Christianity (nominal, in Nazi Germany context)

E275146

Christianity (nominal, in Nazi Germany context) refers to a superficial or merely formal identification with the Christian faith by individuals in Nazi Germany, often without genuine religious conviction and frequently subordinated to or compromised by Nazi ideology.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Christianity (nominal, in Nazi Germany context) canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf form of nominal Christianity
religious affiliation pattern
socioreligious phenomenon
associatedWith German Christians movement
Reich Church policies
state-controlled Protestant church structures
coexistsWith acceptance of antisemitic policies by some self-identified Christians
private adherence to Nazi racial ideology
support for Hitler presented as Christian duty by some clergy and laity
contrastedWith Confessing Church resistance
genuine Christian discipleship
theological opposition to Nazism
hasAspect downplaying of Old Testament and Jewish roots of Christianity
emphasis on Jesus as non-Jewish or Aryan figure in propaganda currents
loyalty to Hitler expressed in religious terms by some adherents
participation in church rites for social or political convenience
selective use of biblical motifs compatible with nationalism
use of Christian language to legitimize Nazi goals
hasConsequence blurring of boundaries between Christian and Nazi value systems
moral accommodation to state violence
weakening of church resistance to Nazi policies
hasEndTime 1945
hasStartTime 1933
hasTemporalContext Nazi Germany
Third Reich
influencedBy anti-Jewish attitudes present in parts of German society
desire for social conformity in the Third Reich
fear of persecution or loss of status
nationalist traditions in German Protestantism
state pressure on churches
isCharacterizedBy adaptation of Christian identity to Nazi ideology
compromise of Christian ethics under political pressure
conformity to state expectations
formal church membership without deep conviction
public profession of Christianity with private ideological loyalty to Nazism
reduced emphasis on traditional Christian doctrine
superficial identification with Christianity
practicedBy segments of the German Catholic population
segments of the German Protestant population
some members of the Nazi Party
relatedTo baptism and confirmation as cultural rites rather than faith commitments
church attendance motivated by career or political advancement
use of Christian holidays for regime propaganda
studiedIn historiography of churches under Nazism
research on political religion and civil religion in the Third Reich
subordinatedTo Führerprinzip
Nazi ideology

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Lorenz Hackenholt religion Christianity (nominal, in Nazi Germany context)