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Never-Before-Published Letter Reveals Concentration Camp Churches — Nazis ‘Received God’ After Atrocities
Townhall.com ^ | October 15, 2020 | Marina Medvin

Posted on 10/15/2020 4:38:33 AM PDT by Kaslin

In a never-before-published letter to his family, American soldier Leon Morin reveals something that has been hidden in a dark corner of history: the Nazis, who committed the most gruesome atrocities against 6 million Jewish people, would simultaneously “receive God” on Sundays in beautiful churches built in the concentration camp Dachau.

On July 9, 1945, about six weeks after the U.S. liberation of Dachau, Leon Morin penned a 10-page letter to his family describing his observations of the “worst” concentration camp, Dachau. “… [I]t will take 12 pages like this one to just give an idea about the best organized butchery in the world,” he wrote. 

“The gruesome part was how they killed those people. Either by torture by the firing squad, mutilation with starved bloodhounds of which each camp had about fifty or sixty, and by mass gas poisoning …” he lamented.

Much of the unspeakable torturous activities of the Nazis have been documented and taught. But the religious beliefs of the Nazis remain rarely discussed. 

Leon Morin documented this in his letter.

“For instance nobody ever mentioned that right among those chambers of horrors stand beautiful churches where these same soldiers of the Reich used to receive God every Sunday and where those same churches are always packed up with people every day of the week. I can’t understand that and there’s nobody in the American Army who does either.”

The Nazi Germans were mostly Lutheran Protestants.

Martin Luther, the German theologist and seminal figure of the German Reformation, influenced the German hatred of their Jewish neighbors starting in the early 1500s. In 1543, Luther authored Von den Jüden und iren Lügen (On the Jews and Their Lies), in which he called for the burning for Jewish synagogues, prohibition of Jewish religious practice and preaching that would be punishable by death, prohibition of Jewish residence near Germans, and confiscation of Jewish property and valuables. Luther successfully had Jews expelled from Saxony.

Sound familiar?

Martin Luther’s teachings of virulent antisemitism were the primary foundation of Nazi beliefs. Hitler’s restatement of Luther’s writings on his path to power was but a regurgitation of Lutheran theology and reinforcement of hundreds of years of festering antisemitism.

Americans repeatedly comment when viewing evidence of the Holocaust, “how could this have happened?” The answer lies in history that we keep muted. The Nazi enslavement, torture, and murder of the Jewish people in their quest for genocide were but a natural progression of their long-held religious beliefs. 

But why isn’t this discussed in America? Indeed, why is it that most American Lutherans, members of my family included, do not know of the antisemitic beliefs of Martin Luther? “Maybe we’re too narrow minded in America,” wondered Leon Morin. Why is it that nobody in the press ever mentioned the churches? Has our news always been “fake news” and we just now wised up to it?

Were American reporters covering up the story?

American Lutheran and Protestant churches did not hold the hateful beliefs of German Lutherans. In fact, American Lutherans are not known as prejudiced towards Jews. But maybe seeing your own religious beliefs smack in the middle of death camps gave too much pause to the reporters.

The uncomfortable history remains: members of the German Protestant clergy actively supported the Nazi regime and their detestable beliefs. It is thus understandable how the Nazi monsters who would kill children with their families just for being born Jewish would feel no conflict in “receiv[ing] God every Sunday.” At the same time, American Protestants were shielded from the beliefs of their German counterparts. That is why it is unsurprising that Leon Morin wrote about his failure to understand. 

Lutheran churches throughout the world have in recent years issued statements apologizing for the Holocaust. In 1982 the Lutheran World Federation issued a consultation stating that "we Christians must purge ourselves of any hatred of the Jews and any sort of teaching of contempt for Judaism.” In 2015, the German Protestant church formally denounced Martin Luther’s antisemitic teachings while tepidly accepting blame for ideas that led to the Holocaust. “We cannot ignore this history of guilt,” the church wrote. “Luther’s view of Judaism and his invective against Jews contradict our understanding today of what it means to believe in one God who has revealed himself in Jesus, the Jew.” 



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: antisemitism; christian; concentrationcamp; holocaust; lutheran; nazi; nazigermany; pagan; religion
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To: Albion Wilde

>> Luther was not “white-washed into Catholicism”; Luther WAS a Catholic, an Augustinian monk. <<

Yes, yes, Luther HAD BEEN Catholic. Every idiot knows that. What I meant was that his LATER beliefs were so white-washed that what is taught by Lutheranism nearly match what the Catholic Church taught in opposition to him.

>> His creed was not simply “sola fide”, it was “sola gratia, sola fide, sola scriptura” <<

Yes, he also taught the Catholic doctrine of Sola Gratia, but that it was ONLY THROUGH faith. There’s no point in arguing “only” something also includes something else. Faith is necessary, but contra Luther, it is not sufficient, as is clearly taught in scripture: “What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if someone claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save them?... In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead... The devils have faith and tremble.” Of course, Luther simply threw this out of the bible, which brings us to the Catholic objection to sola scriptura


21 posted on 10/15/2020 10:32:03 AM PDT by dangus
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To: dangus
The “only" with regard to faith means that even though salvation is only through the grace of God and cannot be earned by works*, it will only have effect if the person believes in God’s gift of salvation and has faith in Him and His Word.

Mottoes typically are short and sweet as a aid to remembrance, but there is a depth of meaning that is taught and catechized by the orthodox Lutheran church in American, the LCMS.


(works are an evidence of faith in salvation, but not a means to it)

22 posted on 10/15/2020 10:47:35 AM PDT by Albion Wilde ("When you open your heart to patriotism, there is no room for prejudice." --Donald Trump)
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To: Kaslin

"God is with us."

23 posted on 10/15/2020 10:49:24 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Wilhelm Tell

“The Mohammedan religion would have been much more compatible to us than Christianity. Why did it have to be Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness?” Had Charles Martel not been victorious at Poitiers — already, you see, the world had fallen into the hands of the Jews, so gutless a thing was Christianity ! — then we should in all probability have been converted to Mohammedanism, that cult which glorifies heroism and which opens the seventh Heaven to the bold warrior alone. Then the Germanic races would have conquered the world. Christianity alone prevented them from doing so.”

Hitler to Albert Speer


24 posted on 10/15/2020 10:51:19 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: 2banana

And 4.5 million non-Jewish death campers. Don’t forget them and I won’t forget the Jews either.


25 posted on 10/15/2020 3:25:59 PM PDT by keving (We the government)
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To: Kaslin
It is intellectually and historically dishonest to attribute 20th Century German antisemitism among some Lutherans to Martin Luther's 16th Century antisemitism. Antisemitic views were prevalent among Christians in Western Europe in the 16th Century. Spain had expelled its Jews and was not the only country to have done so. By the 20th Century views were much more tolerant, although many still held antisemitic views.

As noted earlier in this thread, there was a strong German Lutheran movement to oppose the Nazis for which many were sent to camps and some murdered.

The author would have been on far firmer ground inquiring about the nature of evil in the world and how people could have gone about this sadistic and murderous work during the week and then attended a church on the weekend as if what they were doing was somehow acceptable behavior for a practicing Christian - the same question that baffled the writer of the letter and his fellow soldiers.

26 posted on 10/15/2020 3:49:04 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: dfwgator; Kaslin

The WW1 German Army belt buckle had “Gott Mit Uns” around the German Imperial Crown. The Nazi’s replace the crown with their eagle and swastika motif. I’ve yet to master posting pictures here, thus look at the WW1 and Weimar Republic German Army belt buckles at this site:

https://www.epicmilitaria.com/german-ww2-militaria/ww1-imperial-germany/belt-buckles.html


27 posted on 10/15/2020 4:30:59 PM PDT by GreyFriar (Spearhead - 3rd Armored Division 75-78 & 83-87)
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To: Kaslin

Distinguishing the real God from the father of lies is not difficult.


28 posted on 10/15/2020 4:34:20 PM PDT by reasonisfaith (What are the implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
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