Ludwig Müller - nazismens chefteolog

Martin Friis

Abstract

This article attempts to cast light upon Ludwig Müller's authorship. Müller was one of the leading figures in the German Christian ("DC") Faith Movement during the 1930s. He was elected as the first (and only) Reichsbisch of of the short-lived Protestant Reichskirche in the first half of the 1930s. For this reason his authorship presents unique insights into the DC-movement's own reasoning concerning its particular view of the Evangelical-Protestant doctrine shared by many German theologians at that time. The article asserts that Müller's theological reasoning - in his attempt to bring about a harmonization of Evangelical Protestant doctrine and National-Socialist Weltanschauung - results in a perversion of the above-mentioned Christian doctrine due to a conspicuously anti-dogmatic (i.e. not-sin-oriented), a highly pragmatic oriented attitude towards Christian morals, and a one-sided focus on God's immanence.

OriginalsprogDansk
TidsskriftDansk Teologisk Tidsskrift
Vol/bind75
Udgave nummer1
Sider (fra-til)39-57
ISSN0105-3191
StatusUdgivet - 2012

Citationsformater