Does Nazism have any theological implications ?
Certainly it does, but how can a non-theologian answer the question ? In 1962 two forces gathered in the Vatican : Catholics and Humanists. The last ones were the victors of the Second World War, the representatives of a liberalistic, modernistic Europe. A third force was then necessarily “present” with their non-presence : The Nazis, the members of the antithetical Europe, the Traditionalists, the losers. They were the big unmentioned “participators”. In order to cleanse the theological atmosphere after WWII the conciliators needed the Nazis as garbage can, just as the surrounding secular new powers needed the Nazis for their cleaning purposes. At that very moment the Nazis were upgraded theologically. They were estimated important as representatives of Evil. They were conciliatorily satanized. The Jews were given satisfaction for Christian anti-Jewish attitude since the foundation of the Church. Historical repressions of the Jews were recognized by the Church as wrong steps both mora