• Tyfud@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    So, they were attacking other religious sects and churches that were different than their specific version of Christianity?

    That sounds like Christianity to me.

    Just because it wasn’t the form of Christianity we recognize today, doesn’t mean it wasn’t a valid religious movement. Sure, it specifically helped the Nazi party, but all the pieces of the puzzle to create their christo-fascist state were there for them to put together.

    And they used Christianity to do it. Saying otherwise is being disingenuous and revisionist. They espoused Christianity. They espoused the teachings of Jesus. They claimed moral superiority just like every other religion does.

    Sure, they used it to attack other religions to set theirs up as the state religion, but that doesn’t make it less like Christianity. Just a form that doesn’t exist today.

    Repressing other religions is a cornerstone of most religions, including Christianity. To say otherwise is invoking apologetics.

    • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 months ago

      Look we can be flippant about how evil organized religion is or we can discuss history. We can’t just vacillate between the two and expect a productive discussion. Major Christian institutions were attacked by the nazi party/hitler. This is historical fact. Whether or not they branded themselves as Christian or even were Christian doesn’t change that fact. They went after both Catholic and Protestant institutions across the country. Many clergy were arrested and/or killed. This is history, not another proxy battle for “church bad.”

      I mean the nazi party had “socialist” in its name. Would it not be pretty reductionist of me to say “they were socialist”?