citytom said:I have a righteous Christian friend who tells me that "Hitler could not have believed in God!". I'm aware that he referred to "the Lord" in Mein Kampf, but don't have any other ammo. Anyone know of any other citations, evidence, etc.?
Help!
Ask him if he thinks Martin Luther (yes, the Martin Luther, the founder of Protestantism) believed in God. Make him commit to a yes or no.I have a righteous Christian friend who tells me that "Hitler could not have believed in God!".
So Luther considered 1500 years of "comforting them neither with words nor with deeds" as proof that the Jews were not god's any longer. I wonder exactly how many "comforting words or deeds" have been directed from god to the various christian faiths in the past 2000 years? None, that I recall off-hand. Clearly, christians are no longer His people. As Luther says "Even a child can comprehend this."For this year, which we Christians write as the year 1542 since the birth of Christ, is exactly 1,468 years, going on fifteen hundred years, since Vespasian and Titus destroyed Jerusalem and expelled the Jews from the city. Let the Jews bite on this nut and dispute this question as long as they wish.
For such ruthless wrath of God is sufficient evidence that they assuredly have erred and gone astray. Even a child can comprehend this. For one dare not regard God as so cruel that he would punish his own people so long, so terribly, so unmercifully, and in addition keep silent, comforting them neither with words nor with deeds, and fixing no time limit and no end to it. Who would have faith, hope, or love toward such a God? Therefore this work of wrath is proof that the Jews, surely rejected by God, are no longer his people, and neither is he any longer their God.
Hitler was a terrible human, manipulating his followers to carry out unspeakable acts against humanity.
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The Xians have their comfort from God. They have the Jews to kick around."comforting them neither with words nor with deeds"
c4ts said:Hitler had about three motivators: patriotism, religion, and insanity. I've read Mein Kamph, and it looks like his hatred of the Jews is just part of his religious fervor.
LucyR said:
Patriotism? I think a more accurate word would be "nationalism".
How do you define "insane"? Presumably, tens of millions of Germans thought him quite "sane".
Calling him insane helps us to believe we're not capable of the same time of behaviour.
In any case, he was driven by a desire for power. A quite rational motivation in my opinion.
c4ts said:
He says the Jews are Marxists, and he says all Marxists are atheists, and he even calls the Jews athiests because they are Marxists. If that isn't an example of insanity, then what is it?
LucyR said:
That could come under the heading of ignorance, propaganda, stupidity...etc, but it is in no way a definition of insanity.
c4ts said:
http://www.hitler.org/writings/Mein_Kampf/
Read it. Then we can talk about whether it's insane or not. It may very well be insane propaganda.
LucyR said:
I have tried to read it but it bored me silly. I'm not saying he was not insane. I'm just curious about your use of the word. How do you personally define it (i.e. in your own words)? This may seem like nitpicking, I know. However, as I said earlier we tend to use the word in a casual way to rationalise behaviour that frightens us.
c4ts said:
Insanity, in this case, would be the inability to make sense in a way that involves complete thought, perception of reality, or both.
Hitler was raised a Catholic, and apparently did believe in god when he was a child.citytom said:I have a righteous Christian friend who tells me that "Hitler could not have believed in God!". I'm aware that he referred to "the Lord" in Mein Kampf, but don't have any other ammo. Anyone know of any other citations, evidence, etc.?
Help!
LucyR said:
I do this on a daily basis. I suspect you do too.
"complete thought"?
The term "Jew" has various different meanings.c4ts said:
...Don Quixote calling a windmill an evil giant, for example, is insanity. So is Hitler calling a Jew an atheist.
Excellent point, Sort.SortingItAllOut said:
Hitler was a terrible human, manipulating his followers to carry out unspeakable acts against humanity.
If he were a Christian, or an atheist, it is of little significance in my mind. I can show countless examples of selfless humans who consider themselves one or the other.