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The Protestant Church in Hitler's Germany and the
Barmen Declaration
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January 30, 1933, German President Paul von Hindenburg appointed Adolf Hitler
Chancellor of Germany. But less than two months later, Hitler was the nation’s
dictator.
Many German Christians at first openly welcomed Hitler’s Nazi party to
power as a historic moment of Christ’s work on earth through and for the Aryan
"Volk." A leading Lutheran theologian wrote in 1934, "Our Protestant churches
have welcomed the turning point of 1933 as a gift and miracle of God."
A "faith
party" of "German Christians" began to develop and grow in influence. In their
first national convention in April 1933, in Berlin, the delegates stated their
goal to reorganize the 27 Protestant regional churches in Germany into a single,
national church under the leadership of a national bishop.
The "German
Christians" published a number of programmatic papers during 1932-1933 that give
us an insight into their hopes and goals. They wanted an evangelical church
rooted in German nationhood based on an Aryan model. "We want a vital national
Church that will express all the spiritual forces of our people," stated one
"German Christian" document from 1932.
On June 28, 1933, with Hitler’s
authorization, Ludwig Müller, a fervent Nazi, took over chairmanship of the
council of the Federation of the 27 regional Protestant churches. A new
constitution established a single "Protestant Reich Church." On September 27,
1933, Müller was elected national bishop by a synod dominated by "German
Christians."
Restrictions were immediately placed on the clergy. They had to be
"politically reliable" and accept the superiority of the Aryan race. Pressure
was exerted to expel Jewish Christians from ministry. The Nazi "Führer
Principle" was to be adopted by the churches, which was a claim that Hitler was
"lord" over the German church and that its Christ and Christianity were uniquely
Aryan.
Confessing Church and Barmen
Some German Protestant pastors, led by Martin
Niemöller (1892-1984), stood in opposition to the "German Christians." In
September 1933, Niemöller sent a letter to all German pastors, inviting them to
join a Pastors’ Emergency League. Niemöller asked the pastors to pledge
themselves to be bound to Christ as Lord, teach the gospel message of the
Scriptures and the historic Confessions of the Church. Aryanism, a doctrine of
racial superiority, was to be rejected as anti-Christian teaching.
In April
1934, the League created the Confessing Church. It included ministers and
churchmen from Reformed, Lutheran and United Churches, as well as other church
groups. The Confessing Church took its name from the fact that its members had
pledged themselves to affirm the great historic Confessions of the Church.
The
leaders of the Confessing Church met on May 29-31, 1934, at Barmen. Here they
issued the historic Barmen Declaration, drafted by Reformed theologian Karl
Barth (1886-1968) and Lutheran theologian Hans Asmussen with input from other
Lutheran, Reformed and United Churches leaders. One of the original signatories
of the Declaration wrote, in retrospect, that Barmen "appeared to us then like a
miracle from God."
The Declaration was written in direct opposition to the
national church government—the "Faith Movement of the German Christians"—rather
than against the Nazi regime itself. It challenged Christians who were
attempting to bring the Protestant church into line with the nationalistic
ideals and aspirations of Nazi rule. However, since the "German Christians" were
a proxy for the Nazi state, the Declaration became also a prophetic condemnation
of Hitler’s totalitarian rule.
The Barmen Declaration expressly asserts that
Christ alone is the one Word of God—the source of all authority and truth—whom
we must hear, trust and obey. It rejects the notion that other powers apart from
Christ could be sources of God’s revelation.
It stands on the principle that
Christ cannot be co-opted by, used in the service of, or be remade in the image
of religious or political ideologies created by fallen human beings and
structures in opposition to God. Barmen confesses the reality that God’s grace
for us cannot be reinterpreted or replaced by ideas and programs growing out of
human creaturely self-interest and evil designs.
In these ways, Barmen speaks
not only to the times and crisis of the church in Nazi Germany, but to
Christians throughout the history of the church and in our time and place.
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