Without asking about justice or injustice, the church takes to itself all the sufferers, all the forsaken of every party and of every status. ‘Open your mouth for the dumb’; (Prov. 31.8). Here the decision will really be made whether we are still the church of the present Christ. The Jewish question.” See Robertson, , No Rusty Swords, 325.Google Scholar

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91. This message is even clearer in The Bethel Confession, which states that God “continues to preserve a ‘holy remnant’ of Israel after the flesh, which can not be absorbed into another nation by emancipation and assimilation.” No Rusty Swords, 241.

92. The only scholar to demonstrate an awareness of this problem is Stephen S. Schwarzchild. See “Bonhoeffer and the Jews,” 254.

93. Bergen, , Twisted Cross, 32.Google Scholar

94. “The Church and the Jewish Question,” in Robertson, , No Rusty Swords, 227–28Google Scholar. In a lecture delivered at the University of Berlin on 22 June 1933 and entitled “The Struggle for the Church,” Bonhoeffer invoked a less troublesome analogy. Citing Romans 14, he argued that “strong is he who ejects no one; weak is he who puts a fence around the congregation. Those today who are weak in faith need a racial law.” In a leaflet drafted that August (“The Aryan Paragraph in the Church”) Bonhoeffer repeated his warning that “the demand of the weak” not become church law. See Gerlach, , And the Witnesses Were Silent, 27, 29.Google Scholar

95. At first glance it appears that this “divine law” refers to Jewish legal stipulations. But as Bonhoeffer's argument develops, it becomes clear that the “divine law” he is thinking of is racial identity. Bonhoeffer writes that something analogous to the Apostolic Council of Acts 10 would occur today if a group within the church were to base membership on “the observance of a divine law, for example the racial unity of the members of the community.” While the law in question in the first century was the law of Moses, for Bonhoeffer's argument to make sense, the “law” he is referring to must be racial identity. Thus, Bonhoeffer's argument seems to require that human racial categories be viewed as reflecting “divine law.” If this is the case, Bonhoeffer implies what many Protestant theologians on the German Christian side were arguing at the time: that race or peoplehood must be regarded as an ordinance of creation.

96. Cited in Gerlach, , And the Witnesses Were Silent, 73Google Scholar. Emphasis added.

97. “Principles of the Rhineland Brotherhood of Pastors against the Twenty-eight Theses,” Junge Kirche (June, 1934). The principles were written in response to “Twenty Eight Theses of the Saxon People's Church on the Internal Organization of the German Evangelical church,” adopted the previous December. In Ibid., 70.

98. This view is taken by Franklin Littell among others. Zerner, Ruth ably argues the case in “German Protestant Responses to Nazi Persecution of the Jews,” in Braham, Randolph L., ed., Perspectives on the Holocaust (Boston: Luwer-Nijhoff, 1983), 6465.Google Scholar

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