Not only that, Hitler wrote extensively about how much he hated Christianity and thought that it was a weak religion that made you a cuck. And the only reason he couldnt get rid of it was because there were so many Germans who were worshippers that it would be more than a little obvious.
Considering he took only the wrong lessons from Nietzsche, who fundamentally thought Christianity was a kind of slave-mentality moral framework, it's not a surprise that Hitler wouldn't like Christianity.
Heck, his biggest real electoral threat came from German Catholics.
If he had tried to openly remove Christianity from all of Germany (rather than subverting it into the Nazi religion), he would have been seen as too similar to the Communists.
It is interesting to me that although the Catholics never posed a big problem in Italy, and the Catholics even joined with the Fascists in Spain (even forming Falangism), it seems like National Socialism violated something in the Catholic germans' principles.
Fundamentally, I think that unless a Socialist makes space for Catholicism, it's just going to be treated as a rival religion.
The round table talks had little context and are subject to arguably deliberate mistranslation, abridging, and framing (to delegitimize him to english speaking countries who might have been on the fence about WWII, who were largely Christian at the time; Thus, among other collective psycho-sociological efforts, they sought to bury any chance of a counter narrative seeding and any
meaningful association with him), beyond that I don't know where you might extrapolate these "extensive" writings. Goebbels and others maybe, but the bulk of Germans were absolutely Christian/Catholic, as was the Fuhrer, though it would make sense that he would fall away from the faith because a profound criticism of Christendom was bouncing around the interoccular of philosophy at the time along with the undeniable factor of social pressure from his cohorts.
What can be said of Christendom? It is not a worldly faith. If you are doing anything less than the anabaptists and the Orthodoxy then you're essentially doing it wrong. Though, the 25 points of NSDAP are in no way a contrast to the values of mainstream Christianity, in fact, the 24th point contradicts you entirely.
Not only that, Hitler wrote extensively about how much he hated Christianity and thought that it was a weak religion that made you a cuck. And the only reason he couldnt get rid of it was because there were so many Germans who were worshippers that it would be more than a little obvious.
Considering he took only the wrong lessons from Nietzsche, who fundamentally thought Christianity was a kind of slave-mentality moral framework, it's not a surprise that Hitler wouldn't like Christianity.
Heck, his biggest real electoral threat came from German Catholics.
If he had tried to openly remove Christianity from all of Germany (rather than subverting it into the Nazi religion), he would have been seen as too similar to the Communists.
It is interesting to me that although the Catholics never posed a big problem in Italy, and the Catholics even joined with the Fascists in Spain (even forming Falangism), it seems like National Socialism violated something in the Catholic germans' principles.
Fundamentally, I think that unless a Socialist makes space for Catholicism, it's just going to be treated as a rival religion.
The round table talks had little context and are subject to arguably deliberate mistranslation, abridging, and framing (to delegitimize him to english speaking countries who might have been on the fence about WWII, who were largely Christian at the time; Thus, among other collective psycho-sociological efforts, they sought to bury any chance of a counter narrative seeding and any meaningful association with him), beyond that I don't know where you might extrapolate these "extensive" writings. Goebbels and others maybe, but the bulk of Germans were absolutely Christian/Catholic, as was the Fuhrer, though it would make sense that he would fall away from the faith because a profound criticism of Christendom was bouncing around the interoccular of philosophy at the time along with the undeniable factor of social pressure from his cohorts.
What can be said of Christendom? It is not a worldly faith. If you are doing anything less than the anabaptists and the Orthodoxy then you're essentially doing it wrong. Though, the 25 points of NSDAP are in no way a contrast to the values of mainstream Christianity, in fact, the 24th point contradicts you entirely.
Gee I wonder what could have given him that idea.