
DISDAIN FOR CHRISTIANS: What we do know from the historical record is that much of
Germany’s Protestant Christians were too timid to stand up against anti-human
racial doctrines and anti-Christian declarations of the Nazis. Adolph Hitler’s disdain was captured in a
comment he made about German Protestants:
“You can do anything you want with them, ... . They will
submit. . . .They are insignificant little people, submissive as dogs, and they
sweat with embarrassment when you talk to them.”[1]
There were, of course, shining and courageous examples of
Protestant resistance to the Nazi agenda, such as Franz Hildebrandt, Reverend
Martin Niemöller of the Church of Jesus Christ in the affluent Berlin suburb of
Dahlem, Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Pastor
Niemöller and the congregation became symbols of resistance to Nazi racial
doctrines and anti-Christian declarations of Nazi leaders. They internalized Jesus’ exhortations to be “salt
and light” in a hostile world? It helped to explain Nazi contempt for the
German Protestant church.

How can I be critical of German Christians of the Nazi era
when many Christians of my era were silent, during the 1970s – 1990s, about the
abortion holocaust, and many still have not found their tongues? How can I stand in
judgement of others when I championed the abortion of my first child? We are all sinful, weak people who must
confess our sin. With God’s help, perhaps we will learn from the history of
violence against the weak and stand up en
masse against the next assault against the vulnerable: Euthanasia and
assisted suicide. Put away timidity or indifference, fellow follower of Christ! Put on the armor of God to do battle with the forces of evil that are here!
Write to your elected officials at state, provincial and national

Do not listen to those who tell you to downplay or hide your Christian faith. We must be unremitting witnesses for the Jesus Christ who is the light and life of humanity during this dark and terrible juncture in North American history, and always. -- Mark
[1]
William L. Shirer, The Nightmare Years:
1930-40, (Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1984) p.152.
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