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German Faith Movement

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Religious movement in Nazi Germany Not to be confused with Faith Movement of the German Christians.
Part of the Religion series on the
German Faith Movement
Adapted "Sun Cross", official symbol of the German Faith Movement
Major conceptsReligious nationalism
(Ethnoreligion
National-Protestantism)
Blood and soil
Völkisch populism
Germanic neopaganism
Ariosophy
Positive Christianity
Major personalitiesRichard Walther Darré
Jakob Wilhelm Hauer
Friedrich Hielscher
Heinrich Himmler
Hanns Kerrl
Alexander Rud Mills
Ludwig Müller
Otto Rahn
Ernst Graf zu Reventlow
Alfred Rosenberg
Alfred Schuler
ForerunnersGuido von List
Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels
Rudolf von Sebottendorf
OrganizationsThule Society
Germanenorden
Order of the New Templars
Wewelsburg
Related topicsCatholic Church and Nazi Germany
Fascist mysticism
First Anglecyn Church of Odin
Kirchenkampf
Magic: History, Theory, Practice
Reconstructionist Roman religion
Religion in Nazi Germany
Religious aspects of Nazism
Religion portal
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The German Faith Movement (Deutsche Glaubensbewegung) was a religious movement in Nazi Germany (1933–1945), closely associated with University of Tübingen professor Jakob Wilhelm Hauer. The movement sought to move Germany away from Christianity towards a religion that was based on Germanic paganism and Nazi ideas.

History

In 1933, Germany's population of almost 60 million belonged to either the Catholic Church (20 million members) or the Protestant Church (40 million members). Many Christians were initially drawn to supporting Nazism due to the emphasis on "positive Christianity," noted in Article 24 of the 1920 National Socialist Program. However, two distinct Protestant factions emerged as Christians in Germany were divided along political lines. The "German Christians" (Deutsche Christen) emerged from the German Evangelical Church, adhering closely to the nationalistic and racial teachings of the Nazis and ultimately deferring to the Führer's authority. The second faction was the "Confessing Church", which opposed the "German Christians" and swore allegiance to "God and scripture, not a worldly Führer." The Confessing Church moved to counteract the Nazis' grouping of all German people into a singular Protestant church (German Christians) in order to "de-Judaize" Christianity.

Jakob Wilhelm Hauer founded the German Faith Movement in response to the Nazi government's intended indoctrination of children with Christianity and attempting to outlaw all critiques of the faith. He was initially not an obvious supporter of Adolf Hitler and had earlier started the Köngener Bund, a German Protestant youth movement, which attracted many young Germans due to its opposition to Nazism as well as to antisemitism. His allegiance changed however, joining the Combat League for German Culture (Kampfbund für deutsche Kultur) in May 1933. Hauer then joined the Hitler Youth later that year, in December. The once liberal anti-nationalist was then inducted into the SS and SD in August 1934. Hauer became the Führer of the German Faith Movement when it was constituted in May 1934. His reign was short-lived, stepping down on April 1, 1936.

Hauer was a critic of traditional Christianity but was compelled to create the German Faith Movement as a way to preserve freedom of conscience.

Composition

The movement initially invited various different groups, including religious free-thinkers (at first even including Jews), racialists, and political opponents of the Nazis, to join a group that was seemingly antagonistic to the Nazi Church. However, racialists, including Hauer, did not believe Jews should be included in the movement, thus leaving only racialists and those who had abandoned German Christianity (i.e. unconventional) to compose the German Faith Movement.

Peak era and rituals

The movement's ceremonies involved sermons, German classical music and political hymns. The movement had around 200,000 followers at its height (less than 0.3% of the population). Following the Nazi accession to power, it obtained rights of civil tolerance from Rudolf Hess, but never the preferential treatment from the Nazi state for which Hauer campaigned. However, in the years that followed Hauer's abdication of his title as Führer of the Movement, the Movement largely served as a NSDAP appendage.

The development of the German Faith Movement revolved around:

  • the propagation of the 'blood and soil' ideology
  • the syncretism of Christian ceremonies with pagan equivalents; the most favored pagan deity being the sun, as can be seen from the flag of the faith movement
  • the cult of Hitler's personality
  • the spread of Norse paganism throughout Germany

Similar movements have remained active in Germany since 1945 outside mainstream educational and social structures.

See also

References

  1. Richard Bonney (15 June 2009). Confronting the Nazi War on Christianity: The Kulturkampf Newsletters, 1936-1939. Peter Lang. pp. 62, 73. ISBN 978-3-03911-904-2. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  2. ^ "The German Churches and the Nazi State". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  3. ^ Alles, Gregory D. (22 February 2011). "The Science of Religions in a Fascist State: Rudolf Otto and Jakob Wilhelm Hauer During the Third Reich". Religion. 32 (3): 177–204. doi:10.1006/reli.2002.0401. S2CID 170671466. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  4. ^ Solberg, Mary M. (1 April 2015). A Church Undone: Documents from the German Christian Faith Movement, 1932-1940. Fortress Press. ISBN 9781451496666. Retrieved 8 November 2019.

Sources

  • Hauer, William et al. (1937); Germany's New Religion: The German Faith Movement; London, George Allen & Unwin Ltd. Written with Karl Heim & Karl Adam; trans. from German by T.S.K. Scott-Craig & R.E. Davies.
  • Nanko, Ulrich (1993); Die Deutsche Glaubensbewegung. Eine historische und soziologische Untersuchung (German: the German Faith Movement - a historical and sociological examination); Religionswissenschaftliche Reihe Bd. 4. Diagonal, Marburg (Lahn). ISBN 3-927165-16-6
  • Poewe, Karla (2005); New Religions and the Nazis; Routledge. ISBN 0-415-29024-4
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