The evidence that Hitler was a staunch Christian is overwhelming. He banned 
secular education in Germany on the basis that Christian religious instruction 
is essential to moral development, repeatedly vilified atheism, and although he 
often clashed with Catholic bishops over his ill-treatment of Jews, Hitler did 
not perceive himself as being anti-Christian, but rather as bringing the Church 
back to what he saw as its proper, traditional role in persecuting the 
pestilent. While negotiating the Reichskonkordat, Hitler said to Bishop Berning 
that suppressing Jews was, “doing Christianity a great service by pushing them 
out of schools and public functions.”

There are numerous other examples, from Mein Kampf (“only fools and criminals 
would think of abolishing existing religion”), to Hitler’s letters (1941: “I am 
now as before a Catholic and will always remain so”), to the Gott Mit Uns motto 
on German army uniforms during the Nazi era, to the Lutheran Church in Berlin, 
full of carvings celebrating Hitler’s rise to power (including an exquisitely 
carved SA paramilitary trooper on the baptismal font), to the amended 1934 
loyalty oath of the German military (“I swear by almighty God this sacred oath: 
I will render unconditional obedience to the Führer of the German Reich and 
people, Adolf Hitler, Supreme Commander of the Wehrmacht…”).

Perhaps the most telling Hitler quote of all shows that not only did he believe 
in God, he believed his racial purity laws would protect God’s creation from 
spoliation by interbreeding. From Mein Kampf (vol. 2, chapter 2):

[H]undreds and hundreds of thousands of people voluntarily submit to celibacy, 
obligated and bound by nothing except the injunction of the Church. Should the 
same renunciation not be possible if this injunction is replaced by the 
admonition finally to put an end to the constant and continuous original sin of 
racial poisoning, and to give the Almighty Creator beings such as He Himself 
created?

After the Enabling Act of 1933 delivered dictatorial powers to Hitler, one of 
his first actions was to outlaw atheist and freethinking groups. His public 
speech, after the fact, boasted that, “we have therefore undertaken the fight 
against the atheistic movement, and that not merely with a few theoretical 
declarations: we have stamped it out.”

In short, there is overwhelming evidence that Hitler saw himself as a Christian 
doing God’s work (even if his own church often opposed him), and that he saw 
atheism as one of many insults to the German nation requiring ruthless 
suppression.

Chris Lawson

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