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Full Description
Delineates the roles that individuals and their churches played in confronting Hitler. Written by both Jewish and Christian scholars, these essays focus on the Christian responses to Nazism and delineate the roles that individuals and their churches played in confronting Hitler.
Contents
Totalitarianism and theology, John S. Conway; Roman-Catholic theologians and National socialism - adaptation to Nazi ideology, Thomas Ruster; the conflict between Engelbert Krebs and the Third Reich, Robert A. Krieg ; between nationalism and resistance - the path of Father Albert Coppenrath in the Third Reich, Kevin Spicer; National Socialism as a force for German Protestant renewal? - pastors and parishioners respond to Adolf Hitler's ""national renewal"", Kyle Jantzen; sowing Volksgemeinschaft in Bavaria's stony village soil - Catholic peasant rejection of anti-Polish social policy, 1939-1945 - John J. Delaney; the priority of diplomacy - Pius XII and the Holocaust during the Second World War, Michael Phayer; bystander, resistor, victim - Dietrich Bonhoeffer's response to Nazism, Stephen R. Haynes; supercessionism without contempt - the Holocaust evangelism of Corrie Ten Boom, Lawrence Baron; Irene Harand's campaign against Nazi anti-semitism in Vienna, 1933-1938 - the Catholic context, Gershon Greenberg; representations of the Nazi past in the German Protestant Church in early 1945, Matthew D. Hockenos; liturgy and the Holocaust - how do we worship in an age of genocide?, John T. Pawlinkowski.