This innovative new work demonstrates that a significant
minority of pastors, bishops, and theologians of varying
theological and church-political persuasions utilized Martin Luther
s writings about Jews and Judaism with considerable effectiveness
to reinforce the anti-Semitism and anti-Judaism already present in
substantial degrees among Protestants in Nazi Germany.
Scholarship on Nazi Germany and the Holocaust has typically
viewed anti-Semitism as a modern, racially-based phenomenon.
Anti-Judaism, on the other hand, has regularly been regarded as a
pre-modern, religiously-based hatred of Jews. In this book,
Christopher J. Probst, demonstrates that anti-Semitism pre-dates
the modern era and anti-Judaism survived into and flourished during
the Nazi era.
Following historian Gavin Langmuir, Probst argues that the
traditional distinction between anti-Judaism as "theological"
hostility and anti-Semitism as "racial" animus is not empirically
demonstrable and thus should be abandoned. Instead, it is
irrational thought that characterizes anti-Semitism; nonrational
(symbolic) thought, the kind found in art and affirmations of
belief, characterizes anti-Judaism. This schema helps us to
comprehend with greater clarity how the nature of theological
discourse shaped German Protestant approaches to the "Jewish
Question."
The carefully situated case studies presented in the book
demonstrate that a significant minority of pastors, bishops, and
theologians of varying theological and church-political persuasions
utilized Luther s writings about Jews and Judaism with considerable
effectiveness to reinforce the cultural anti-Semitism and
anti-Judaism already present in significant degrees among
Protestants in Nazi Germany.
With material from Luther s writings forming an important part
of their intellectual arsenal, many German Protestant theologians
and clergy seized upon old ideas and overlaid them with more
up-to-date connotations. Such anti-Semitism and anti-Judaism thus
circulated widely through the largest theological confession in
Germany. Thousands had access to such potent literature, much of
which contained material that resembled Nazi ideology aimed at
dehumanizing Jews, who died by the millions in Hitler s Third
Reich."
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