Gottgläubig, Writings On German Faith by Anton Holzner
Gottgläubig, Writings On German Faith by Anton Holzner
Gottgläubig, Writings On German Faith by Anton Holzner
Anton Holzner
- 130 AH -
Table of Conents
Foreword...................................................... 1
Eternal Front .......................................... 3
Master Life........................................... 55
God’s Law ............................................ 103
Priest Power ....................................... 167
Anton Holzner
(Albert Hartl)
Foreword
1
Eternal Front
Introduction
W hen the German rebirth began under the flags of the National
Socialist revolution—after the experience from the World War—
and the arising generation went through the hard character school of the
National Socialist movement, Germandom in the Sudetenland was in a
difficult struggle for the preservation of its folkdom and its home soil.
Cut off from German cultural and intellectual life, borderland fate
determined its fighting bearing. It formed the people and their character
and made them a tough breed. And so, aside from the bonds of blood, it
was the experience of struggle on the other fronts of German life that
defined the general direction of Germandom on both sides of the old
borders of the Reich.
After the return of the Sudeten-German regions to Adolf Hitler's
Germany, it was a matter of giving a world-view foundation to, and thus
firming, the battle-proven character formation of the German people.
From this effort arose the essays of this little book, which appeared as
Sunday articles in the Sudeten-German provincial organ “Die Zeit” [“The
Time”]. For the old fighters in the Bohemian-Moravian region they
became an interpretation of their sacrifice, struggle and victory, and for
the folk comrades who previously stood apart from the greater German
revolt, they became an introduction to our blood-determined world of
feeling and thought. The collection of these essays in this volume rescues
them from the fate of a newspaper article and makes them a valuable
contribution to the character formation of the German people.
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About the Meaning of Life
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8
Nordic Faith
N ordic man stands in the middle of life. He forms his view of the world
from nature. The laws of life that reveal themselves in his blood, in
nature and in history, are his guidelines for action.
In life, God reveals himself to Nordic man as the Divine, the Almighty,
Providence, the Lord or the Creator; for him, all these terms are an
expression for one and the same divine power, which appears in life and
in nature, above life and above the worlds.
When Nordic man gazes at night into the starry heaven, when he
stands on the shore of a roaring sea, when he looks across the land from
a mountain peak, or when in complete silence he immerses himself in
the beauty of a flower, of a living creature or a work of art, then he
experiences that there is a divine force.
When Nordic man listens to the voice of his blood, and consciously
thinks about the moral obligations prescribed him by the laws of his
blood, the indivisible bond to his folk, honor and truthfulness,
unshakeable faith and loyalty, then he feels that these laws of his action
represent the highest laws.
And when in a contemplative hour he reviews his own life and the
history of his folk, then he knows that a deep meaning and a supreme
goal has often found an expression in his and his folk's life.
So Nordic man will always be an idealist, always possess faith in a
higher power, and an abysm will always separate him from that
materialistic attitude, from godlessness and lack of faith.
For Nordic man, therefore, there will also always be a unity between
life and religious belief, for him the belief in God is and remains a
necessary component of his world-view and life-view. For him there can
be no gap between faith and knowledge, no disagreement between
religion and life.
The path of people and their folks to their god is different, each
according to its own racial nature. There are primitive folks for whom
their god, their fetish, is simply their helper who brings them nice
weather or rain, whom they beat, when he does not obey them, and
whom they curse, when he does not please them. There are folks for
whom, due to their blood-determined feeling, their god is a merchant
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who haggles with the devil for the souls of people, for whom God is
largely a wretched, pitiful creature who suffers infinitely from the evil
will of people. There are folks who want to banish their god to specific
locations, folks who have a small or inferior image of God.
For German people, who live in such close bond to powerful nature,
who live from such deep, blood-determined values and such a great
history, there can also only be a very great and very powerful concept of
the Almighty. Nordic man sees God not in the pasha to whom he is
servilely devoted, before whom he throws himself on the ground and
toward whom he acts like a slave, but he also does not see in God an
inferior servant of his wishes. Nordic man stands before the Divine in
reverence and at the same time feels himself closely connected to him
like to a friend. Nordic man knows that his God is not banished in certain
statues or a few holy substances or in solid houses, he feels close to his
God everywhere, in his clan, in the great folk community, in the forests
and fields, at the fine festival locations and in the quiet ceremony halls
of his folk or at the home hearth.
Nordic man knows that he does not need to tell his God what moves
him in long addresses or hours of prayer, or with oriental prayer chants
or with Jewish phylacteries.
With a silent thought or a few short words, he feels himself—in hours
of distress, in great danger, after a beautiful success, during the
experiencing of a great joy—connected to his God, he feels the nearness
of the Divine. Nordic man knows that God does not work for him, rather
that success is only coming to him, if he himself—however, in confidence
in Providence—employs all his energy for his work; he knows that God
is only with him, if he himself fights and struggles bravely, if he himself
is tenacious and works ardently and is active on his work.
The affirmation of this Nordic faith became covered with weeds over
the course of centuries by many foreign worlds. All great German men,
however, have in every period been filled with this Nordic faith. This
highest faith, this greatest idealism, has given great Germans of every
period their security and fearlessness in life, has guided their artist hands
and their creative genius in all areas of art and research. The German
folk will not allow itself to be robbed of this faith in the Divine by anyone,
never again. This faith, however, also means at the same time the highest
moral responsibility and the deepest obligation toward these laws of life,
which are God's laws.
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Community
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Eternal Front
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Law and Obedience
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15
Responsibility
A basic question for the moral bearing of a person in his private and
public life is the question of responsibility.
Based on their racial makeup, individual folks and countless world-
views have taken very different stances toward this question. There are
natural, primitive folks who go through life with a certain lack of worry,
in their actions still largely driven by instinct, and for whom great
conflicts about responsibility and duty do not exist.
There is a Marxist world that has managed to remove responsibility
from the individual human being. The dominant factor in life is, for these
Marxist circles, the environment. The conditions under which a person
grows up, the people he lives with, the given surroundings in which fate
has put him, in short, the whole environment in which he finds himself,
shape his development. The criminal hence practically does not deserve
any punishment. Prisons must hence practically be transformed into
institutions of healing and sanatoriums for these unhappy people,
toward whom all these mushy feelings of Marxism and humanitarian do-
gooders turn.
According to another view, which comes from the oriental world,
man is held down and chained by the original sin that weighs upon him.
All folks of all eras are affected by the original sin the same way. Human
reason is, according to this view, clouded, the human body is shameful,
human will is weak. Man can practically be educated only to a limited
degree. Insofar man can be led to positive action at all, so-called
supernatural and cult means are much more important for influencing
him than all natural forces.
The healthy German does not let his actions or his whole inner
bearing be suppressed by environment or original sin. He feels that the
Creator has not made him small—above all with an inescapable original
sin—rather he is filled deep inside with the faith in the hereditary nobility
of his blood. Grateful and proud, the German carries within him the
consciousness that the Creator has given him the most precious energies,
which enable him to stand his ground in life.
Nordic man is basically always an idealist and optimist. He indeed
sees the hampering, the negative and the bad in life, but he does not let
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himself be pulled down by that. His eye again and again looks at the good,
the beautiful and noble that Providence has given him. His idealism is
never unreal. In his heroic bearing he hence also overcomes everything
tragic in life.
The symbol of Nordic man is the sun, which again and again shines,
warms and radiates though every night and every cloud.
So German man walks his path into the future proud and happy, full
of confidence in the strengths that the Creator gave him.
A past world sought the most diverse mitigating circumstances for its
mistakes. For example, alcohol is a mitigating circumstance for the law
and moral view of the past Marxist and oriental world. In some areas it
was downright common knowledge that one would drink before certain
actions to obtain so-called mitigating circumstances.
The new German legal view has fundamentally cleared away these
mitigating circumstances. German man considers himself responsible for
his actions, he takes responsibility for what he has done. It is not his
nature to shake off guilt, to burden other people with the guilt, or to seek
other mitigating circumstances. The guiding star for all moral action is
his concept of honor. For him, honor and responsibility flow together
into a great union, which lets him approach his work hard and serious,
but at the same time full of confidence and full of happy courage, and
which keeps him far from any licentiousness and superficiality.
In this consciousness of determined moral responsibility, German
man directs his personal, private life and his behavior in public according
to the laws that his blood dictates to him, according to what serves the
well-being of his folk, his family and his homeland. No super-
governmental bond can be the guideline for his moral behavior; his
responsibility is guided by the natural laws of life, by the laws of the
order of the Creator, which are God's laws.
Proceeding from this consciousness, which bases his responsibility on
the most natural and fundamental norms that can exist in the world, he
can make clear, calm decisions in his behavior, and he is not subjected to
moral doubts and pains of conscience, which often face people with
artificial, unnatural doctrines. Straightforward like the great buildings of
the German present, clear and bright and full of greatness is the inner
bearing of the German man as well, who stands in life full of moral
responsibility. His moral responsibility does not press him to the ground,
it instead lifts him up and makes him happy, free and great.
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Honor
Forsomething
many people, folks and world-views, honor is something external,
that comes down to outward prestige, good reputation and
general social rank. Whoever in public and in private life behaves
correctly outwardly, whoever obeys the customary rules of bourgeois
decency, whoever above all knows how to keep an outer shell around his
inner bearing, he is considered an honorable gentleman in this superficial,
liberal world. People and folks carefully keep watch over this so-called
honor and thereby try to hide their inner degeneracy and hollowness.
The appeal to this honorableness is for them nothing else than an
expression of their basic deceit.
For German man, honor reaches into the final depths of his essence.
It is the basic value of his character bearing. It grows from the deepest
foundations of his racial world-view.
For German man, honor reaches into the final depths of his essence.
It is the basic value of his character bearing. It grows from the deepest
foundations of his racial world-view.
Honor means loyalty toward God's order of creation, toward the laws
of life, toward the voice of blood, toward himself. The Almighty has
placed the laws of action for people and folks in their blood inside them,
in their conscience. To be loyal to these divine laws and hence to be an
executor and fulfiller of the divine work of creation and of the will of
creation, that is the greatest and highest thing for people, that is their
honor.
This honor must prove itself in the thousands of big and little things
of life. Whoever in great hours and in daily routine serves his folk full of
devotion, joy and loyalty, is conscious of his honor.
Whoever keeps his blood and his soul pure, whoever preserves
woman's honor and family happiness in his heart, whoever fulfills his
sacred duties toward ancestors and descendants he knows what German
honor is.
Whoever always remembers that money and property were
determined by the Creator for the whole folk community, whoever gives
from his plenty to the needy as self-evident, whoever views other
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he can only expect respect for his honor from others, if he himself keeps
the shield of his honor clean.
In all times in Germany, loss of honor was always considered the
greatest shame and humiliation, and the worst treason. The loss of honor
is the loss of one's own deepest essence.
There have been times and folks that had no understanding for the
concept of honor, they only knew moral action under the whip or action
out of pure selfishness.
We Germans are happy and proud that the Creator has given us
honor as the guideline of our life and as the highest moral property at
the same time. We are happy that National Socialism has again led us
back to this basic moral value.
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Guilt and Atonement
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22
Soldierdom
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increase this sacred legacy of blood and folkdom. There have been times
when the honor of the soldier almost disappeared behind the honor of
the officer. Today there is still only one honor in the German folk and
with German man, the honor of soldierdom. It is his greatest honor, if his
soldierly honor is recognized. Honor is the shrine of the German soldier.
His military uniform is a uniform of honor, his armed service is a service
of honor.
The soldier must always be ready for action. Mobility, skill, constant
readiness in the physical, intellectual and psychological areas belong to
soldierdom. This requires constant drill, constant exercise, tireless
schooling, constant watchfulness. These characteristics grow in light and
sun, in holy, joyful naturalness, not in mystical half-darkness and
unnatural rigidity. In God's glorious nature, amid sun and water, at
sports and gaiety, witch cheerful jokes and happy songs, young people
develop into fresh, skilled, action-ready soldiers. Every German man,
however, regardless where he stands, must today possess at every hour
this constant readiness for action; he must also acquire for himself this
characteristic of soldierdom.
The German folk stands today and for all the future like a single
unified company of soldiers. The Führer has created this new folk
soldierdom. National Socialism has perfected this soldierly spirit.
The task of this soldierdom is to secure a lasting peace. Under the
eternal protection of German soldierdom, the great achievements of
peaceful German work will evolve for all time.
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Grace
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cares, tasks and work, yes, she wants to stimulate and fertilize. The
German woman hence does not exhaust herself in superficial beauty and
fleeting charms. Rich spirit and deep understanding for all things in life
radiates from her charm. She does not just take care of the table, rather
she shapes the culture of the house, the style of the residence, the family's
manner of life. Hence clear intellect and practical sense also radiate
simultaneously from the charm of the German girl and the German
woman.
The woman is the bearer of new life, the protector of her folk's blood
and kind for distant generations. She must guard the purity of the blood,
maintain discipline and proper manner, ward off poison and decay. The
most sacred obligation and the greatest pride lies therein for each girl
and each woman. For each man this means immeasurable responsibility
toward his folk. The deepest essence and the most beautiful decoration
of female charm lies in this purity of blood and kind. The woman
becomes a participant in divine powers as the bearer of new life. Through
her own blood, she is inseparably bound to the folk's eternal life.
The German world-view and life-view also grows from German blood
and German kind. The woman is natural bearer and teacher of a world-
view and life-view to her children fitting for her kind. She gives them life.
But she is also the first, closest, natural one to solve for her child the
riddle of life, to lead them into the small and larger worlds of divine
creation. The woman opens the child's eyes and their view for the
manifoldness of this world and in the process she herself becomes ever
richer inwardly. She teaches to differentiate between good and evil,
beautiful and ugly, noble and base, useful and harmful. But she also lets
her children surmise the eternal relationships of family, folk, homeland
and Führer, of workers, peasants and soldiers, of war and peace and the
eternal laws of life. The woman also finally leads her children to the faith
in a divine power, a “dear God”, who lives above us. In this emersion in
natural, genuine and deep world-view, in this familiarity with the divine
order of creation, the woman herself finds that inner strength and depth,
that richness of the heart, which especially typifies the German woman.
Natural beauty and health, purity of blood, richness of feeling, clear
sense, genuine, deep world-view—those are the gifts and advantages that
radiate from the charm of the German girl and German woman.
To preserve and increase these advantages is the pride, the striving
and the obligation of each girl and each woman. To win and keep such a
girl and such a woman as the mother of his children and as life comrade,
is the yearning and the unconditional will of each man. A folk, however,
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in which the radiance of this female charm is united with the soldierly
bearing of the man, will live and blossom forever.
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Heroism
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Reverence
W hen one divides the word reverence [“Ehrfurcht”] into its two
components [“Ehre'' = honor & “Furcht'' = “fear''] one still does not
by a long shot exhaust its meaning. Reverence is the feeling of
appreciation and admiration toward a very great reality. Especially
among the great masters of German genius, such as Goethe, reverence
has always represented an essential component of their inner bearing.
German man shows reverence toward all life. This life confronts us
in million-fold diversity. We admire this life in the colorful splendor of
flowers and feathers, in the apparent rigidity of stones, in the living
greatness of forests and mountains, and in the endless motion of the seas
we admire this life. And just as amazed do we stand before the life of all
the countless animals that move in and on the ground, in the air and in
the water. In the dying and becoming that constantly repeats itself in the
eternal blossoming and withering, we see with amazed reverence a
divine power that fills and guides all this great and glorious life, this
mighty reality. This reverence forbids us from wantonly destroying this
life, to senselessly break flowers or heartlessly torment animals.
In all the millennia, Nordic man has known reverence toward the
stars in heaven. The sun has become to him a sacred symbol of life ever
renewing itself. For thousands of years, he has sought to research the
great consonances of the star world. In the process, he did not drift into
reality-alien mystical dreaming and he did not lose himself in
commercial astrology, rather he saw in the warmth, brightness and
movement of the stars a mighty reality which showed him traces and
paths of the divine. Today, like in the endless ages of the past, German
man stands silent before the greatness of the stars, moved by reverence.
German man feels reverence for human life itself. Propagation and
birth of new life are for him just as sublime events as the passing of all
life and death. He rejects frivolity and superficiality just like fear. The
innocence of youth, the experience of age, great joys and deep sorrow
are to him expressions of this life, which likewise reveals to him the
greatness and richness of this world. Reverently, he hence affirms this
reality of life. Reverently, German man stands before the testaments of
human life and works from the past. Cultural monuments, works of art,
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31
Of Joy
N ationalist Socialist German man stands in life with both feet and is
happy with this life. Happy and confident, he looks to the future. He
stands in the present joyfully and is happy that he is able to enjoy this
beautiful life. Today one still cannot measure at all what a great
revolution in shaping life has taken place with the creation of “Strength
through Joy”, with the rediscovery of joy for all people. There was a
Marxist past when it was hammered into the working people with all
means that they are slaves of a ruling class, and that it is their task to one
day break these heavy slave chains. And indeed, often a small group of
owners endeavored to exploit the working folk and make them slaves. It
was really a joyless life.
Today every productive person knows he has an important place to
fill in the overall organism of his folk, and that—at the place he now
stands—he bears responsibility toward all folk comrades. Hence every
person is today proud of the task that fate and the folk community have
given him. For him there is nothing more beautiful and greater than to
be allowed to employ all his energy, his whole personality, for his family
and his folk.
An oriental and confessional world has made work a burden, a
punishment for sins, something oppressive, a torment. German man sees
in work something great and beautiful. He would not be happy, if he
could not create and work. He opposes the Jewish curse of work with the
beauty of work.
When we Germans hike through our glorious homeland and admire
the beauty of our forests, fields and seas, and the greatness of the
mountains and seas, then we are proud that the Almighty has given us
such a precious land, then we are joyful, free and happy, and draw life
energy from this joy. And just as our work simultaneously becomes a
joyful affirmation of God's works of creation, a noble prayer, so does our
joyful hiking through God's nature simultaneously become the most
beautiful religious service in the great temple that the Lord himself has
built.
A hundred-fold is the shape of the joy that German man has
rediscovered. Natural and genuine is this kind of joy. There are people
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who only know a measured, dignified joy; for whom there is only a
restrained smile. We are joyful and happy that we can again laugh from
a full heart, fresh and unforced. This laughter can sometimes be haughty,
this joy can sometimes be unbridled. It will always be pure, because it is
always natural. It will never be cruel, because it flows from the nobility
of our blood.
The sun is our symbol. It radiates pure and clear and warm. Just as
the sun accompanies us, so does joy accompany us on our march into the
future. Bright and sunny is our path. Work and struggle are also shined
upon joy. Being German means being happy. Hence be happy with your
life!
The faith in our idea is so great, the certainty that we again live
according to God's natural laws, according to the norms of the order of
creation, gives us such security and confidence, the trust in the Führer
gives us so much strength that we can look into and walk toward the
future, inwardly and outwardly happy, with honest joy, full of justified
optimism.
Many of us must first again reconquer this joy, must first again learn
to be happy. The coming generation will already hike in the middle of
this happy German world and will hence by itself overcome many things
that still cling to and hamper us as the inhibiting dregs of alien world-
views.
But only then will one also be able to completely understand that the
rediscovery of joy was for German man one of the greatest deeds of all
millennia. Only then will one comprehend that the saying coined by Dr.
Ley, “Strength through Joy”, is one of the most important principles of
National Socialist, German life bearing.
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Suffering
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in life in which one is happy that one has overcome the suffering, in
which the suffering and past pains seem small and insignificant.
The motto for German man is not “Take your suffering upon
yourself”, rather “Overcome the suffering!” In the process, he knows that
in life it is not just about him, rather that he is a link in the organism of
the great community of his folk. And when he alone threatens to become
too weak, he is held by the firm bond that ties him to more than eighty
million people. When he alone wants to lamely surrender to the suffering,
the marching step of his folk pulls him up; when he wants to throw away
his life, he is called back to life by the obligation toward his folk.
When the whole folk is filled with this joyful faith in the future, with
this sacred will to overcome any suffering, then whatever wants to can
befall the individual and the whole Reich.
But whoever preaches surrender, preaches weakness; he is not
German, he is our enemy.
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Festivals and Celebrations
Human life does not proceed in a straight line with boring monotony.
It is shaped by the constant ups and downs of happy times and serious
hours. Among natural German man, this God desired rhythm of life
grows out of a multiple festival circles.
German man lives in closest bond with great nature. He has hence in
all times especially celebrated winter solstice and summer solstice, spring
festival and harvest festival. The eternal return of the sun's light is
celebrated with manifold customs in the holy night of winter solstice.
This day becomes a festival of always renewing life. The symbols of this
life are united on the tree of light, the always green evergreen, and light
radiating energy, brightness and warmth. Spring festival is a festival of
youth and joy, of cheerful work and community. It is spent with fun
games and joyous dance. The summer festival in the middle of radiant,
hot summer days admonishes to contemplation, reminds of the constant
up and down of life, but also ties again, with all contemplativeness, to
the faith in the unshakeable force of our idea. Harvest festival is a festival
of joy over the completed harvest and a festival of thanks to the Almighty
for his gifts.
All these nature festivals show the deep inwardness of Nordic man.
His close bond to the Creator finds expression in the bond to nature.
A second circle of festivals encompasses the holidays of the family.
The goal of every marriage is the child. When an offspring comes to the
family, this happy event is celebrated. In the circle of the relatives, it is
ceremoniously accepted into the clan; it receives its name and receives
the best wishes for its life path. The father or clan elder is usually the
speaker for the whole clan.
When a young couple has decided to go through life together, they
ceremonially enter into marriage before a representative of the state.
This act as well becomes a celebration for the whole clan. Relatives, work
colleagues, comrades and friends shape this day into a memorable
experience.
When a person has ended this earthly life, his relatives and friends,
coworkers and leaders prepare for him an honorable departure from this
world with a dignified burial. Naturalness and inner honesty are the main
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Just as the great buildings of the Third Reich rise to heaven clear and
testify that a folk has again found its way back to the simple greatness of
the natural, so do the festivals of the three natural festival circles also
again differentiate themselves from the artificial festival constructions of
the recent past and proclaim that the German folk again wants to live
according to God's natural laws.
These festival days should be days of honest, great, inner and outer
celebration. They should bestow strength and unity, should make the
folk inwardly rich. They should indicate the great lines of life, the mighty
goals of the folks, the meaning of nature and of history. People,
residences, streets and squares wear a festive dress on these days. The
great works of art fill the expanse of the folk soul. Ideas that encompass
millennia are brought to man's consciousness, the festivals themselves
should become a sacred religious service.
Whoever wants a measuring stick for his inner worth and his spiritual
wealth, should consider how he celebrates festivals.
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Solitude
ForThecenturies, Germans were often inwardly cut off from each other.
borders of class, confession and party separated them from each
other.
Only the National Socialist revolution has again brought together a
genuine folk community.
At work, at festivals and celebrations, at recreation and sports, at
school and enjoyment of art, the community idea, the community
experience, stands in the foreground.
From time to time, however, a person also needs quiet hours, in
order—all alone, somewhere in solitude—to let thoughts travel, to shape
works, to shape his own inside.
The Catholic Church has made a brilliant soul training out of these
quiet hours in its devotions.
For German man, here, as everywhere, the supreme principle of
formation is naturalness.
There are certain days that are especially suited for these quiet hours:
the birthday as the beginning of a new year of life, days when one had
an experience that especially moved one inwardly, days of a great
success or of a severe outward or inward defeat.
The places where one can devote oneself to this creative solitude are
manifold: one's own home, a quiet work room, a quiet field path, a forest,
a mountain height, the sea shore, an art or cultural monument away from
much traffic, an ancestral site.
In these hours of solitude, one gives an accounting to oneself, his folk
and his Lord for the previous year, for a completed work or task. One
reflects what one has done well and has done poorly, where one failed
and where one was successful. One researches the cause of the success
or failure, why one receives praise or scolding, what were the sources of
mistakes and errors.
This search of conscience must be inward, honest and natural,
without makeup and fixing up, free of rigidity. Clear and objective, one
tells oneself what was right and resolves to continue to do so. Sober, one
admits to oneself what was wrong and unjust, and promises oneself to
do better next time.
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Brief and clear is the line of separation that one draws under the past.
There is no long complaining and brooding, nor fruitless pains of
conscience, not useless inner martyrdom and waste of energy. There is
only one thing: The resolution to improve oneself, and the new, better
work, the more noble deed, the greater performance.
German man is directed forward, active, life affirming here as well.
In the hours of solitude, one reviews one's relationship with fellow
human beings. Has one given enough love, joy and trust to one's family?
Was one always comradely, honest and kind toward one's superiors and
subordinates? Did one leave nobody aside or behind, unjustly favored or
disfavored, annoyed, insulted, slighted his honor? Was one selfish, brutal,
cruel, quarrelsome, jealous, flattering, false?
Perhaps one can make everything well again with a word, a small
deed? Perhaps, however, more effort, serious, conscientious work is
necessary to again smooth out a past injustice.
If one has to shape a great work, carry out an important assignment,
one faces a grave decision, then one will likewise have to collect oneself
for it for a short time in solitude. The energies that one has gathered in
the community, at festivals and celebrations, often take creative shape in
solitude, they suddenly become fertile in quiet hours, in order to then
again serve the community. According to the words of Alfred Rosenberg,
community and solitude supplement each other like breathing in and
breathing out, and together mean fruitful life. This life, however,
enriches the individual just as it does the whole folk.
There are people who never feel comfortable in solitude, who always
have to have motion around them.
These people become inwardly empty and superficial. Whoever
wants to be up to great tasks, whoever wants to succeed in daily life,
whoever wants to live his life as a deep German, seeks quiet hours of
solitude from time to time. They bring him close to the divine and put
him in the middle of life again with new energy, clear sight and greater
faith.
41
Body Hygiene
42
Eternal Front
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Gottgläubig: Writings on German Faith
44
About Enjoying
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Gottgläubig: Writings on German Faith
46
Human Leadership
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Gottgläubig: Writings on German Faith
48
Eternal Front
49
Fanaticism and Objectivity
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Gottgläubig: Writings on German Faith
German man, the deep view for reality combines with the élan of
enthusiasm.
Fanaticism alone can be one-sided, it can lead to injustice,
senselessness and blindness. But whoever combines sober objectivity
with fanaticism, will strike the opponent the deepest and hardest. The
pure fanatic is often not taken seriously. But whoever is objective and
fanatical at the same time, will overcome any resistance that opposes him
in good times and bad. This is true for the positive construction of the
natural German world for which we fight and this is equally true for the
defense against all opponents. If we build and defend, in big things and
in little things, fanatically and objectively at the same time, then this
world will successfully withstand all enemies.
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Eternal Front
T
won.
hrough external power, through sly calculation, clever reason,
talented propaganda and skillful organization, temporary victories are
However, the forces that in the life of people and folks lead to ongoing
verification and eternal existence lie in the character bearing, in the
blood determined final psychological substance.
Health, cleverness and reason, organizational talent and many other
gifts of nature are prerequisites for man's successful work. The decisive
battles of the world, however, are fought by great characters. Without
deep character, psychological foundation, every work is just a temporary
illusion, any success just a fleeting flash in the pan.
A folk that wants to succeed in the struggle of political powers and
world-view forces must hence blend together into one great front of
inner, character bearing. No artificial missionary work with complicated
moral doctrines and constructed dogmas is required for that. Character
values flow from the racial, blood-related condition of the individual
folks.
It just needs to make real in daily life this great, eternal front of divine
life laws, which the Creator has put into the folks, to nurture it, to always
clean it of rubbish, to protect it against alien seeds of decay.
For Nordic man, the purpose of life lies in this life itself. The divinity,
however, rules for him in the middle of this world. Each individual
person is a member of the natural communities. He hence owes
obedience to the laws of the community. Every person is responsible for
his actions and bearing. Honor is guideline for him in this. Whoever
takes a guilt upon himself, he has the obligation for atonement.
The character bearing of German man finds its best expression in the
soldier spirit. The character of German woman is reflected in her charm.
Decisive times often demand unprecedented heroism from men and
women.
Nordic man faces all great realities of this life full of reverence.
He finds a natural, self-evident bearing toward suffering and joy.
Festivals and celebrations in the circle of the community and quiet,
creative activity in solitude mutually supplement his life rhythm.
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54
Master Life
Introduction
T he life that the divine has given us has not come to us as a coincidental
fate. We are happy that we ourselves can shape our lives days and
years into our life work.
In war and in peace, this life formation faces a person as an equally
obligating demand. Often all strength and final personal devotion are
needed in order to be able to master life in every situation, in order to
strengthen the inner front. The following thoughts were published in the
war special service of the “National Socialist Party Correspondence”, the
“Inner Front” (WSK) as Sunday articles under the title “Front of the
Hearts”, in the years 1940/41. They were printed in numerous
newspapers of the Greater German Reich. The thoughts in the short
work “Eternal Front” (Nordland Publishing House, Berlin) are continued
in this short work, “Master Life”.
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Obligation
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60
Motion
T here are people, folks and worlds for which their external and internal
stiffness means imminent end. They no longer have any strength for
new development and fresh life.
But there are also people, folks and worlds that are filled with an inner
life energy, to whom, however, the motionless immersion into a divine
power, the inner lack of touch with the motion of life, the peaceful rest
in God appears the goal of all earthly existence.
For German man, life is the same as motion. If German man is
threatened with standing still, then this is a sign that something is out of
order with his organism. The whole history of the German folk is filled
with constant motion, constant struggle, constant seeking and wrestling.
In the period of greatest distress after 1918, a great folk movement
again awakened sick Germany to new energy and finally showed it the
meaning of its existence. Since then, it has been a special honor for each
German to belong to the “movement”. But it is also part of the character
bearing of Nordic man to be a person of motion inwardly.
To be a person of motion means to always be open for the course of
life and the laws of development of this world. One of the most
wonderful experiences of life is that all existence constantly develops in
accordance with the creator’s eternal plan, manifests itself ever anew,
always strides onward and changes again and again. Certain people and
world-views have derived from one of the stages of development of the
world form norms and have applied this scheme to cultural life, religious
life, the political or economic conditions of all times. Nordic man knows
there are indeed certain laws of inner bearing; his blood-related feelings
give him the key-note of his life formation. But he also knows that there
can exist no eternally unchangeable scheme, no inalterable, rigid dogma
for the individual formation of personal and folkish life.
Each era of historical development has its own causality, just as each
season of the year and each age level in the life of nature has its own life
norms. The voice of the time is the voice of God. It is not spiritual
anarchy and not moral licentiousness, if one rejects rigid dogma and
schematization of life. It instead means the most sacred obligation toward
God’s laws, if one always obeys the always progressing laws of life, the
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call of awakening and the development of this life. Only whoever hears
this voice of the time and follows it, only whoever takes it upon himself
to break with all rigid bonds and traditional schematic laws, if the call of
the future demands it, can view himself as a person of motion.
To be a person of motion means not to be able to rest as long as the
whole folk has not been filled with the same inner motion. People of
motion are like torches who radiate the light of their world-view and
their faith into the whole land and who happily consume themselves in
the process. People of motion find no rest and no peace, if they still find
ambiguity, uncertainty, error and misunderstanding somewhere among
their folk comrades. They are, on all the paths of their life, preachers of
their faith through their character bearing, their appearance, their words
and their deeds. People of motion enthuse just by their mere existence,
they draw along through their example, give strength and ardor by the
idealism of their bearing.
A person of motion feels in his deepest interior contradiction and
revulsion, if cowardice, baseness, meanness, dishonesty, falsehood,
dishonor or injustice threatens to drag his character in the mud.
A person of motion becomes restless at the bottom of his heart, if he
sees somewhere distress, misery, poverty, wretchedness and
helplessness. He sees in the poorest person his comrade of the same folk
community. It is self-evident to him that he pitches in wherever distress
requires immediate relief. It is self-evident to him that he puts himself at
disposal, in word and deed, wherever there is distress and misery to sooth.
He does not feel completely well, his own happiness is not complete, if
he knows that, next to his well-being, other folk comrades suffer
undeservedly, that next to his happiness other people, who are no worse
than he, wrestle with desperation. Every suffering child of man, every
gaze into the poverty quarter must have an effect of shaking up and
stirring up people of motion.
People of motion find stimulus and impetus for their action and their
bearing everywhere in life. They are most deeply pleased by everything
beautiful, themselves elevated by everything noble, enthused by
everything great. The richness of life, which remains hidden to rigid or
flat people, fertilizes people of motion to the highest development of
strength, best performance and noblest bearing. People of motion hate
doing nothing, laziness and constant comfort. For them, all rest and
recreation only serve new gathering of strength. They are not happy, if
they cannot constantly work, create, strive and research. They never
exhaust themselves in negative criticism, in negation and destruction.
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They want to and must always build positively, shape new life, have a
creating effect. They stand in life and they want to work for life’s forward
development. The motion of sports, the rhythm of dance, the thing in
human formative energy that is free of rigidity, belong to the life
expression of people of motion.
The goal of all education, personal character schooling and human
leadership must be to preserve this spirit of motion in people or to again
regain it. For motion means, for German man, life, but rigidity leads to
death.
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Life Affirmation
T here are people who see only the dark side and the bad in life. There
are folks and religions for whom life only exists in order to be denied
and forgotten, despised and overcome in order to be able to be absorbed
as completely as possible into the great void. There are people who just
wait their whole life for death and eternity and who believe to thereby
especially please God.
German man knows that God has first placed him into this life so that
he masters the tasks of this life. He views life as a gift of the divinity,
puts himself fully into this life and affirms life.
Glorious is the nature that God has designated mankind’s guarantor.
In infinite variety, nature offers man in its richness a symbol of the divine.
Wretched people see in this work of God always just the thistles and
thorns, the heat and cold, the shadows and fog, the darkness and the filth.
When they walk through creation, they only register what they don’t
like, what is not comfortable for them, what seems useless and
impractical to them. They always just feel called on for criticism and
correction of the divine forces. German man admires in each landscape
its uniqueness and its special beauty. He knows that a heath landscape
cannot be gigantic and high mountains cannot be darling. He immerses
himself in the character of every manifestation of nature and sees
everywhere, amazed and happy, inwardly moved and open, an
expression of divine richness. For himself, however, German man inhales
in nature the most valuable energies for body and soul.
German man says yes to the tasks that life has put to him. He stands
steadfast at the post that has once been assigned to him. He masters the
tasks that precisely he has to master. There are people who dream for
half their lives about what they will one day do; and the other half of
their life they dream about what they would have done under other
circumstances. So their life then passes without them having come to the
ground of reality. One can be filled with ideas, plans and great tasks
without dreaming away life in the process. One can perform something
great at any post of human life. One just has to affirm work and struggle
as two glorious and great tests that the Lord God has given man as a very
special distinction.
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65
Inner Freedom
I n every age, Germans have fought in a very special way for the
preservation or conquest of their freedom. They were especially filled
with the yearning for freedom or with the happiness of freedom.
Outward freedom from the chains of slavery can only be earned
through inner freedom from whatever servitude. But despite all
advantages of Nordic blood, this inner freedom must be won anew every
day.
Whoever stands so firm and clear in life that he can fulfill his work
sure and straight, undistracted by the vicissitudes of existence and
unhampered by the weaknesses and moods of people, that person is
inwardly free.
There are people who—at their work and in their decisions, in their
thinking and feeling—bear like a heavy burden the bond to whatever
external, magical force. They trust in the power of an amulet or secretive
means of magic, in the mysticism of whatever numbers or words, in the
effect of foreign ceremonies or formulas or in the supernatural influence
of the stars. These bonds often take such solid forms that such people
many times become slaves of this their delusion. Their freedom of will
becomes limited, their decisiveness weakened. They become dependent
and helpless and become totally dependent on their magic.
German man believes in a higher, divine energy. But he keeps himself
free of any magic. He knows that God is with him, if he himself creates
and struggles.
There are other people who stand all too much under the spell of the
vicissitudes of life. Illnesses and cases of deaths, storms and natural
catastrophes, personal misfortune or the misfortune of the folk,
coincidences or blows of fate of any kind can totally confuse these people,
make them lose their composure, beat them down and shake them up.
The natural, inwardly free person knows that, according to the causality
of life, there is not just youth, rather also age, not just blossoming, rather
also dying, that sunshine alternates with rain, mildness with storm,
health with sickness, peace with war, good fortune with misfortune. He
hence looks toward the death of a person, for example, just as free as
toward any other event of nature. But he is not blindly devoted to fate in
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67
Political Freedom
E very person must regain inner freedom every day anew. Whoever
possesses inner freedom, possesses a mighty human greatness. The
inner freedom of the individual is the prerequisite for the political
freedom of the folk.
A folk that does not have any inner strength for freedom of the
individual human being also cannot claim any political freedom. For such
a folk, political freedom would mean arbitrariness, lack of restraint,
anarchy of character and of economics, cultural decline and total internal
collapse. Such a folk can only achieve its own prosperity and contribute
to the prosperity of mankind under an energetic foreign rule. This
condition may be a tragic fate for a folk. But it would be insanity to want
to deny this fate. The history of all millennia shows instructive examples
from which each person and each folk must learn. A folk to whom fate
has given a leadership obligation over another, independent folk, can
forfeit this right, if the individual members of this folk stray to brutality,
personal exploitation, baseness of character, moral decay and hence
political inability. Every German knows the mighty obligating task that
history has given him, and indeed each individual personally. Every
German is proud of this obligation and takes it upon himself with a
sacred, serious feeling of responsibility. But he also bears within himself
the happy consciousness and the unshakeable will that he will master
this task, come what may.
A great, politically independent folk, with a calling to freedom, feels it
an unbearable yoke, if it is tyrannically raped, horribly subjugated and
drawn into unnatural rule by force, by petty and narrow political leaders.
The German folk knows such absolutist arbitrariness and such incapable
rule well enough from its history. Great German fighters and singers
have again and again fought with passion and hatred against such
tyranny. Base rule by force always stands in crass contradiction with the
well-being of the folk.
But if a great leader arises, who with iron energy, and, if necessary,
an iron fist, leads the folk back to its own life laws, puts the stamp of his
own energy and greatness on the folk with every power, again opening
to the folk the wellsprings of its happiness and well-being, then this
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69
German Faith
T here are times in human life in which the whole world threatens to
collapse, all certainty becomes uncertainty and all life foundations
seem to sink, in which one only experiences disappointments, darkness
and total abandonment.
Those are the times of test for faith.
Every faith of a man must find its final anchor in a clear, secure world-
view. In the hours of the most difficult test, only a faith resting upon a
solid world-view basis can point towards the path into the future.
Observation of the world and of life gives German man the certainty
that there is a higher power, a divine force. God, the Almighty, the
divinity, providence, the godly—those are some names that worldwide
German bearing gives to the divine essence. History, daily life, nature
and the voice of his own action reveal to German man with
unconditional certainty the rule of the divinity. It is fulfillment,
everything great, good and beautiful. For German man, there is no world-
alien doctrine, no uncertain presumption in his faith in God. He feels,
recognizes and comprehends God's laws in the clear laws of life. The faith
in God again and again helps man to preserve the faith in everything
noble, beautiful and great, and saves him from straying into base
materialism and from nihilism. Faith in the divine means for German
man the unconditional affirmation of a sacred idealism, of a divine
meaning of this life. And even if so much meanness falls upon a person,
even if the bitterest misfortune follows him and the vilest ugliness
surrounds him, the once experienced traces of God keep him faithful.
German man knows that the Almighty has united him with the great
natural community of his folk by the bond of blood. This German folk,
however, was bestowed most glorious gifts of the homeland, of the blood,
of character and of spirit. This folk has journeyed from distant millennia
into history known today and shows its, today, still unknown future path.
The mission of this folk and each of its members is to bear within itself,
to carry on God's eternal work of creation, to make it shine into the world
and pass along to the future. Faith in the folk is not to be separated from
faith in the divinity. This faith is the most glorious joy for every human
being. What does it matter, if at some time distress befalls the individual
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human being, if he just sees his folk's future radiate in happiness! What
does a German man care, if the torch of his life is extinguished all too
early in heroic death, if the survival of his folk is thereby secured into
coming centuries! How can the German mother be tormented the by
pains she suffers because of her children, if she thereby contributes her
part to her folk's eternal life. This faith is the faith that inspires every
work, makes every sacrifice, enlivens the daily routine and consecrates
each holiday. In the most difficult hours of German history, this
unshakeable faith in the folk has again prepared the paths to new ascent.
In the most beautiful hours of the greatest German victory, this faith
must protect against shallowness and arrogance.
Great men have arisen for the German folk over the course of its
history. The greatest German of all times is Adolf Hitler. The coming
millennia will be an immortal monument to his deeds, to his exemplary
life, to his teaching and to his human leadership. His work now already
points beyond all concepts of time familiar to us. It is not deification,
when the German folk gives this man unshakeable faith as their leader.
It is only self-evident that the folk leadership created by Adolf Hitler can
count on the faith of the German folk for all the future.
Manifold are the hostile powers that want to destroy German man's
faith. The German folk has become acquainted with these folk-alien
enemies. It will only oppose this subversion with even more firm faith in
the future. No power of darkness will ever shake the faith of the German
folk. The German folk's sacred faith is the pledge of its eternal life.
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Trust
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Master Life
73
The Power of Love
T here are few things in human life that are so rich in content and yet
often so terribly empty, so magically tender and yet many times so
worn out, so nobly treated and yet often so pitifully low than what one
calls love.
One must again and again feel in moving hours of silent experience
the greatness, tenderness and depth of love in order to be able to surmise
its full power. Whoever does not understand that, has wasted an essential
part of his life.
Love creates knowledge. One often says: love makes blind. One would
have to say: Being in love makes blind. Whoever strays from deep love
to unrealistic being in love, may go astray like a blind person. Genuine,
great love makes knowing. With reason, one can calculate things and
work out problems. With reason, one can even conclude a political treaty
or a marriage bond. Seeing the final connections, understanding a human
heart, grasping a great miracle of nature, feeling the greatness of divine
forces—but one can only become knowing, if the heart is there as well, if
one radiates with deep love. Whoever wants to achieve ultimate
knowledge, must know that he must first be possessed by this, the
deepest love. Genuine love wisdom is only possessed by the person who
loves life infinitely. Puzzles of science and research can only be solved
by the person who devotes himself to the problems with all his heart.
Understanding and knowledgeable educator and human leader can be
only the person whose heart glows for his following. Wise people, to
whom fate has given a special sense for the secretive connections of life,
are always people full of love.
Love is creative. From the love of a man and a woman grows a new
creature. From the amorous rapture of many clans a new generation
arises for the folk. Great works are only created from a moved heart. A
life-like sculpture, deep literature, a powerful or ardent musical
composition can only be created by an artist who burns with an inner
fire. Often, these creative people do not find the full fulfillment of their
passionate love. They are, in this regard, many times empty of love. But
they thirst for love. They are, for their part, bursting full of love. In their
deepest inside loveless people are never creative. One often ponders
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what gives a certain person the invincible energy for creative formation.
It is God's gift of devoted love. Infinitely creative is the loving mother
who enchants her child at Christmas with the simplest means of a fairy-
tale of happiness and joy, who solemnly fills her family—from the ancient
sources of the gifts of nature and of the forces of folk custom—with
spiritual depth. With inexhaustible love, loving people can reciprocally
shape their happiness. A folk that is filled with a deep love for blood and
homeland, for a great idea and a great leader, will also be a creatively
productive folk.
The power of love is a divine power. Ancient sagas again and again
relate that the divinity embraced earthly life out of and through love, that
through love, divine forces filled the earth. Whoever is filled with love,
feels in a special way the nearness of the divinity. Divine radiance
glistens in the eyes of the people who carry a great love within
themselves, who cherish a person, their folk, a work, an idea with infinite
love. And because every great love is an outflow of divine forces, every
deep love also deserves sacred reverence and tender shyness. Youth and
age should always carry this reverence for love in their heart in always
the same manner.
The ardent and deep love of German man is known in the whole
world. Every German should at every time carry, cherish and increase
love in his heart. Then this love will be an eternal pledge of the
inexhaustible wealth of the German folk.
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Endurance
T he Germans are known in the whole world for their tenacity and
endurance. They owe their successes in all areas of life not least to
this great endurance.
Endurance requires thoroughness. Whoever flutters through life
superficially, whoever just quickly sips all things, whoever only
superficially touches problems and is not accustomed to seriously
solving them—of that person one also cannot expect that he devotes
himself full of dedication and endurance to a certain job or task, to tough
fighting and struggle. Only whoever fully puts himself at the post given
him, whoever penetrates into the depths of his life task, can possess the
strength for stubborn persistence.
Endurance is nourished by an unshakeable faith. Wherever doubt and
despair take hold, all strength of resistance is soon worn down, every
front breaks, there can be no endurance there. Sacred enthusiasm,
glowing faith and total trust are the foundations upon which alone
stubborn persistence lets itself be based in the hardest fighting, in the
most difficult work, in the bitterest tests of endurance for body, spirit and
soul.
War demands iron endurance. In many historical conflicts, folks faced
each other as equal opponents for years without a decision. Victory
finally fell to the more tenacious opponent, who possessed better nerves
and greater endurance. Not seldom in the course of history, the mightier
and stronger opponent also fell, because internal enemies undermined
his strength and took away his endurance. The promotion of stubborn
strength of resistance is always one of the most necessary war
preparations. The unflinching deepening of the unified, steel endurance
of the whole external and internal front is one of the most essential war
tasks.
Work often requires bitterly difficult endurance. For Nordic man,
work is not a curse, but also not a superficial game. For him, it is so full
of beauty and charm, because he sees a great task in work, to which he
can completely devote himself with every ounce of his being, through
which he wrestles in stubborn struggle and which he masters
triumphantly. The miner must possess the greatest endurance, who
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unearths coal and metal, and the precision machinist who performs the
most valuable precision work. The home worker must struggle through
his work with the same constancy as the factory worker, the worker in
the office and the peasant. Only through this unshakeable firmness and
endurance can work led to final successes. Silent heroism of invincible
endurance must stand behind the worker.
Great works of creative formation are usually envisioned and
surmised in a blessed moment, but then born only from the most
tenacious struggle full of totally harnessed energy and often superhuman
endurance. Day and night, the creative person carries his work around
with him, he is occupied with his work in silence and in the hubbub of
life. Inwardly, he never gets away from it. He is so obsessed with it that
he very often seems to his close family circle very far away, living in
another world. Moving and shocking are the examples of this stubborn
endurance and admirable constancy of the creative person are offered by
history. Nature itself shows men that new life may be conceived in a
moment's notice, but only after a long and patient time is it truly born.
For nine months the mother cherishes and protects, cares for and
nurtures the child under her heart with self-sacrificing endurance until
it sees the light of day as the most beautiful work of the human being.
Every creative formation receives its crown only through endurance.
People and folks whose endurance has never failed are the actual
victors in life. They have the right to be proud of this victory.
Education for endurance, however, is one of the most important
components of youth education and any human leadership.
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Of Being Able to Wait
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79
Modesty
Whoever does not know this modesty toward the divinity, will never
learn modesty toward other people. One must, above all, be modest
toward the following, toward the people at whose head one stands, for
whose leadership one is responsible. To play the Pasha, to assert oneself
as superior through external means of pressure, to surround one's high-
placed person with a cold, high wall, to look down arrogantly and
superficially on the so-called subordinates, is dumb and ridiculous and
requires no kind of spiritual education. Only whoever sees in each
member of his following a living person with blood and soul, whoever
can feel the cares of the outwardly smallest and simple person, whoever
respects in each folk comrade the same blood, whoever recognizes the
value of the most unpretentious member in God's eternal work of
creation, that person fulfills the prerequisite of genuine greatness and
true modesty. The modest person is great, because he does not need to
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81
Character Hardness
I t is an experience of the millennia that all people and folks who fall
into softness and slackness approach their decline or their total
annihilation.
It is a life-law of Nordic man that a soft essence is irreconcilable
especially with his nature.
Strict and clear, Nordic man keeps his body disciplined. In air, sun and
invigorating water, in games and sports, dance and gymnastics, male and
female bodies maintain their appropriate tension and bearing. This
bearing has nothing to do with oriental deadening of the body.
Nordic man does not want to deaden his body, rather master it, he does
not want to disrobe it of its physicality, rather bring it to full
development and enliven the bodily energies.
For Nordic man, body, soul and spirit form an inseparable union.
Strong and clear like his body is therefore also his character. Far from
every weakness, strength of character is the special trait of the Nordic
man.
Character hardness means an inner psychological discipline. It must
prove itself the same way in difficult hours, in which one threatens to
collapse under the weight of the test, and in times of prosperity, in which
the danger of slackening and softening is especially great.
Character strength is only acquired and preserved through constant
inner alertness and tireless psychological discipline. Whoever does not
in pleasure become the slave of his senses, whoever does not confuse
recreation with total slackening, whoever does not allow passion to
become licentiousness, whoever can differentiate rest from laziness,
justified pride from dumb arrogance, natural sensuousness from base
shamelessness, reinforcing pleasure from senseless pleasure, that person
possesses character hardness.
Any kind of unnaturalness, all artificial nature, everything contrary
to nature is alien to character hardness.
German man hence maintains his youthful freshness his whole life
long, but he is not childish, he has tender feeling for the finest stirrings
of the heart, but he is not sentimental, he is comradely, but not unisexual,
he is kind, but not soft.
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83
Personal Kindness of Heart
M any people believe that they must prove their energy, their
sharpness of mind and their soldierly bearing through ruthlessness
and brutality toward their fellow human beings. They forget that
personal kindness of heart is also part of inner maturity and genuine
greatness.
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most inferior person, even next to the most repulsive baseness one will
in this manner still find tendencies toward good. This good spark will
then often be ignited anew by the understanding kindness and will chime
in harmony with the noble forces of the understanding person.
Happy giving and joyful receiving grew from understanding and
inner harmony. One of the most beautiful joys in human life is when one
has penetrated deeply into a soul, found inner resonance and can then
give this person advice, help, leadership and enrichment. It is something
wonderful, if one can give a fellow human being a little light, strength,
sun and warmth from overflowing, inner wealth. It is the greatest
happiness of human leadership, if one may radiate the energies that one
possesses as a gift from the creator onto one's following. Certainly,
egoists can never radiate this kindness. Only whoever has educated
oneself to unselfish comradeship possesses the strength for never failing
kindness of heart. The energy of the suns lies in this kindness of heart. It
can awaken to new life, can radiate light and warmth and be the signpost
to new worlds. But kindness of heart also means inner readiness to
receive. There are people who become uncomfortable, angry, bristly and
prickly, if somebody wants to approach them with advice, a gift, a
suggestion. In this manner they make themselves poor, joyless hermits.
Every person requires some sort of help and is imperfect. Every
person is also still susceptible for suggestions, for new enrichment and
vitalization. Every person should therefore also be ready to receive from
his full, innermost heart the gift of his fellow human beings. Just as the
flower drinks the dew of the night and the light of the sun in order to be
able to grow and blossom, man as well should absorb the energies that
flow toward him in order to become greater, more mature and richer.
Wherever in the community givers and receivers are devoted to each
other in this kindness of heart, rich fruits will grow.
Many people confuse kindness of heart with weakness, softness,
slackness and sentimentality. Many people reject kindness of heart as
unmanly. But they hide their own weakness and insecurity behind
outward brutality.
In reality, tremendous strength of character and psychological energy
are needed in order to always preserve for oneself personal kindness of
heart and to not just display it daily anew outwardly, rather to achieve it
most deeply inside as well. One has often cursed the Germans as
barbarians. It will be the pride of every German man to nurture precisely
his kindness of heart and to thereby secure for himself and his folk
emotional wealth.
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Courage
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dangers that he must overcome. Life brings a person many distresses that
he must endure all alone, without any kind of help. Then only courage,
brave action, determined striding into the future helps.
Courage is not a prerogative of the male. Women and mothers, boys
and girls have in the same manner the proud right and the sacred duty
to be courageous.
Courage is good. Cowardice is bad. Whoever has always acted
courageously in the fateful hours of his life and in the little things of daily
life, may have made many mistakes in his life.
Courage makes happy. There are people who endure their fate with
stubborn bitterness. And there are people who play the patient, sacrificial
lamb full of gentleness and a pain-filled gaze. All that has nothing to do
with courage. The courageous person encounters life with fresh, happy
bravery. Happy and proud, upright and free, the courageous person
strides into the future—even if he sees death in front of him.
Courage always means affirmation of life. The courageous person
stands firmly in life. He never seeks to save himself from a difficult
situation through flight to death.
This courage must prove itself in daily life, so that it can lead to
victory in the decision. Courage must be practiced in the daily work of
peace so that the folk can pass the test in war. One cannot hurriedly fetch
courage in the hour of danger from an old weapons arsenal. Courage is
part of the eternal bearing of German man. Because he is always
courageous in victory and defeat, in war and peace, God is with him.
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Justice
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Every person has a fine feeling for justice. The smallest child feels
justice and injustice exactly like the oldest elder. Justice is one of the
necessary prerequisites of every community. Justice is one of the most
sacred duties of every member of the community.
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Cleanliness
Fighting and wars, dangers and obstacles of every kind are concentrated
tests for people and folks. They will only pass, if the person has proven
himself in daily life. The tests of daily life are often more dangerous than
life's great tests of strength. Many people and folks who have
triumphantly survived the hardest fighting have in daily life slid into
frivolity, superficiality, comfort and unclean bearing unnoticed, and then
perished.
German man hence always strives, in war as in peace, in misfortune
and in good fortune, to shape his inner life from inner cleanliness. Honor
is the guiding principle of his action for his political and militant battle
front as well as for the front of his work. It becomes clear to him again
and again that this clean bearing, which is of the same genuine depth as
his blood, must always be won anew and preserved through the use of
all his energies.
One often feels it at the first encounter with many people, one
experiences it with many people in years of experience that their whole
being is filled with pure cleanliness. The acquaintance with such pure,
genuine, valuable people always brings joy. Any association with these
people of purest character cleanliness is a gain. It ennobles and
transfigures any community. A folk that possesses a number of such
people can pass the test of history. It ensures itself eternal life.
Purity of thought is generally reflected in outward cleanliness. A clear
eye, a clean exterior, the natural effort to remain free of outer dirtiness,
usually indicates that behind this exterior cleanliness an inner purity is
also to be found.
Above all, honesty is part of character cleanliness. There are people
who pretend that they serve the Reich with the exertion of all their
energy. But they radiate no inner blaze and no gripping enthusiasm.
They are cold and leave empty, because they only strive for a high office,
for promotion and distinction. Service to the Reich is for them only a
pretty facade for their egoism.
There are people who claim they serve the folk community. But one
feels in their proximity that they only know the common good, if they
have first ensured their own gain. The German moral law “common good
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before personal good” has not been absorbed by them. Their whole
conduct is hence hollow and false. Among clean people, there is no
disharmony between outward appearance and inner bearing, between
words and deeds. The purest person has weaknesses and imperfections.
That has nothing to do with the disharmony, dirtiness and filthiness of
people who are inwardly completely dishonest and false.
Honesty toward the fellow human being is part of inner cleanliness.
One must always be able to look the fellow human being in the eye. The
pure person honestly allows the fellow human being any joy and is
always an honest friend. But he also knows how to openly encounter him
with seriousness, with punishment, or, if necessary, with hostility. The
honest attitude toward the property of the fellow human being and
toward the property of the community is part of cleanliness. Where
millions of people can barely earn their necessary life basis through hard
work, it is a crime, if individuals enrich themselves without effort and
thereby swindle the folk comrades. Where work and wage are justly
distributed, dishonesty, swindle, corruption, embezzlement, or receiving
stolen property are all the more contemptible offenses.
Above all, cleanliness must show itself in the most intimate
relationships between people. In comradeship and friendship, and above
all in love, all dishonesty, any swindle, any mutual deception must be
excluded. Precisely in the most personal relationships between people,
one must renounce everything upon which one has no claim. Precisely
here, one must not secretly take possession of something that does not
belong to one.
Many people believe they can even deceive fate. They do not want to
believe that any dirtiness of character always just hurts themselves. In
the final analysis, one can never deceive fate through impurity. One
always just dirties oneself through dirtiness. Every German feels within
himself the obligation to look inside himself from time to time in a quiet
hour and to check the purity of his life. Constant self-checking will save
him and his folk for all future from the dangers of daily life and
strengthen them for times of distress and struggle.
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Breeding
T here was a time in which the term breeding was in content torn apart
into two different parts. Applied to people, it meant good and strict
upbringing. But in animal breeding, it meant biological betterment of
breed and racial selection.
The National Socialist world-view has again led people back to the
simple and great connections of life and has again given the term
discipline its full, natural and original meaning.
Seen biologically, a person of good breeding is a person with clean
blood and highly valuable physical-mental-psychological genes. It is the
first and most natural law that the creator has given man: that he keeps
his blood legacy pure and noble. Every person has the sacred obligation
to protect the energies of his blood against any falsification and
decomposition, against destruction and annihilation. The worst crime
and the greatest misfortune is simultaneously such a sin against the
blood.
But it is also an offense against the blood to senselessly waste the
healthy energies of the blood and thereby weaken the blood current of
his clan. The life energies of a folk are so valuable and sacred that any
folk that in good times frivolously wastes these energies in times of
distress and decision many times no longer has any strength of resistance
and no energy for self-assertion. Many a folk has bled to death over the
course of history due to this frivolous self-surrender.
Whoever lives so with breeding, is full of the highest morality. This
natural breeding is the healthy opposition to any lack of breeding. This
breeding has nothing to do with moral hypocrisy and prudery. Breeding
certainly means more than biological selection. The energies of soul and
intellect cannot be separated from the energies of the blood.
Preservation of blood purity simultaneously means the obligation for
inner cleanliness. The moral and psychological contamination and
decomposition of people or folks always goes hand in hand with the
biological contamination of the blood. The most unnatural products of a
degenerate art correspond to the psychological deformity, blood
contamination and moral depravity of that time. Breeding of the body,
however, is the prerequisite for decent moral bearing. Whoever believes
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In the term breeding, the great natural harmony of body, soul and
mind finds the expression that especially characterizes the harmonic
essence of Nordic man. There are people who indeed strive for moral
breeding. But they lack the breeding of the mind and hence never achieve
a balanced bearing. There are people who are outwardly somewhat
flawless. But in their thoughts, in their fantasy they surrender
themselves to a deformed, contaminated and decadent world. This inner
lack of breeding somewhat reflects itself in the outer conduct of the
people. Each most secret thought somehow shapes the physical and
moral bearing of the person with a fine chisel. Becoming accustomed to
clear, consequential and logical thinking is also part of mental discipline,
the freedom from any mental jumpiness and superficiality, the effort for
intellectual depth and intensification. Where this mental discipline is
lacking, the best physical breeding will not be able to convey final values
to the person.
From childhood on, a person must be educated toward this high,
broad breeding. For breeding, adolescence represents the decisive period
in human life. In the full power of his years, a person can and must work
day after day on the disciplined formation of his personality. This is not
only a sacred duty, rather also a moral gift for him. And even in old age,
when many energies long slumber, a person can still be an expression
and a shaper of disciplined essence.
There are several words in the German language that concisely, but
flexibly and broadly, express the whole bearing of Nordic man. The term
breeding is one of them.
A person full of breeding is a person with a healthy, fresh, natural and
sound body, with moral energy and psychological depth, with clear,
objective and deep, schooled intellect.
Thus, breeding becomes the highest ideal of the German. A folk that
holds this breeding sacred will be capable of the greatest deeds and works.
A person who embodies this breeding secures for himself eternity.
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Politeness
T here was once a time when one could learn politeness according to a
precisely prescribed system of rules, according to an etiquette set
down to the finest detail, according to a schematic of regulations and
decrees. Whoever had enough time to memorize and to practice all these
things, that person was polite.
Meanwhile, man has again remembered that politeness is a natural
characteristic and a self-evident obligation of German man.
Politeness flows by itself from the inner wealth of a noble person. It
is not something empty, hollow, weak and external. It is not tied to rigid
formulas and regulations, to mechanical ceremony and a stiff etiquette.
Politeness is an expression of genuine community spirit, honest respect
for life and deep character formation. Politeness is hence not a secondary
manifestation and an unimportant accessory of decent human bearing. It
is an inner obligation for every proper person.
Where life is dominated by impoliteness and unfriendliness, this
proves that the affected people cannot deal with life, that they possess a
character deficiency or that their spirit and mind are narrow and limited.
Corresponding to the essence of people and the given circumstances,
the expression of politeness can be very diverse. There is a reserved
politeness that is not stiff, but also not overflowing, and yet sincere. This
is a plain, heartfelt and natural politeness. The dry, somewhat angular
and rough politeness is again different, but no less valuable than the
politeness of sunny people who always overflow with dearness. And the
politeness of especially deep people radiating calmness, security and
safety has yet another character.
People with a calm nature should not strive for bubbling politeness,
otherwise this politeness appears false. And people who always radiate
sunshine should not unnaturally hold back their politeness, otherwise it
becomes rejection.
Toward the own blood, politeness takes a different form than toward
strangers. At events full of stormy joy it has a different tone than on
serious and sad occasions.
But in all life situations and toward all people, there exists a clear duty
to politeness, which nobody can cast off—politeness makes life easier and
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96
Sacrifice and
Renunciation
G erman man stands in life with both feet. He enjoys this life and
reaches, full of gratitude, to the divinity, for the fruits of this life. But
it is the greatest joy for him to be allowed to himself work along on God's
work of creation, to be able to himself shape life according to the great
laws of eternal order, to be allowed to create, sow and harvest with his
own strength. German man only knows a full, unconditional yes to this
life.
But precisely because being German means restless life affirmation,
the obligation to renunciation and sacrifice also arises again and again
for Germans.
Self-evident is the renunciation of all those things, comforts, desires
and pleasures that must lead to a permanent damage to one's own life
and to the well-being of the folk community. Stimulants of the most
diverse kind can in small doses liven up a listless person, bestow new
energy to a worn out person, without somehow harming. Unrestrained
enjoyment of whatever bodily or emotional poisons, however, must
always be a disadvantage. May the temptation beckon ever so greatly
and the radiance enchant ever so much, here there is only a clear no, a
strong renunciation.
But the German will occasionally also have to renounce harmless joys
and, above all, the comforts of life in order to thereby protect himself
against slackness, stiffness, calcification and softness.
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German man is always aware that he does not stand alone in life,
rather is a member in the great organism of the folk community.
Wherever a folk comrade lives in need, the person next to him is
obligated to stand at his side as a comrade, to help him, even if this help
requires a renunciation, to support him, even if this readiness to help
demands personal sacrifice. Wherever a fellow human being is in danger,
it is self-evident for every German that he stands by him, even if he must
himself survive dangers and take on discomforts.
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For him, sacrifices and renunciation only then have a meaning, if the
forces of life are thereby heightened and strengthened, refined and steeled.
Renunciation grows precisely from life affirmation. And each
renunciation is great and glorious, if thereby the ground for new life and
blossoming, for new seed and new harvest becomes free and ready.
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Whoever wants to master life, must shape his life energetically and
goal-consciously. His action and his bearing must be filled with
meaningful and compelling driving forces. Whoever just blindly obeys
the drives of physical self-preservation, will often disturb life order more
than promote it. Deep meaning and sacred obligation must always
transfigure human life.
People who want to pass the test of life must, above all, win inner
freedom. Whoever does not possess this inner freedom, becomes a pitiful
slave of life. Inner freedom is just as necessary for the life of the
individual person as political freedom is for the life of the folk.
Victor in the life struggle always remains the person who fills his
energies with a glowing faith and a rock-hard trust and simultaneously
bears a heart full of life inside. For that, all ardor and enthusiasm must
also be accompanied by endurance in work and struggle and in readiness.
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After great life successes, people often suddenly fall due to vanity and
arrogance. Whoever has really mastered life, will remain modest despite
all self-awareness. In a person's inner bearing, however, character
hardness and personal kindness of heart must supplement each other.
Despite all life joy and life affirmation, precisely Nordic man knows
that he will never master life without renunciation and sacrifice. But he
is not unhappy about that. For him it is self-evident that he must win his
life through much sacrifice and must stand at the side of his fellow
human being's life through much renunciation. Fighting spirit is always
part of the basic core of Nordic essence. But his motto is not “kill life”,
rather “master life”. Only through this life mastery does he bring life to
the fullest development.
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Introduction
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Part One
For a child, God manifests himself in the works of creation and in father
and mother.
Plain, natural and free are child's faith and child's piety.
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possible on his back, in order to protect the most sensitive part of all
children. But the maid also sees with the same aggravation that the
teacher's son and the priest's dog are the most impertinent ones in the
village.
Often when Peter, on assignment from his father, must take a letter
in the most severe winter to a peasant in another town and he has hardly
left the village, he positions himself on the snow-swept country road and
stomps and tramps his feet, and from pure rage he shouts very loudly
against the sharpest wind. But by the time he has reached the peasant,
he has long since reconciled with himself; then so much good spirit and
joyfulness again laughs from his little heart that he is not allowed to leave
again until he has eaten some nice, thick honey bread. On the way home
a peasant often comes with a sleigh or wagon, then Peter can steer the
horses.
When the father learns of Peter's defiance, he always says the same
words to him. With a serious wrinkle on his brow, he says: “Thick-head”,
or “You young rogue, you”. But Peter senses in the words, next to the
seriousness, simultaneously a certain pride of the father, and hence he
remains like he is.
3.
In school Peter is one of those who always sit up front in the first row.
Why, he does not know himself; he actually does nothing for it.
Often, a small troop of boys rushes into the schoolroom. On their
roaming they have forgotten that they only have a short recess, until
suddenly their conscience tears them from play and admonishes them of
their duty. Many a peasant then sees a child racing round the corner of
the school building shaking its head. Tense and a little afraid, they stand
in the classroom. Things were never any different.
Peter stands in their middle and accepts the punishment full of calm
and ease.
He is not especially well-behaved otherwise as well. Just like the other
boys, he takes pride in racing through morning prayer, fast and unclear.
Boys must not pray so well-behaved as girls; that is Peter's opinion.
Now and then, when Peter and some other boys have to stay after
school due to unruliness, the schoolmistress must take the bicycle to the
next village, because she also teaches there. When she has then tightly
closed the door and hardly left the building, it is always Peter who makes
sure that the others, and especially he himself, very quickly leave
through the windows unscathed.
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feast at the farmstead, and according to custom he is owed two half beers.
If the little acolyte then comes home so terribly happy and pleased, the
mother scolds him: in the future he should only take one swallow of beer.
But Peter finds beer drinking so nice and interesting, because the adult
men do it, and hence he does not like to leave the glasses standing full.
6.
Among Peter's most beautiful childhood days is the annual Corpus
Christi festival with the procession.
Amidst the unbroken, festive bell chiming, everybody gathers around
the whole village to participate in the procession. The peasants and
peasant women, the girls in white dresses, the boys in blue Sunday pants,
the adolescent lads and lasses, clubs and flags and many more people
from other villages come along. When the procession leads along paths
strewn with aromatic hay and through the waving corn fields, when the
sun beams in the clear blue sky and the meadows stand in full flowered
splendor, Peter rejoices inside at all the beauty.
In the middle of the procession strides the “master” in gold brocade
overcoat under a canopy, carrying the monstrance.
Peter, who walks directly in front of the priest, forgets what a
dignified office he must hold on this day. And although the mother has
often told him how he should do it and has given him all the best advice,
he does not notice at all whether or not the incense container in his hands
swings back and forth.
Peter only sees all the splendor, sees the flags wave, sees how the sun
reflects in the clean polished helmets of the fire department and in the
great trumpets of the band, and how all the implements and flagpole tops
shine and glisten. To the right and left of the path lie the many colorful,
big and small flowers that the pious people have strewn. And when the
long procession of the faithful then turns into the great village street,
then the chiming of the church bells mixes with the sounds of the band;
then the fire-engine chief, like always at festive occasions, fires the old
cannon, and the heavy shells resound in a dull roar over all the festivities.
Peter wants to shout aloud with joy amidst all the music.
When the procession has afterward dispersed, the church bells have
made their last swings and Peter's mass garment already hangs again in
the closet, he still stands a long time on the path, gathers up many
colorful flowers, is still amazed here and there at all the beautifully
dressed people who are on the way home, and is overjoyed with all the
festive events.
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7.
Peter should be right pious and well-behaved toward the priest, for
he is the one who represents dear God on earth, and he is also the one,
who will one day get for Peter a right pretty place in heaven, perhaps
right next to dear God; that is what his mother tells him. Full of
satisfaction, she observes that the churchyard is one of the boy's favorite
places to stay. Peter likes to be there, for the servants let him harness the
oxen, they take him into the field and he is allowed to feed the horses.
When Peter meets the priest, he greets him friendly, just like his
mother has told him, and just like the other children and the big people
also do.
He has considered whether he would also actually like to be priest
one day, for he is the mightiest, the people usually only say “sir” to him,
and they are devoted to him and pay homage to him. What he preaches,
is the truth, what he does, is pious, and want he wants, happens. Besides,
things never go badly for him, he has plenty to eat and to drink and has
the most land and cattle in the village. Peter can only imagine the king
more powerful, but he is so far away that he can form no real picture of
him.
8.
Although the teacher's boy has spent a large portion of his childhood
in the sphere of the priest, he still lives with a very great inner distance
from him. As well as he understands the blacksmith and as much as he
likes the Loidl and Gosch peasants, as much as he likes the peasant
woman in the other town as well, so alien to him remains the priest from
the start. Perhaps the reason is that the priest and the teacher of the
village are so very much different, and Peter knows that they have had
many a quarrel. Indeed, that does not manifest itself to him in daily life,
but various events let him surmise it and feel it unconsciously.
Peter does not know that his mother is a pretty young woman, and if
almost daily all kinds of nice things are delivered from the rectory to the
teacher's house, he finds that wonderful and does not think anything of
it. But one time he is present, when the father comes home at noon and
is very unhappy to find that a good goose from “over there” again lies on
the table.
The son has a special, silent admiration for his father in one certain
point. The teacher Schaedl does not go to confession in the village; for
this purpose, he travels once a year to the big city, and he does that for
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his wife's sake. Peter only knows that the father comes home on that day
with many packages, what else he does in the city, he does not ask.
At the outbreak of the great war, the priest spoke of the Russians,
who pass through the country burning and pillaging, and said that the
people should build caves, take everything along and pray for God's
mercy. Then it was teacher Schaedl who called the people together and
filled them with courage and enthusiasm, when he convinced them of
the powerful force that protects the borders. And when they all went
home bravely and happily, Peter was again very proud that he, too, is
one of the Schaedls.
Severe storms cross over the heights and nearby villages almost every
evening after the summer heat of the high summer days. The mountain
creeks surge and churn into the valley, storms race across the land, and
hail pelts the fields.
On such evenings, Peter stands in front of the door, looks at the
darting lightning and hears the crashing thunder, or he stands on the
bridge, when the last thunder rolls, and gazes long into the creek's dirty
torrent.
But one night, one of the great buildings in the village, struck by
lightning, is suddenly on fire. The teacher, like many times already, is
the first who comes to help. While he saves people and property at the
risk of his own life, and the alarm bells call the surrounding peasants to
help, and women and children have assembled in the rectory and pray
for support and assistance. But Peter is not among them. Barely
comprehending the tremendous power of the forces of nature, he stands
on the path in reverence before his father's action, all alone, amidst the
great confusion. All around them there is haste, racing, fetching,
bringing, shouting, extinguishing.
Peter hears and sees nothing of all that. He only feels the nearness of
the mighty fire; inwardly excited and moved, his gaze follows the father,
continually exposed to death by fire, working relentlessly with
concentrated will.
Then his gaze turns toward the sky, which stands out black and
threatening against the dark red, glowing ball of fire. For a long time he
looks back and forth between sky and earth. His gaze is fixed by the
mighty event of the huge fire and then again by the clouds in the sky,
which race past like great rags, whipped by the sweeping storm. When
Peter then sees the hurrying people, the fleeing cattle, and between all
them his father, and then again the broad plain of the fields and forests
suddenly dipped into a bright light of lightning, as the rain pours down
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114
Part Two
The church world tempts the human child with its strangeness and its
splendor. Healthy natures rebel against its unnaturalness and its
compulsion of soul.
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community has come. All the teachers from the surroundings are there.
The peasants have come, and also all the clubs with flags are present.
Nobody from the area far and wide has allowed himself to be prevented
from paying his final respects to the teacher. The procession of mourners
is so long that it cannot take the closed path to the cemetery. They walk
around the whole village, such as is otherwise customary only on
holidays. Although the women cry and the men, in sincere grief, now
and then hold their hand over their eyes, Peter looks straight ahead and
upright. As the eldest son, he walks directly behind the coffin. He is filled
with endless pride, for they carry the father to the grave as if in a
triumphant procession. Peter now feels very close to him, for him, the
father will live on. He cannot imagine that the words about hell and hell
fire, which he always had to memorize in the cloister school, should
apply to the father; he is quite certainly not dependent on prayers of
intercession and requiems, for he has died like many other soldiers who
fell in the great war for their Germany. Peter now knows it quite
certainly, he wants to be like his father; his father will be his example,
for his whole life.
After the burial, Peter is reprimanded by his aunt, because he has not
cried enough in the procession, but the grandmother takes him under her
protection. “Peter is still a child and does not know what death means”,
she says. Then Peter goes to his mother again and asks to take him from
the cloister school. But her fate has bound her even more tightly to her
faith, she has become even more pious, and her will is that Peter become
a clergyman.
The same day, the boy leaves the home village. The path is long and
difficult, but he memorizes it well and will never forget it. He sees every
flower, every stalk, all the little animals on the ground, the fields,
meadows and forests and the creek, his little creek, which winds past his
father's house.
Now and then, peasant folk encounter him on the path; they want to
go up to him and comfort him; but Peter evades them, they have all
become so strange to him, as if he had never had anything to do with
them. An endless grief and the feeling of complete abandonment
overcome him, and still, he does not want to see the people. Suddenly, he
starts to run off the path into the fields, ever faster, similar to a hunted
animal. He sees the village lying far behind him, and far behind as well
does he leave his freedom and his childhood.
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3.
“Schaedl, get out!” roars Father Josef, if he catches cloister pupil
Schaedl at any “crime”. When Peter has then left the school bench, the
father works over the boy's round cheeks with a mixture of tender pats
and slaps.
One time the pupils are supposed to write an essay. Peter chews on
the pen-holder and gazes contentedly out of the classroom window. His
thoughts go from the tall tress and groomed lawn of the cloister park to
the meadows and forests of his homeland. Then a great reverence
suddenly overcomes him, and he must get a grip on himself, so that he
does not act like many a new lad who, when he awakens from his pretty
dream in the morning, secretly cries in his pillow out of pure home-
sickness or calls for his mother.
With measured, silent steps, his head lowered over a prayer book,
Father Korbinian has meanwhile probably already ended his tenth round
through the rows of pupil benches when he suddenly, reaching Peter's
bench, stops in front of it for a few short minutes without any movement
and then suddenly, abruptly and furiously rips out a lock of his hair.
Afterward, he carefully puts the boy's hair into his book and goes on. He
has already observed the dreaming boy for a long time, and he wants to
punish him this way. Peter looks at the monk in disbelief. Such a thing
has never before happened to him; he knows well that back home the
boys have a lot of fun among themselves by pulling out the other's hair,
and that afterward there is always a big brawl, but the monk knows
perfectly well that he cannot start a brawl with him, and this cannot be
a game, either...
Almost desperately, he looks at the priest again. But when he
continues his walk as self-evident, as if all that were nothing at all, Peter
would like most to cry, to cry without end. Never before had he felt like
that.
He remembers that he had often been punished by his father as well,
and when he got a hard spanking, he clenched his teeth so that it would
not hurt, but he had never cried.
Although the monk's behavior seemed strangely odd and inexplicable
to Peter, he controls himself now as well and does not cry. Awakened
from his dream, he endeavors to finish his essay. After Father Korbinian
has walked around for a long time praying piously, he returns to Peter's
seat and throws the hair down in front of the lad with the words: “Here
is your hair. I don't keep other people's property.”
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After the daily instruction, the pupils pass through the long cloister
halls on the way to prayer. Peter, still moved and excited by the
preceding event, does not keep step with the lad ahead of him. For that,
the supervising father orders him to fast at lunch.
For that meal, the boy is only allowed to quickly consume a bowl of
soup, he must renounce the main course in favor of a well-behaved boy.
During the first part of the meal, there is a reading aloud from a pious
book, and while the other boys can afterward talk, Peter must kneel in a
corner of the dining room and tell his beads.
Although Peter can quickly forget this kind of punishment and
reprimand, and they impress themselves on him over time, the yearning
for youthful deed and pranks again and again takes hold of him.
When all the 200 boys of the cloister school must form a long double-
line after the noon meal, in order to be “driven to stroll” for half an hour,
as it is called in the pupil's jargon, when the sun shines, the birds sing
and the sky is so blue, then it is most difficult for Peter to be good. He
often has the burning wish to climb one of the park's tall trees, like he
always did at home, if he felt like it. Once, out of sheer joy at the
delightful thought, an impertinent whistle suddenly erupts from him.
Because he actually did not think anything about it, he gives a friendly
smile to Father Benedict rushing toward him. But while he walks next to
the little sinner, he takes his earlobes between his fingers and twists,
squeezes and pinches them around for minutes until they are fire-red.
Peter clenches his little fists, he is boiling with rage and a hatred against
this man that he would like most of all to go at him with his fists. But
Peter is powerless against this monk. He does not understand why the
monk takes such joy in tormenting him... And while the other pupils
hardly notice the whole thing, thick tears of rage and pain roll down the
boy's cheeks. But the more Peter expresses his rage, and the cooler the
monk's smiles, the more firmly does he pummel the child's ear between
his fingers.
The cloister pupils have free time in the afternoon, during which they
may read, draw, write or paint. Father Franz, from whose nose drops of
tobacco constantly run, usually has supervision in the large reading hall.
Already on the first day, when Peter had barely passed his entrance
examination, Peter had gotten into a fight with another little test-taker,
and as both youngsters rolled on the floor of the cloister hall, it was
Father Peter who came along. Since that day, he has never taken his eye
off Peter, and never fails to observe him suspiciously. If Peter breaks the
holy silence or otherwise does something not allowed, Father Peter
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comes, and Peter must take not just one, rather several pinches of strong
tobacco and stuff it into his nose. But the monk shakes with laughter and
delight when the strong tobacco brings tears to the boy's eyes.
What Peter likes least of all is that all of them, after there was already
class in the morning and afternoon, must do their home work in the great
study hall, standing behind pulpits. Often, when he is all too bored and
tired, he very quietly calls one of his fellow pupils to the side, they give
each other signs, hide themselves behind the back of the boy ahead and
enter a pleasant conversation. “Schaedl to the pillar” resounds almost
every other day, and then Peter, if he was not good, must walk, his books
under arm, to the large pillar in the middle of the hall, kneel there and
learn his Latin for the remainder of the class.
But Peter's naughtiness is also often punished with beatings. If he
often does not rightly know why he is punished, that is especially true
for the blows he receives from Father Konrad.
That Father is known to have his favorites among the cloister boys.
In the beginning, he also showed a lively interest in Peter. He gave him
the pet name “Schnauzer”, gave him a lot of sugar candy and was always
especially nice to him.
One day Peter is supposed to go to the Father's room and fetch himself
some chocolate. When Peter stands in the room and watches intently to
see what nice thing the Father will give him, he suddenly grabs the boy
and puts him on his lap. For Peter, that is terribly uncomfortable. At
home he only rarely was allowed to sit on even his father's lap, and that
was when he still wore a skirt and wax apron and still had his finger in
his mouth. Because Peter is not accustomed to it, he quickly slides off the
Father's lap and goes through the door. Since that day, however, Father
Konrad is as if transformed, almost daily he reprimands or hits the boy.
Even the worst punishment that exists in the cloister is not spared
Peter. A walk to the village, allowed in his view, brings it to him. That he
must spend half a day in a dark room with bread and water does not
bother him particularly, but he is upset that the punishment is supposed
to result in a bad note in his record.
Peter goes to the director and wants to complain. He had always been
allowed to say anything he was thinking to his teacher in the village
school, and so he now presents his case to the director as well without
any concern. The well-meant explanation of the honorable monk is
followed by Peter's counter-explanation. Argument and counter-
argument from oldster and boy now collide, until he can only save
himself from the thick-skull by pushing him out the door with the words,
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“You scoundrel, now get out of here!” But for Peter that is no reason to
go. He remains a while in front of the door of the feared director, knocks
again and then enters the room anew with the words: “Director, sir, I still
do not understand the punishment.” The man resorts to kindness. With
much patience, like a kindly old father, he quite calmly explains the
situation to the boy, and Peter's defiance is thereby gradually broken.
Peter does indeed have respect for most of the cloister's monks,
because they are his teachers, but not a genuine reverence toward them,
and although many of them have applied their special methods of
punishment to him daily, he no longer has any pronounced fear of them.
After a special incident, he is only downright afraid of the raging fury of
Father Hieronymus.
It was the last day before the start of vacation. Peter Schaedl, Bruno
Stadler and Friedel Sachs were naughty and as punishment had to kneel
on the floor before Father Hieronymus. Full of rage, he walked back and
forth repeatedly, scolding. Peter does not feel much affected by the hefty
curses, he thinks about being on vacation already the next day.
With big, energetic steps, arms crossed on the back, the monk crosses
the room, scolding incessantly. The indifferent behavior of the boys
angers him greatly. Full of outrage, he steps toward the boy being
punished kneeling in front of him: “You scoundrel, you, you probably
don't care, if you're being punished. Well, just wait, I'll help you”, and
with these words be gives the boy such a hard blow to the face that he
almost loses his balance. Peter remembers he only received such a blow
just once, perhaps, from his father. Peter's face still glows like fire, and
his head spins, as an unwanted tear rolls down his cheek.
“What, and then howl right off and be sensitive? “ the Father almost
oversteps himself and, in rage, lets the boy feel some more hard blows.
Peter swallows the bitter tears and stares ahead with a dark gaze. Father
Hieronymus does not like it that the boy still expresses his defiance and
thick-headedness, he should kneel on the floor and be humble. Panting
in the room, totally enraged without any taming, he roars again: “So, he
still wants to be obstinate, I will drive that out of you!”
Under the constantly renewed slaps and blows, Peter's rage gradually
recedes, he becomes ever more indifferent to the situation, he
automatically does what the monk demands of him.
But Peter has experienced one thing that day, something that had
until then always been alien to him and that he had never felt, he has
learned to hate a person in the bottom of his heart and with all his
strength.
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4.
As the cloister school's pupil, Peter may indeed only spend his
vacations at home in his black seminary uniform, and although he feels
the homeland so totally differently than before, the freedom that he
enjoys, full of memory of his earliest childhood, still has a redeeming and
happy effect on him.
When Peter is back in the cloister school, he sets aside some of the
money that his mother gave him and only turns in some of it.
Because neither his mother, to whom he has constantly made it clear
that in the long-run life in the cloister school is unbearable for him, nor
any of the monks or his comrades understand him, he quietly hatches a
plan, and one day he escapes through the back door of the kitchen, where
entry is forbidden even to the monks, to say nothing of the pupils, to
freedom and runs off.
But the joy suddenly and abruptly comes to an end when a hand
snares Peter's collar from behind and does not let go of him. A Father
drags him along, and whether Peter wants to or not, he must again return
to the cloister school.
The patience of his educators has come to an end due to this final act
of disobedience.
Although the impression from many punishments, debasements and
blows remain deep seated in Peter, and although his boy's soul has been
deeply shaken by this or that incident and he has often been almost
desperate and unhappy, his unbending youthful manner, his gaiety and
naturalness again and again lift him above every misfortune, every
aggravation and every baseness. Peter Schaedl is still the always
laughing, singing, whistling boy who is always ready for new pranks.
Now as before, he cannot understand that as a 12 year old one is not
allowed to laugh and shout. It does not want to sink into his head that he
may not speak when he wants to and other similar things.
Under these circumstances it is not surprising that the lively, fresh lad
from the Bavarian mountains has within a short period acquired a
substantial record of punishments.
Be it that he once climbed a tree instead of playing the assigned
games, that he once sent impertinent letters home, that he soon gave a
mocking nickname to one of the monks and is then obstinate, or that he
always holds his head so cocky. All that combined contributes, at any
rate, to the deepest outrage of his teachers and educators, and after the
failed escape attempt a letter one day goes to Peter Schaedl's mother, in
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which it is written that the boy must leave the cloister school, since all
pedagogical measures have failed and his temperament is not to be
tamed.
But the reply to that goes like how Peter has known his mother for so
long: a single request to try it again with the boy, since he cannot be that
ruined and bad.
5.
So it comes to pass that Peter Schaedl remains in the cloister school.
And since he can think of nothing else, he makes the attempt to reconcile
himself a little better to the external circumstances of this daily routine.
For this, he does not utilize any especially great will and good
resolutions, rather he shows, almost unconsciously, more indifference
toward the things that he previously only encountered with iron struggle
and stubborn resistance, and turns to other interests.
If the cloister school brought nothing but this hard, bitter daily
routine, then Peter would certainly repeat his escape attempt in a more
perfected form, then he would in the long run never endure the constant
being pious and good, the eternal indifference of praying, being silent,
learning. But he gradually discovers many new things in the cloister
school and finds many interesting things that occupy, fill, excite and
enrich him.
First, it is the cloister itself. It was once the hereditary seat of the royal
house, and many monuments, many graves and many pictures bear
witness to more than a thousand years of German history, to old noble
families, to great men, to wars and victories, to joy and distress, to
warriors and thinkers, to women and marriages, to monks and artists.
Testimony to Germanic and Christian history is given in most manifold
portrayals within these castle and cloister grounds.
Especially on Sunday afternoon, when the pupils are given two hours
off to make confession and for pious reflection, Peter finds rest and time,
unobserved and unnoticed by all the others, to sneak off on a journey of
discovery. Then he finds ever new niches with only inscriptions and
symbols, ever new testimony to an old time.
Hours of complete joy are also brought to Peter by the cloister's
musical events, which take place from time to time, regardless of whether
they take place in the church or the festive hall.
When a mass by Orlando di Lasso, Bach or Haller is played, if Peter
sings along with his high soprano voice in Haydn's creation or in songs
of the Bavarian marksmen, then he rejoices inwardly, then his heart is so
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free and happy and festive that he forgets the cares of daily life. That is
an experience for him which repays him for a long time for all suffering.
It is similar for him later during the two to three hour Sunday hikes.
When the path leads along numerous fish dikes, through great hops
gardens into the infinitely wide forest, when Peter again and again has
something new to see on the right and on the left, and when he is even
given permission to leave the ranks and play in the forest, then he is in
his element, then he forgets that he is a cloister pupil.
6.
From time to time, when his path leads through isolated cloister halls
and corners, Peter encounters many a monk who was previously
unknown to him. Often they get into little conversations.
The abbot of the cloister is a long grayed, dignified elder. Only seldom
do the pupils see him, for he is very distant to them. But he often shows
a special benevolence toward Peter.
One year during Christmas vacation, Peter did not travel home to his
mother, rather experienced the holidays in their special radiance and in
their whole solemnity in the cloister.
It is midnight mass. The church altar radiates with the most beautiful
floral decorations, and on both sides stand mighty fir trees, still with
fresh dew and fragrant scent. Dozens of candles are burning and
flickering in the whole room. The church is filled with people from the
surroundings. About fifty monks stand motionless in the choir section
with their long, black, billowing Benedictine cowls. Left of the altar,
however, stands the abbot in gold brocade with a headband and staff in
front of his throne seat. About twenty clerics surround him, likewise
dressed in white and gold brocade. Twelve little candle-boys in white-
red garments, among them Peter Schaedl, accompany the ceremonies,
first standing, then kneeling, then again slowly and ceremoniously
striding. The incense mixes with the fragrant scent of the fir trees and
with the sweet aroma of the hot-house flowers and penetrates all the
senses. The music resounds from the large, far famous organ with
hovering chords.
Peter Schaedl is totally under the spell of this hour. He feels like he is
in the outer court of heaven. If the child Jesus would now come to him
smiling, take him by the hand and invite him to walk through heaven, to
a visit with dear God himself or even with the most blessed Mother Mary,
he would accept that not as a miracle, rather as a firm reality.
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The abbot must have observed the boy in this blessed dream state, for
the next day he says to him: “Remain as good as you were at Christmas
mass, like a true Christian child.”
The old prelate meets with the boy one more time and pays special
attention to him.
In the cloister there is a small chapel, of which many secretive things
are said. No stranger and none of the pupils are allowed to enter it, even
for the monks it is accessible only in the rarest cases. When guests come
from the royal house or from old noble families, then they may enter the
secretive room for a very short time.
No pupil knows whether ghosts haunt this chapel at night, whether
figures from ancient times appear. It is said that the abbot and Father
Odilo, called “the great silent one”, are the only people who spend much
time there. None of the pupils know the chapel's correct name. Most are
only briefly interested in it, and then it is forgotten again. Some of them
often call it the chapel of the ancestors, but most of the monks say prelate
chapel.
One day on his explorations, Peter winds up in this chapel, which is
otherwise locked, and which one can only open with a gold key, as is
told. He cannot actually see anything special in it, and yet there is
something in the room that certainly captivates him, so he sits down on
one of the empty benches and looks around silently. The walls are
decorated with ornaments with delicate colors. In part, they are plant
imitations that flow into each other and are intertwined, in part there are
spirals or angular, simple figures. Between them there are wavy lines and
other simple decorations.
Peter cannot find any real meaning behind it, just like he still cannot
fully grasp many things in the pictures and on the tombs, but yet, he sees
something mysterious behind the things, and they simultaneously seem
self-evident to him.
On the arched dome ceiling of the chapel, the sun is portrayed with
many stars, but between them many crests and letters, of which Peter
does not know whether they are of Greek origin or are supposed to
represent German letters from the oldest times.
Peter still sits alone in the darkness of the old chapel when suddenly
the heavy door slowly opens and the cloister's abbot enters the shrine.
At first, the elderly man is startled and very surprised at the sight of the
boy, but he is not angry: “Go now to study, I want to pray here a little,
and tomorrow you come to me”, he says to the young pupil petrified with
terror and fear. The next day Peter is serious when he goes to the
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so strictly. The pious mother reinforces this feeling in him through her
letters. Once she wrote to the director: “And even if a thick-head is ever
so big and the boy still so fresh, seven to nine cloister years are still
mightier, especially if a boy is all on his own.”
Peter senses that it is pointless to continue to rebel against the
compulsion of the cloister. After all, he must again and again think that
he is a scoundrel, a sinner and villain. At each confession he must hear
it, in each religion class it is presented to the young seminary pupil, every
punishment is supposed to show him that he is a pitiful sinner, an
earthworm, who must do penance for his and his parents' sins.
From the start, Peter has asked a hundred times: “What is sin, how
have my parents sinned?”, but he has never much understood the
answers to that, and when he continued to ask, he had to memorize the
answers.
The ugliest things about the corruptibility of people and their vices
are presented to the boy daily, and in opposition to that the works of the
saints of the church radiate constantly in pictures and writings as shining
examples.
All pious doctrines and sayings, all punishments and acts of penance,
all prayers and religious events, the compulsion and the distress, the
severity and the bitterness of the last years have made the boy tired, he
is passive, indifferent toward his previous interests, and he has lost his
will.
Very gradually, the thickheaded romp capitulates to the world in
which he stands alone and abandoned since his father is no longer with
him. The fresh prince of the village becomes a quiet cloister pupil who
endeavors to fulfill the demands of the cloister seminary.
Peter himself does not notice that the monks now doctor him with
much mildness, kindness and with much wisdom in order to make him
even more submissive, even more pious.
Step by step, he becomes accustomed to learning even what he does
not like. The young seminary pupil applies his energy and drive for
action more and more to intellectual works. In his free time, he no longer
draws caricatures, also no longer writes any letters home, rather devotes
the time to learning Greek and Latin. He translates French lectures,
voluntarily learns the English and Italian languages, although he has no
special talent for it.
Since the older classes have permission to get up early, Peter is at the
wash basin already at 04:00 in order to then work.
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The pupil takes holy communion daily, and Sundays he attends mass
three times. Each day of the week he tells his beads or the way of the
cross, and each week he confesses his sins. With unstoppable zeal he
pounces on all means that are offered to him and that lead to the path to
piety and wisdom. Again and again, he is immersed in pious books, and
from time to time he takes holy oaths.
Peter Schaedl also renounces the last earthly joys solely to serve his
motto: “Pray and work”, that is what he seeks.
Through good works, work and prayer the boy gradually gets to the
Abitur examination. But his healthy freshness has given way to a
nervous, overworked appearance, his impertinence to softness and his
natural faith to a forced piety. The exuberant joy has become a serious,
sedate, quiet adolescence.
“Over the course of his stay at our institute, Peter Schaedl has
developed into a young man of sedate, very solid character”, stands
written in the exit certificate upon leaving school. When Peter then
wants to travel home to his overjoyed mother during vacation, his
prefect says to him: “Mr. Schaedl, in the last years you were the most
diligent seminary pupil of the house. God will reward you for it one day.”
Peter Schaedl now feels like he is in a different world that is actually
not his own. He lets himself drift as if in a dream that leads far away from
reality.
His confessor and spiritual guide tells him that this is the kingdom of
mercy, in which those wander who walk upon God's tracks. Peter thanks
God daily for this mercy and counts himself happy that he has managed
to tame his unruly nature.
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Part Three
Holy faith in the Highest conveys invincible strength.
But sincere incorrect faith as well has already led many people and
families to many a righteous work.
1.
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the father is occupied with the children, the young theologian casts a shy
gaze at this girl, whom he finds as beautiful as few other girls. Then she
comes to him, shy and blushing, and offers him a gentle handshake, and
Peter believes he hears a very soft “good night” from her. This moment
completely confuses the student, he has never before experienced
anything similar. This evening takes a strange turn for him from the
moment when that young niece enters the room.
During the next few days Peter is completely absorbed with the
memory of that evening. As much as he resists with prayers and good
resolutions, he must again and again remember the girl's appearance. He
could not say how old this girl was, he also could not describe her face,
he only remembers that she had brown hair and wore a blue dress, and
that she was as slender as a deer.
He sees her once again. One evening when he is on the way to church,
she looks out the window of the master's house. When Peter looks up at
her, she suddenly disappears. Or had she not nodded slightly with her
head? —But perhaps that is more of the young man's hoping and wishing
than reality.
Full of yearning, the young theologian walks around the vicinity of
the manor evening after evening. But one day as he is walking in the
shadow under the old chestnut tree, he can see the faint outline of a girl
next to him in the darkness. Peter greets and his greeting is reciprocated.
He cannot make out much, but suddenly he again feels that strange,
warm and tender handshake, he feels the same hand that he felt that past
evening lying in his. Peter hardly dares to look at the girl. For a few short
seconds he feels very close to the young creature, when he suddenly feels
her full, fresh lips on his. But before he can think of anything, the figure
has again disappeared into the darkness.
Never before, as far back as Peter can remember, did he get a kiss. Not
from his parents, not from his siblings, from none of his relatives, let
alone from any girl. Peter is terribly ashamed, because he believes he has
done everything wrong and stupidly, and acted ridiculous during this
evening encounter. For days the young student torments himself with
this thought, and his only wish, his full yearning is to see the girl again
or perhaps even speak with her. But then the young priest in training is
gripped by fear. In the religious books he has read it, and he still
remembers the words of his priestly educators: “Through a single kiss
one can contract the worst diseases for one's whole life. A single kiss can
put a terrible curse on the whole body. But worse yet are the
consequences for the soul. Even for the common man, a kiss is a serious
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sin of unchastity and is punished with eternal damnation, but for a young
person who wants to devote himself to God's service, it is a discharge of
deep and harmful depravity.” The young theologian is confused and
unhappy the next few weeks. He never again sees the manor master's
niece, because she has journeyed away. He totally forgets all the beauty
and uniqueness of the evening event. Full of fear, he awaits the outbreak
of a bad disease and feels like a poor, wretched sinner burdened with a
great guilt. Even confession, absolution and penance can no longer free
him from this burden.
When Peter returns to the priest seminary at the beginning of the
semester, he can hardly still look his superiors in the face.
Under the influence of his education, the evening event becomes for
him a terrible sin, a perceived guilt that he carries with him, which he
tries to eradicate through tireless industriousness. At the university he
plunges into a jumble of lectures and exercises. Aside from his
theological and philological disciplines, he attends lectures about
psychology, pedagogy, art and the history of literature in order, after all,
to also become a well-educated and contemporary spiritual guide.
In the lectures on the history of literature, Peter meets many a nice
female student and gets into conversations with many a female singers
or actresses. And each time, he is terribly reminded of his first closer
encounter with a young girl.
He cannot comprehend that these girls are not supposed to be fully
valued human beings. He finds that dear God has equipped them with
many right attractive talents. But that, after all, is the devil in them, that
is what Peter has learned, and he remembers again and again that the
female creature brings terrible dangers.
When the seminary's regent then again and again admonishes:
“Gentlemen, you must get to the point where every woman is repellent
to you from the start”, Peter finds this admonishment self-evident. Peter
Schaedl knows that his mother and his two sisters are pious souls who
complacently love God and God's children through blessed mercy. Aside
from them, he also knows other pious women from whom a young
theologian has nothing to fear. But the majority of this gender is not to
be trusted, and beauty is from the start one of Satan's means to blind!
Based on this knowledge crammed into him, Peter wages a defense
struggle full of pride and fanaticism against all human thoughts and
feelings that want to arise in him from time to time.
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2.
What scholastic philosophy, what exegesis, morality and dogma all
cram into the young brain in the course of study cannot be fully digested
by the brain. Many doubts, much vagueness and many questions arise
again and again in the student's mind. But Peter now has no time to
ponder the questions more closely. Regulations demand from him the
taking of so many exams that the theology student must always only
strive to get good test grades and thereby assure himself a shining priest
career.
At the same time, he is also aware from religion class that any doubt
on the truth revealed by God, church and Bible is a serious offense and
nothing else than an evil temptation by the devil.
And finally, the spiritual guide, an elderly Jesuit Father, stresses that
all the doubts that try to arise during the years of study will fade away
by themselves and be solved in the fulfillment of the priest profession
and in the blessed work of priest life. Hence Peter Schaedl as well
victoriously casts off all the doubts that want to arise in him against the
often right hard to grasp doctrine of the church.
He believes he has finally won the battle with confession and
communion, with prayer and work and with the “weapons of the holy
spirit”, when the young man in him tries to stand up against the young
theologian.
Occasionally, admittedly, when he takes a walk in the park at dawn,
when he is especially entranced by a work of art, when he reads a
classical book or if he goes too far in conversations with others and
expresses the problems that interest him, then he is depressed that at the
age of twenty he piously walks around in the serious theology robe. Then
he is gripped by the yearning to be able to be free and proud, full of
energy and gaiety, and many times he thinks he must throw away the
rosary, prayer book and all theology in order to do something great. He
wants to plunge into a struggle and fight for victory and laurels.
3.
The spiritual guide in the priest seminary has often said that for every
young theologian the time comes when he strays from the church's
doctrine, when an inner emptiness arises within him and lack of faith
seizes him. Peter Schaedl has gradually come to feel so secure in his
profession that he believes he will certainly be spared from this
condition.
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comes from a noble family of the most ancient origin, and he enjoys
world fame as a scientist.
“Father, Sir, I cannot go through with the consecrations”, Peter
declares. “I no longer feel called upon for the priesthood. I cannot fully
agree with all the church doctrines inwardly. I feel unsuited, although I
cannot define it in detail.” This admission is terribly difficult for the
young theologian: he, who enjoys the unlimited trust of his superiors,
who has the place of honor among all theologians of the seminary, must
now cause such difficulties.”
But Peter has hardly spoken the words when the elder suddenly
kneels on the ground; he grips the hand of the doubting theologian,
kisses it and speaks: “My son, if you are not worthy to step to the altar,
then nobody is worthy. You are, after all, an angel! You can hear God's
voice in my voice and calmly and unconcerned accept the consecration.”
Peter is hot and cold at the same time. The world famous Jesuit Father,
before whom he has so often knelt in reverence at confession, this Jesuit
now kneels at his feet. Inexperienced Peter does not for a moment doubt
the words of the Jesuit, and all his reservations are smashed with one
blow, and he is ready to take the consecrations.
4.
Priest in training Schaedl devotes himself completely to the tasks of
the week of preparation. Mental drills, fasting and prayer fill them.
The exercise lectures at the start deal with the nature of God
Almighty.
They continue with the concept of God's son Christ, his suffering and
his resurrection.
The ugliness of sin and the wretchedness of man contrast sharply to
the divine greatness. The image of hell is shockingly portrayed in a
dramatic highpoint.
The church as the sole path out of this darkness is the motif that forms
the radiant introduction to the second part: the priest as medium
between God and man appears as the most sublime ideal of human effort.
Rights and duties of the priesthood form the conclusion of this ideal,
vivid and desired.
The whole huge building of the priest seminary is filled with serious
silence during the solemn week.
Several times a day all the theologians of the house pray for the
consecration candidates out of inner solidarity.
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The chorus begins to sing the Most Holy litany, and the candidates
throw themselves to the ground, stretched out long. They bury their
Dices in their hands and remain lying on the ground, in silent prayer,
while the litany resounds over them...Take pity upon us...take pity upon
us...hear us...request for us, request for us...spare us...save us...take pity
on us...
These cries for help penetrate into the hearts of the young priest
candidates like mighty blows.
Whatever bonds to homeland, family and parental home, to folk and
world were still left in them, now fall away from these men as they lie as
sinners on the ground in order to then again arise with burning
enthusiasm, to step before the bishop, and to receive from his hands the
insignia of their new dignity as God's representatives.
Months pass. For Peter Schaedl, they are like a dream. Then the priest
consecration itself comes. It is even more solemn than the higher
consecrations. And afterward they travel to the homeland for the
“primiz”, i.e. the celebration of the first sacred mass of a just consecrated
priest.
Peter would have gladly spent that day at the place of his childhood,
but his mother has been living for years already in another town. And
now that town claims the right to the festival.
Peter is received at the train station by the whole community. He
must quickly put on the priest robes in the waiting room, and then he
joins the triumphant procession through the town. First, little girls recite
poems and give him flowers. Right and left of the roads, the many various
church clubs have gathered with their banners and flags. Women's
federation and mother's club, young girls’ federation and male youth,
voluntary fire department, veterans’ association and even the gymnastics
club take pride in marching along in the procession. The brass band of
the town plays, and they proceed through arches of triumph and along
streets decorated with garlands, past houses festively decorated with
many flags to the church. There, the new priest must himself deliver a
short sermon after the address of greeting by the local priest. Then he
bestows sacred blessings for the first time, which counts a hundred-fold
to the pious people, coming from these freshly salved and newly
consecrated hands.
At home, however, mother and siblings kneel before their
“honorable” son and brother, and now, since the young priest is supposed
to bestow blessings on his mother, his hands tremble and his eyes
become moist. It seems almost impossible to him to bestow this blessing
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“Chaplain, sir, on the Bahnhofstrasse 78, on the fifth floor, a man lies
dying; he has not confessed for forty years; try your luck. He is an old
communist. But the wife will probably throw you out; I've already been
brushed off.” That is the first spiritual assignment that the young
chaplain gets from his superior.
Peter goes to work with apostolic zeal. He acquires the necessary
insignia, buys a bottle of wine and climbs—a prayer on his lips—with
pounding heart up the four stairs.
When the wife opens the door, she immediately says: “My husband
can die without a priest. We are not criminals and have nothing to fear.”
“I just wanted to ask about your husband's condition and drop off this
bottle of wine.”
“Well then, come in”, the wife replies to Peter's words. As the chaplain
converses with the sick man, he immediately declares that he will die in
five days; the doctor told him that and he feels it as well.
The young priest wants to ask about his earlier life, since he is new
in town.
The gravely ill man describes his simple life, his little joy, his work
and his mistakes, “Now you have made a little confession, after all”, the
young chaplain says when the man has finished his story. “Now we can
also formalize this confession.” The priest pulls his stole from this pocket,
puts it around his neck as a symbol of his power.
“For all I care, if it is so simple and if it's fun for you”, the sick man
consents.
The next day Chaplain Schaedl gives the dying man communion,
salves him with the sacrament of the rosary and is witness for the first
time to a human being silently and calmly departing this life. He
naturally counts this as a success of his priestly effectiveness.
For years, the young priest stands at a death bed two or three times a
week. Each of these fates, each death is a great hour for him.
The formulas of church acts recede behind the impression, the
experiences of the moment.
In the background of each of these dying people, Peter sees his father
struggle with death. Admittedly, he was not present, but he can
nonetheless form a precise picture of his father's death.
He knows that his father, weakened in body and soul by the long
illness, was greatly tormented in the last minutes of his life by his most
bitter enemy. The town priest had come back then and spoken to the
father about heaven, hell and final Judgement Day in order to then force
confession from the man.
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Peter knows that the last minutes were the most painful of his life for
his father, and that he had to endure them only because he was no longer
in full possession of his physical energies, which would have been
needed against this his blackmailer.
This memory is seen by the heart of the young chaplain so much each
time that he can never torment the dying people with confessions of sin
and he is not able to threaten them with hell and purgatory. He seeks to
help them with a few words, tells them about life in the beyond, of the
great, kind and understanding God and that nobody of good will needs
to tremble before death.
When then the life of the one has gone out, Peters also always knows
how to give comfort and good advice to the other members of the family,
and so he is often more generous toward the people than is allowed him
by formal church law.
After the completion of this and similar proceedings assigned to him,
Peter always feels an inner satisfaction. And he also feels this satisfaction
at his other work.
When he sits almost every Saturday from early afternoon until late'
in the evening in the confession booth, then he has the happy feeling that
he can assist human hearts tormented by doubt and distress with advice
and deed, and, above all, as God's representative, through absolution of
sins, lift from them the burden of sin, to reconcile them with God again,
and to be able to again open to them the path to heaven.
When the young chaplain stands at the pulpit and gradually notes
that the visitors of his sermons become ever more numerous, when he
stands and senses how people of every age and position listen to his
words full of reverence and are uplifted by his words, this gives his work
new impetus.
Daily mass forms the center of his priestly activity. Following church
doctrine with blind faith, each day the young chaplain remembers the
inconceivable miracle that he himself has the grace and the authority to
perform. Daily, he can, with a few words, transform a piece of bread, the
sacred wafer, and the little wine in his goblet into the genuine body and
the genuine blood of Christ. Christ, however, is genuine God. The
Almighty has hence put himself in the hands of the priest in order to save
as many people as possible from the eternal death owed to sin.
At each of these sacred acts, Peter Schaedl is filled with the sublime
awareness that at any hour of the day somewhere on the broad globe this
same sacred secret is celebrated by hundreds of Catholic priests. The
presentation of mass sacrifice around the globe hence takes place in an
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endless chain day after day and year after year and bonds the priests of
the whole world into a great totality, which —across the borders of
countries and folks—is based in the beyond. He senses the same powerful
energy and strength at eternal worship or at breviary prayer. He is happy
in the awareness that in each diocese, according to a precisely set plan,
every day and every night, in churches or in cloister chapels, in
uninterrupted mutual relief, the “Most Holy” is honored in the “displayed
monstrance” in the same “eternal worship”. He considers it more a work
of grace than a natural concentration of energies, if at breviary prayer
his feelings soar, because several hundred thousand priests pray the same
exact words in the same Latin language daily for two hours.
One of Peter's daily duties is also religion class at the secondary
school. The only difficulty that exists for the young chaplain in this work
appears to be giving instruction to the little ones. But he knows all the
better how to be a good teacher and guide to the older pupils in matters
of faith and life.
But the chaplain understands especially well how to deal with the
poor, the sick and everyone needing help. He has turned many parish
children—who were totally alienated form the church—into pious
church-goers again, he has again reconciled many people with the
church.
Despite all his work, Peter Schaedl has not neglected to think about
the health of his soul, to correct his own mistakes and to do penance for
his own sins.
Despite all mistakes and weaknesses, he can proudly maintain one
thing about himself, that in the first years of his priesthood he was a
priest with honest enthusiasm, honest intention and struggle, and that
he endeavored to live and act in accordance to the doctrine and law of
the Catholic Church.
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Part Four
lf a world falls into ruin, then that is not proof that it was worthless from
the start, rather only that it has fulfilled its world historical meaning in the
eternal providence plan of the creator.
To leave this broken world and to work along on the building of a new
world is not betrayal, rather obedience to God's law.
1.
Peter Schaedl has advanced swiftly in his church career in just a few
years. He has quickly advanced from big city chaplain to religion
teacher at a school of higher learning.
Years of zealous fulfillment of duty have passed. The days and years
of the first priestly enthusiasm have long faded and made way for
tenacious work. At the same time, the doubts, struggles and distress of
the student period have followed the young religion teacher into his
priest life.
Old puzzles pop up again, eternal questions of humanity move the
young priest always anew. The laws of life put their demands on Peter
Schaedl almost every day. But he endeavors incessantly to bring God's
natural laws into harmony with the doctrines of the church, he seeks to
stand in life and at the same time to be able to remain in the church, he
wants to be life-affirming and bound to the church in the same way.
But there is so much that could make him doubt the validity of his
profession and his world, but also so much that holds him firm and
reinforces him on his old path.
Peter Schaedl wants to undertake exercises for his emotional solidity
according to church regulations.
He has selected the Bavarian resort Altotting for this.
Heavy wooden crosses in all sizes lean on the hall of pillars that leads
around the chapel of grace. Men and women load them on their
shoulders in order to, praying with the rosary, hobble around the church
on their knees.
The young priest sees such a group of hand-worked countrywomen
at this drill. During his earlier, frequent pilgrimages he had never
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thought it at all strange. But this fleeting sight stays with him, and he
now sees and observes many things that he had not noticed earlier.
He imagines that these women, who now, bent under the burden of
the crosses, sob upward toward their Lord God, were blossoming,
upright, young German children of man not all that many years ago.
He hardly dares to imagine that he could ever see his mother and
sisters kneeling on the ground so miserably and pitifully.
After Peter Schaedl has been observing this sight for a long time, it
suddenly comes to him that he has never seen a priest among these cross-
bearers. And when he then thinks of himself, he knows that he would
never participate in this exercise.
The priest is shocked when the countrywomen tell him after
conclusion of the prayer: Their walk to Altotting took ten hours. Dry
bread, warm soup and a glass of beer was supposed to fortify them for
the return trip, which they wanted to start during the coming night. The
previous week, hail had destroyed the harvest of their small fields. That
is why they had paid for masses in Altotting with their meager savings
and done penance on their knees for their own sins and those of their
family members, and implored heaven to help them through the next
winter.
The drill lectures of the capuchin monk are no longer able to
extinguish this experience in the priest. Again and again, he sees with
his mental eye the humbled people crawling with the wooden cross. But
when on the second drill day he reads in the drill book by the founder of
the Jesuit Order: “I observe all the decay and ugliness of my body; I view
myself as a festering wound and a boil from which so many sins and evils
and such an ugly poison break out”, he finds a connection between these
subjugated women and the doctrines of the church.
When the Father then speaks of original sin, with whose curse all
human beings are burdened, of hell and its torments, the young priest
can no longer comprehend how a great God should find pleasure in so
debasing his most sublime creature, man, to subjugate and torment him
such as he experiences and feels during these days.
The church’s view of man as a pitiful, guilt-ridden earthworm has
totally collapsed within him due to his observations during these days.
Peter further reads in his drill book: “I see with the eyes of my power
of imagination the length, breadth, height and depth of hell, I see those
mighty blazes and the souls as if enclosed in burning bodies; I hear with
my ears the crying, howling and screaming; I smell with my sense of
smell the smoke, sulphur, garbage and decaying things; I taste with my
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sense of taste bitter things; I feel with my sense of touch how the flames
engulf and burn the souls.”
No, fear of hell should in the future no longer influence Peter's moral
action.
He wants to follow the voice of his conscience. He wants to fulfill
God's law, but he must inwardly reject the church's law.
At the bottom of his heart he feels that he has over the course of time
become a heretic; but his oath binds him to the church, and hence he
must outwardly subordinate himself to it and obey.
2.
Peter's oldest sister wants to marry. The very honorable brother is,
supposed to perform the marriage. The ceremony takes place in the
clean, clear church reminiscent of antiquity.
The brother speaks to the sister and her husband and to all the
relatives about spring and its joy, about summer and its oppressiveness
and heat, about life's autumn with its harvest and its fruits. Then he tells
them about God, who guides our path in sunshine and rain.
Peter himself is just as moved as his family members. He may
consecrate his sister for a path that he closed to himself. He senses how
beautiful it must be, if two people continue God's work of creation; mod
join in order to carry the bloodstream of our ancestors into the distant
future.
The young priest Schaedl speaks the Latin formulas and prayers of
the marriage ceremony. But suddenly, he stops in the middle of his words
in order to quickly read a few lines farther in the ritual: “... Sit amabilis
viro suo ut Rachel; sapiens ut Rebeca; longaeva et fidelus ut Sara...“ Peter
Schaedl's face turns red. He had already given the blessing for their life
bond to dozens of young, blossoming people, but only now, when he
reads the blessing formula in front of his sister, does he become
conscious of the terrible meaning of these words. “... she should be dear
to her husband, like Rachel; wise like Rebecca; long-lived and loyal like
Sara.” The three Old Testament Jewesses Rachel, Rebecca and Sarah are
supposed to be examples for his sister?
Peter remembers precisely the places in the Bible where these women
are discussed. Rachel, whom Isaac's son Jacob purchased for good money
aside from his other wives, and Rebecca as well as Sarah, who were both
presented by their husbands Isaac and Abraham as their sisters to other
men in the hope for great profit, these Jewesses are supposed to be an
ideal for every Catholic woman?
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and stars, about the laws that all nature obeys, and about the Almighty
who stands over everything.
It goes like that then ever more frequently for the young religion
teacher and pulpit speaker. He is supposed to talk about whatever
dogmatic doctrine of the church, and he no longer finds his own way
through theology.
He is thereby compelled either to be dishonest by presenting with
great pathos something in which he himself does not totally believe; or
he must return to the fundamental, basic truth of natural belief in God
and preach general truths that go beyond church and Bible.
In this condition, Peter feels more and more that within the great
circle of the church he represents a loner, a straying person.
Once he was close to coming to terms with all the existing facts. He
almost got to the point of giving up all pondering and researching. Once
he was ready to accept the church, the Bible, his profession and his
present life as unchangeable facts, simply to teach what was in the books,
to live life according to the guidelines of Catholic morality and to strike
to the ground all doubts as well as inner stirrings.
Peter knows how quickly he would have soon reconciled himself with
this condition, how he would have unnoticeably become satisfied and
peaceful, and how easy it would have been to be pious.
Back then, it was his young Catholic circle of friends and an essay
written by him against satiation and laziness which again and again
shook him out of his slackness and again pulled him into the inescapable
struggle.
For years, the young priest has been praying, day after day, Hebrew
psalms in the Latin language, stories and poems from Jewish literature,
wise judgement by Salomon, terrible and amazing legends from early
Christianity and the Middle Ages, between them invocations and
rogations. And this is how he is supposed to spend his whole hour, two
hours each day, with prayers with foreign content and in foreign
language?
According to the letters of the law, all that is required for the validity
of the breviary prayer is that it is prayed with the lips; inner participation
is not formally demanded. Many colleagues satisfy in this manner the
paragraphs of the law in one hour. But Peter Schaedl also knows of
conscientious priests who torment themselves daily for four or five hours
with the content of the breviary.
Day after day, the young priest Peter Schaedl prays for the spread of
the Catholic religion, for the conversion of the heathen, for the
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idea, for they miss no opportunity to issue blows, to prick and to throw
stones; everything is done in order to make the good cause bad. This
behavior by his colleagues, however, only makes the young priest ponder
even more deeply, drives him to become better acquainted with the ideas,
the leaders and the members of this movement.
What he here hears and sees, what he reads, has such a familiar tone
to it, seems to him so natural, self-evident and enlightening. Peter
believes he sees his own thoughts in all the thinking, and in everything
that he hears, feels and experiences, he thinks he feels a piece of himself,
of his life. A new ray of hope, a new goal has hereby come into Peter's
daily life and work, into his contemplation and striving. Now he believes
it must be an easy matter to inwardly refresh the church and to purify it
from the slag of its former politics, so that it can then form a union with
the new spirit and both can fight jointly for the final goal of the
Almighty.
Some time still passes with Peter genuinely believing in his view. But
then he must experience that the church does not want to concede its
claim to infiltration and domination of public life and does not want to
share it with anybody. The new movement, however, also raises the
claim to want to reform all of public life based on the new spirit.
5.
At his place of work, the searching young priest one day talks with a
fellow brother who has the reputation of special piety.
“You are a very pious priest”, he tells him in the course of the
conversation, “but you lack joy in the church.”
These words suffice for Peter Schaedl, he does not ask anything more,
these words alone make everything clear to him. It almost fills him with
inner defiance and bestows upon him a combative pride. So now he
prefers to be pious and to do without joy in the church.
From this point in time onward, Peter Schaedl examines all measures,
institutions and doctrines of the church with the sharpest criticism. Now
Peter closely examines everything in his daily life. Almost like lightning
bolts, ever new realizations reveal themselves to him. Everywhere he
encounters vagueness, discord, dishonesty, tears and breaches in the
world of the church.
More and more, the confession stool becomes his greatest torment.
He is deeply ashamed when gray-haired men confess their most hidden
thoughts, when married women tell him the most intimate things from
their marriage and uncorrupted youth constructs a sin from their natural
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Peter Schaedl's priest life is over. For fifteen years he has prepared
himself for this priesthood. For five years he has honestly tried to live it,
and the world in which he had lived for twenty years has finally
collapsed in ruin. What was so dear to him, what he had fought, suffered
and prayed for so long, what had become his most sacred ideal, what he
over the course of time put his whole heart into, what seemed sacred and
inviolable to him, that has now collapsed, that no longer exists in his life.
Now he is no longer God's representative, no longer venerable, rather
the quite ordinary Peter Schaedl.
Since the church's verdict has been issued, since the priest has been
expelled from the community of the sole grace-dispensing church, he is
suddenly seized by a strange feeling of loneliness. Shaken, Peter looks
behind the ruins of his former life and his ideals, and in front of him he
sees a void, a chaos, a darkness and terrible abandonment.
In the following period, Peter constantly wanders about, hunted and
pursued. Many of the fellow brothers and other pious Christians feel
obligated to mock and ridicule him from the pulpit and in letters as a
traitor or Judas. Numerous anonymous letters threaten him with
revenge, shame, distress and misery. Yes, even his imminent murder is
threatened. The end and the meaning of all these threats and defamation
is always the same: Peter Schaedl should himself get a rope and hang
himself on the next tree like Judas in order to escape an even worse death
and to fulfill his fate as quickly as possible.
For Peter's family members, his step is the most severe blow. They
cannot understand him. For them, he has now fallen to the devil forever.
Peter's former fellow brothers, the priests of the church, do their part in
order to portray the priest's fall as contemptibly as possible to the family
members. “It was probably a frivolous woman”, they declare, boasting.
The pious mother wishes her son were dead; she would prefer that over
experiencing this shame and to have to call a fallen priest her son. Day
and night, the woman cries her eyes red and does not know what to do.
She no longer ever dares to go onto the street, because she is ashamed to
show herself there. Peter Schaedl knows this, and it pains him more than
many other things.
Despised, cast off, hated and scorned, at most still pitied a little by the
people who were previously dear to him, who stood close to him, with
whom he had walked for 20 years of his life, now he stands before an
unknown fate and is compelled at first to look around for a little bread
and work. He knows that many a former priest must sell newspaper or
shoelaces on street corners, beg a living as travelling salesmen without
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any experience, spend their lives as miners and helpers in factories and
at construction sites. That will now become his fate as well.
7.
Day and night, Peter Schaedl is tormented by unrest and worry, and
they often drive him close to desperation. One cold winter night he
wanders, again starving and freezing, along the bank of the broad river.
He continues on the street that leads between the water and the train
tracks.
Off to the side, a few hours distant, lies the cloister that was supposed
to serve his recovery. Only mechanically does he still put one foot in
front of the other. Is not his whole life blown? Is he not on the wrong
track, from which there is no return to the right path? Would it not be
best to get rid of himself, now, since his whole life has become
meaningless?
Peter is gripped by a terrible temptation: To now plunge himself into
the sweeping river and leave everything behind him; or should he even
go over to the train tracks, perhaps that is a faster death?
Or should he penitently knock on the nearby cloister door and, in
silent peace, lead his young life to a perhaps no longer distant death? —
Peter Schaedl stops on the lonely road, for his reason and his heart do
not want to go on given all the confusion and desperation.
But then he gains clarity. Now that he stands at the lowest point in
his life, his conscience tells him quite clearly that he must not become
cowardly now. He would do the greatest favor for the world he has
escaped, if he would now give up the fight. He must dare the path into
the future, as unclear and vague as it may be. He feels that this path must
somewhere and someday lead into the new time, whose traces he
previously more surmised than recognized.
With the firm decision to fight on, his self-confidence also grows.
Meanwhile, Peter Schaedl has asked himself during the past weeks,
whether he is not indeed that unworthy, despicable Judas as such he has
been reviled and hated. But then he must again and again think about his
former fellow brothers, and he reflects again on how they put up with
their priesthood in reality.
8.
Peter Schaedl remembers his fellow brother Alois Pfandl, the upright
chaplain. Since the time when he, as a little Latin pupil in the cloister
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school, became acquainted with him, he has always remained equally dry
and calm, equally immobile and well-behaved. During his student period
he had to work hard, but thanks to his diligence he had it to the Abitur
examination. But in the theological college, his piety was valued more
highly than his test scores. Whatever he found in the learned theological
books, he always memorized without any deliberation and further
reflection. He always told himself: More intelligent people have written
that, it will be true, even if I do not understand it. So he did not have any
doubts in his faith. As a priest he can present all the church's doctrines
without second thought in sermons and classes to children and adults
full of conviction. Natural stirrings and feelings are not very strong in
him, so priestly chastity does not cause him any difficulties, and he feels
as little bound to folk and homeland as to any individual human being.
Peter Schaedl knows that his former fellow brother is an honest, pious,
good priest, but has little understanding for a struggle such as his own,
just as he cannot envy him for his peaceful priestly happiness.
Peter also remembers his former classmate Bonifaz Seldbauer, who in
school actually always possessed the most knowledge and who
simultaneously also combined his reason with artistic tendencies. He
composed flowery verses and played first violin in the school orchestra.
Among the singers, he was the soloist, and he received instruction from
the school's best piano teacher. He spent at least half of his free periods
in the house chapel in prayer, confessed weekly and took communion
every day.
But even the smallest Latin pupils talked mockingly about the
temptations of pious Seldbauer. One time the religion teacher said that if
one has such unchaste thoughts, one should say a silent prayer and
caress one's face and eyes with the hand, and then the temptations would
go away. Since then, one saw Seldbauer for weeks with a bitter
expression at every occasion, in games and eating, at prayer or study,
caressing his eyes with his hand, until the superiors finally became aware
due to the general laughter of the boys and enlightened the thirteen year
old boy.
The present city priest Bonifaz Seldbauer has not changed. The
human being within him is in a bitter struggle with the priest. He
wrestles day after day with doubts in faith arising from his reason, he
tortures himself in order to be able to honestly proclaim the truth from
the pulpit, and believes after every sermon again that he cannot face his
conscience.
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preaches chastity and secretly gives in to the vice, who gives the
appearance of humility, but is a tyrant in reality.
In his memory, Peter Schaedl has all his former fellow brothers pass
before him, and his thoughts remain on one of the last, Alfons Pfeil, his
roommate at the university.
He had never concerned himself much with religious problems and
dogmatic issues. And his piety was not exactly exemplary. For him, the
church was the great religious power to which he had prescribed and for
whose political and world-view goals he blindly and fanatically fought.
Personal ambition and action for his idea—as so often for cold, rational
people—flowed together in one current. So Alfons Pfeil became a skilled
and well-known diplomat of his church already at an early age, so did
many others become equally fanatical professors, editors, club leaders or
organizers in priest robes or even bishop.
All of them are somehow similar to these types, without one doing
them an injustice, all, with whom Peter Schaedl had once been a priest.
He certainly did not have to be ashamed before God and himself,
before a naturally thinking world and posterity, because he has broken
out of their ranks.
9.
There are still difficult months that Peter must overcome, months of
worry about himself and his family members, months of inner loneliness
and abandonment, of searching and wrestling. His health has been
severely impaired by the past years of emotional struggles. Now that the
inner decision been made and the emotional tensions have dissolved, the
body does not want to hold out. He is very ill for a long time.
The church leaves him to his distress.
After months, he finally receives an admonishment from the General
Vicar to repent.
He does not answer the letter.
Another admonishment follows with a reference to the punishment
of hell, to which he is condemned until Judgement Day. His former
superiors believe that he had meanwhile become tired enough due to
distress and misery and stands at the abyss so that he is again susceptible
to church influence.
But after his difficult struggle, Peter no longer has any fear of hell. A
new, serious letter from the church officials comes, in which he is
admonished to think of the tears of his mother and sisters.
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Peter thinks more intensely than at any other time, almost hourly,
about home and his mother; he suffers more from her tears than any
bishop can imagine.
Nonetheless, the church does not give up the attempt to win back the
apostate. It promises merciful forgiveness and reinstatement in his
profession, it offers the prospect of the most tempting positions, it takes
many other paths in order to re-conquer for itself the fallen away priest
in whom it had placed the greatest hope, or at last to neutralize him for
all time.
Among many other letters, which are more or less meaningless to the
young, former priest, he receives a letter from his former religion
teacher, who up until recently might have been able to still say and to
mean something important to him, but which—in these, his inwardly
most victorious days—only touch him as a human being.
The priest writes: “Dear Young Friend, I write you, trembling, from
my death bed. I was operated on a few days ago and my condition is
hopeless. According to the doctor's opinion, my life will end in a few
days. I hence already half stand in the beyond. Take my words as a
greeting from the other world. In the forty years of my work, you were
one of my very best pupils. Your knowledge, your piety and your sunny
nature made me expect for you a glorious career in the service of our
sacred mother, the church. My death hour, however, is now darkened,
because precisely you have taken a false path. You could transfigure my
death through your repentance. Standing with one foot in the grave, I
ask you for that.”
Peter Schaedl wants to forget the church. He has, admittedly, not yet
completely overcome it, but everything drives him away from it. He
wants to build a new world for himself and begin a new life.
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The laws of nature are the laws of God. To live according to them, is service
to God and highest obligation at the same time.
To celebrate the marriages of nature is the holiest celebration.
1.
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But now the church is so distant for him; he feels so free of it that he
no longer needs to hate it. He views it as a historical event.
For about a thousand years, the church had served broad circles of the
German folk as a substitute for the natural belief in God and played a
mediator role between people and their Lord God. Great Germans have
expressed their wisdom and their artistic energies in the church's
language of forms. Full of reverence, he observes the works created on
church commission; but at the same time, he feels the painful wounds
that the church has inflicted on the German folk during the long
centuries.
But Peter now sees a time dawning in which the priests must step
back behind the true God himself, in which the church must step into the
background from its previous position, because Germans again hear,
understand and speak God's voice, the voice of their blood, within
themselves.
Peter now sees in the church only a transitory tool of the creator that
has fulfilled its task and now, relieved by a new era, is silently set aside.
During this time Peter receives a letter from his mother that is filled
with a question that is constantly tormenting her: “Is it true, what they
say, that you want to erect a new faith and a new religion?”
He can clearly give his mother the liberating answer: “No, my heart
belongs to the one, old, indestructible belief in God, which every German
carries in his heart in one form or another. This God has set down his
laws in the laws of life. They are sacred to me and will obligate me for
my whole life.”
Peter Schaedl immerses himself ever deeper into these laws of life;
into those that were valid millennia ago and will be valid in millennia.
He meets those fighters for whom during his priesthood he could
summon up only a silent, deep admiration. But now he joins the ranks of
these men, who victoriously carry the difficult struggle into the foremost
ranks of the German folk, in order to then make it proud, free, happy and
mighty again before the whole world.
Peter finds the completion of his thoughts in the words of these
people; in their deeds he sees the most glorious fulfillment of his life.
Peter experiences that fathers and mothers are the most natural
mediums to God for their children, he notices that those men who are
the leaders of their folk simultaneously feel responsible for this folk
before God. Peter himself feels that the celebrations of the annual cycle
and the great historical days of remembrance are simultaneously hours
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of celebration close to God, and that the sunny festive places of people
are simultaneously their sacred sites.
It required a truly difficult and long path before Peter gained this
view. Whoever has walked for twenty years through the school of the
church, as priest or monk, carries the seal of that world burned deep into
body and soul, even if he has long since set aside cowl and tonsure.
At first, Peter had to fight against a wall of distrust. Often he thought
he would never be able to find his way back into the life of the folk; then
he believed that nature had totally expelled and cursed him, because he
had acted against its laws for so long.
When he frequently encountered, joyful, happy, laughing youth, he
was totally demoralized in view of the bitter feeling that in twenty years
so much had been destroyed for him. Because he took his profession so
sincerely and seriously, he had to fight against all naturalness. His
original tendencies had been stomped into the ground. He had to
renounce his fresh youthful nature in order to become an eternally
serious, reserved, young oldster always pouring over problems.
Bit by bit Peter has to find the way to his people. It is harder to him
than he had expected, and a lot of time passes before he finds it with all
its consequences. Once, the church was the closest and highest
institution for him, and he could not feel any other form of higher power,
could not have ties to any other community.
That was the first great thing that Peter had to learn, that God first
put him into his folk, that he shares the same blood with each member,
that the same talents and burdens bind him to this folk, and that he must
stand by it always.
He had to comprehend that the highest law is the obligation toward
the German folk, with which the chain of his ancestors binds him, and
that all moral responsibility results from it.
Within his priest activity, Peter had become acquainted with many
people who know nothing about an obligation, people who—totally
imprisoned in an oriental world—ignore all order, all laws, all human
honor, right and life.
The great time and its people however, now make it easy for him to
absorb the new basic laws into his affirmation of faith and of life. They
show him noble, straight, honest and kind people, who give him firm
support and a mighty certainly, so that he no longer needs to search for
evidence for the correctness of his path.
So the former Catholic priest Peter gradually builds a new world for
himself. He works and produces. It is a silent, little work, which he is
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allowed to perform somewhere in the life of his folk, hidden and yet
within the framework of the totality as a great work.
It is this work that step by step leads him back into real life and lets
him stride ever more straight and genuine upon the tracks of naturalness
and life joy.
Through this tenacious, silent work at his modest place, Peter again
becomes a living member of his folk.
He feels joyful, free and happy, happier than ever before in his life.
Unambiguous and clear, he again sees everything that is great, beautiful
and good in the world, and, above all, he feels so close to the working of
the great God.
2.
Like at the shore of the infinite sea, a rustling and surging goes
through the hundreds of thousands of people who stand under the night
sky on the great meadow, assembled in columns four abreast.
German forest surrounds the broad square, and on one side the
glistening of the great dike is visible between the trees, in which the
moon and the stars are reflected. In the distance one sees the lights of the
city. The front of the broad meadow is formed by a mighty pillared
building. Almost like a mighty altar, it juts gigantic into the dark sky.
Then the monumental building suddenly radiates blinding white in
shining light, and—above the great meadow and the people—a cathedral
is created by countless beams of light. After many hundreds of meters,
this canopy of cathedral light is united with the stars of the sky.
Devout silence lies over the broad field; hundreds of thousands hold
their breath. The symbols of the folk, symbols of faith and life, are carried
ahead. The blood red flags sweep like wandering blazes along the infinite
rows of people.
The hundreds of thousands sing a song. This song is simultaneously
jubilation, gratitude and prayer.
What the man of the folk says, that is what each one of the vast crowd
of people also wants to feel and say at this moment.
They stand there close together, peasants, workers, soldiers, officials,
scholars, men, women and children from all classes and of every age.
Every eye glistens with emotion, and each feels that since a folk has come
together again, no one stands alone anymore, rather each belongs to the
next, even if he does not know him. Each feels within himself the blood
current of his folk, for this short hour leads each of these people
millennia back and millennia forward.
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The Emergence of Priest Power
in Germany
Forof millennia the German tribes lived according to the laws God's order
creation showed them. They shaped their life in the close bond to
great and glorious nature, with the stars in the sky, with the endless sea
and the deep forests. Their greatest pride was to always act honestly
toward friends and foes, true to the hereditary nobility of their blood.
That a God ruled in and over the world was self-evident to our
ancestors. Nature, life and history showed them day by day the traces of
the divine. They felt especially close to the Almighty during the festivals
of the annual cycle, at summer and winter solstice, and spring and
autumn harvest, on the holidays of the clan, at happy events and in the
serious and difficult hours. The oldest clan members and the tribal chiefs
also represented the community entrusted to them before God.
The holy places of nature and of the festival grounds of the folk were
simultaneously also the places for their plain, natural religious service.
Long, formal prayers and unnatural cult ceremonies were alien to them.
They expressed their relationship with their Lord God with a few words
and natural symbols. They did not feel like slaves toward him, after all.
For them, he was much more their great, good friend. But they also knew
that they could not force his help with magical means, rather that they
could only then expect God's help, if they themselves concentrated all
their energy.
But much has slackened over the course of the millennia in this
natural life-structure of the Germanic world. Much that was clear has
become dull and much that was fresh has become rotten.
In the period of the fourth to the fourteenth century A.D.—through
the church—a foreign world penetrated our folk's life and permeated it
more and more with its spirit.
Under the influence of the New Testament doctrine of Jesus, the
church separated itself from Old Testament Jewry. The church began its
special life as a Jewish sect. Its apostles and priests originally still
celebrated the cult festivals with their believers in the synagogues in
harmony with the Jews.
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The Political Doctrine of
Denominationalism
AtGermany.
this time, two large churches and about 300 small sects exist in
All these denominations have their central in Rome,
Oxford, Boston or somewhere else outside the Reich.
All members of the respective denominations are brothers among
themselves, regardless, whether they are by race Jews, Negroes, Slavs or
Chinese. The race problem is solved for the church through baptism.
Through the water of baptism, the Jew and Negro can become brothers
with any church-faithful Nordic or other race person.
The person living totally by the laws of the order of creations feels
himself, on the other hand, obligated first of all to his folk comrades.
He knows that God has placed him in a specific folk, with which he
is, inwardly and outwardly, totally and unconditionally bound. The
natural, folkish world thereby clearly and distinctly contrasts the
churchly, universalistic, supra-governmental world. One can best
visualize the whole, unbridgeable chasm, which separates both these
views from each other, if one considers that for a believing Catholic a
syphilitic Negro child, if it has been baptized, must be worth much more
than a—racially in every way highly valuable—child, that has not had the
water of baptism poured over it.
For the church believers, the laws of the church are the highest norms
and mean the most sacred obligation for them. Any other law is only
valid insofar as it does not stand in contradiction to the laws of the
church. Any oath is only binding, if it can be reconciled with the
regulations of church morality.
The violation of state regulations can hence, from the standpoint of
the folkish state, be a crime, and from the standpoint of the church a
pleasing to God, yes, even a sacred obligation.
The preacher who agitates against state regulations from his pulpit,
the monks and nuns who damage the public wealth by millions through
their currency smuggling, feel themselves in their conscience completely
free of guilt. They have performed a service to the church through their
actions. And if they receive the punishment due them according to the
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state laws, they feel themselves as martyrs of the church and not as pests
of the folk.
According to the Reich concordat of July 20, 1933, the bishops swear
an oath of loyalty to the Reich before the representative of the state. At
the same time, they swear in the hand of the Pope's representative the
so-called bishop's oath, through which they obligate themselves to
promote and increase the Pope's power, and to the best of their ability to
persecute and combat all false doctrines, heretics, all who resist the
Pope's power.
They swear both oaths with a clear conscience, because the oath of
loyalty toward their folk only obligates them, after all, insofar as it does
not stand in contradiction to the oath of loyalty toward the Pope.
According to the church view, the official, the lawyer, the soldier and the
worker—in his whole bearing and his manner of action—is ultimately
bound to the regulations of his church morality. For the folkish person,
there can be only one obligation, which is placed upon him by the law of
his blood, the obligation toward his folk.
A Catholic customs official, for example, who is inwardly a convinced
follower of his doctrine, must come into an inner conflict, if he is
supposed to hinder a Catholic nun from currency smuggling. A police
official, who may be convinced of the doctrine of a Bible researcher, must
try to protect and cover the anti-state activity of this sect by every means.
Even state leadership itself is, according to the church view, bound to
church morality in all its measures.
A state leadership that does not totally submit to the doctrines of
Catholicism, the Protestant front of faith, the Adventists or some other
religious community, will be rejected and combatted by the
representatives of this church or sect.
So the Catholic Church fundamentally claims for itself the right to
depose heads of state who stand in opposition to the church, and down
to the present time it has also achieved this claim several times.
The churches and sects raise the claim that they must permeate and
fill with their spirit all spheres of public life, of economic, cultural and
political life. They raise a claim of totality in all spheres of life.
The churches and sects claim that ultimately the decision must belong
to them, which publications may be made public, which creations of art
are reconcilable with their moral bearing and are hence acceptable for
the public, which films and radio programs are desirable and allowed.
The most diverse church leaderships have hence employed their own
commissions and work groups for censorship of press and magazines, for
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work in film and radio programs, for the arts. In the same manner,
according to the church view, all spheres of science stand under the strict
censorship of the church hierarchy.
The churches raise the same claim in the economic sphere. Pope Leo
XIII., for example, and Pope Pius XI have issued explicit guidelines to the
faithful about the ordering of economic life from the Catholic perspective.
Ultimately, according to these demands, every economic order must be
somehow adapted to God's kingdom, which, according to view of the
respective priesthood, is realized in their church.
The churches demand that the youth in the schools are not only given
religious instructions in the church doctrines; they also demand that the
youth—in history class, homeland class, German class —should become
acquainted with German nature, German history and German homeland
from the Catholic, Evangelic, Baptist or whatever perspective.
From the standpoint of the folkish worldview, the whole shaping of
all life spheres should primarily consider the well-being of the folk, must
therefore above all be guided by the natural laws of blood and not by the
norms of a supra-governmental power.
The deep chasm between denominational life and folkish life then
expresses itself in the different view of the individual manifestations and
things of this life.
According to the church view, this life is a valley of woe from which
man is supposed to save himself in a better beyond.
Every Catholic priest, for example, must after every mass recite a
prayer, in which it is stated: “To you we cry, we miserable children of
Eve, to you we sob, mourning and crying in this valley of tears.”
The naturally thinking person is pleased with this life, stubbornly
clings tight to it and puts himself with both feet in this life. When he
wanders through God's wonderful creation and experiences the
mountains and forests and lakes of his homeland, he is proud of this
homeland, which is sacred ground to him. Then he stands silent full of
admiration before the omnipotence of the divine, then he is happy and
glad, and does not have the feeling that he strides through a valley of
woe.
Work, according to the church view, is a result of the original sin of
the first human beings, Adam and Eve. It weighs like a curse on the
human being.
For a German there can be nothing more beautiful and nothing more
great than to be allowed to employ the whole strength of his personality
in tenacious work for his family, his folk and his homeland. If he creates
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something great, then he is far from the thought that he has carried out
this work under the curse of original sin.
From the hereditary nobility of his blood, Nordic man comes to the
special emphasis of honor in his moral bearing. The concept of honor is
one of the most important aspects of life-formation. Therefore, the honor
of fellow man also means a lot to him. It is hence a basic trait of human
leadership among Nordic men that they likewise seek to make those
entrusted to their leadership proud, free, honor-conscious members of
the folk community.
The church world works in the exact opposite direction. With the help
of original sin and fear of hell, with the help of confession and sermon,
people are kept small and base and cowed by the priesthood. The feeling
is bred in people by every means that they are pitiful, inferior and guilt-
laden earthworms.
The contrast between the church and folkish world shows itself in a
similar manner in all spheres, in the attitude toward joy and life, in the
position on women, in the position on family and marriage, war and
peace etc.
The church claims the shaping of private and public life, in every area,
based on its bearing.
German man guides himself in everything according to the life-laws
given him by God. For him the divine is thereby a component of his life-
view. He advances no doctrines and dogmas about the beyond, because
nobody can pronounce sure facts about it. But he also contests the right
claimed by the church servants that they possess special jurisdiction and
special knowledge about the beyond. Hence there is no debate about
doctrines of the beyond for him. All the more clearly and distinct can he
replace the political-worldview doctrines of the church will his own
worldview corresponding to the laws of creation.
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of a jurisdiction derived from the Pope. To this first class of the churchly
government or administrative hierarchy belong the cardinals, legates,
primates, archbishops, apostolic vicars and prefects and apostolic
administrators.
The participants in the bishopric government authority are, above all,
the members of the bishopric hierarchy and cathedral capital, the
diocese-consultors, deans, priests, priest-vicars and church rectors.
For the direction and administration of the whole church, an
extensive administrative apparatus in the papal authority stands at the
Pope's side. The whole churchly power of the whole Catholic world
church is brought together here in the Vatican in the papal authority.
From here, the corresponding guidelines in all spheres of life are sent
out to the world church. The most important problems are processed in
twelve Vatican ministries, the so-called cardinal congregations.
The faith police or the Inquisition Ministry has the greatest
importance and the greatest prestige inside this churchly administration,
in churchly terminology called Holy Office.
All questions of church doctrine and moral issues belong to the
jurisdiction of this ministry.
One of the main tasks of these faith police is the churchly book
censorship (index) and the observation and punishment of heretics.
The papal consistorial congregation concerns itself with the
establishment and assignment of archbishoprics, free abbeys and
prelatures in those lands where the regular church organization has
already been carried out. At the same time, this church ministry is the
personnel department for the selection, checking and naming of the
bishops in those lands in which the bishop appointment must not be
negotiated with the respective government on the basis of concordat
agreements.
The entire supervision of all bishops of the Latin rite and the checking
of their five-year reports also fall to this central church office. In these
five-year reports the bishops must—following a detailed question
scheme—report about the entire life, about the economic situation, about
the general conditions of the folk life etc. in their bishoprics. They hence
provide the sovereign of a foreign power important material for the
evaluation of the general political conditions in their homeland.
The Vatican Eastern Ministry, the so-called oriental congregation,
concerns itself with the affairs of the oriental church communities united
with Rome. It is especially the task of this Eastern Department of the
Vatican to prepare the reunification of the separated eastern churches
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Like a great spider web, this church power sat over the folks and carefully
watched out so that no human being should escape its net.
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The Church’s Political Methods
of Conquest
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immediately that they can exploit this situation for themselves, that now
the people are especially receptive to their whispers.
In part, these community helpers and layman apostles behave state-
loyal and folk-bound. They participate in every assembly, never miss
roll-call, punctually pay their dues, are found in the foremost ranks at
every rally, but have their eyes and ears wide open only in order to learn
as much as possible, to experience as much as possible, in order to then
be able to inform their church. One often encounters people who are
correct to the extreme on the job, of whom one cannot prove the slightest
outward offense, but with whom one always has an unpleasant feeling,
of whom one senses that something is not right with them, that somehow
the inner bond with them is lacking.
But there are always people who constantly just complain and
criticize, who only see the negative and dark side everywhere, upon
whom an impression is only made by whatever is not completely in order,
whatever has not yet achieved its ideal condition. In every person and
every institution they see the dark side; only in the church do they see
light and goodness. These people seek to influence their fellow human
beings, that they should only entrust their children to the church,
because there alone the salvation of their soul and their moral purity is
assured. They seek to influence their work colleagues to only take their
vacation trips with church travel associations, that they pay their
charitable donations solely to church charitable institutions, that they
only read the church press, because one only finds the truth there. These
people try by all means to alienate their fellow human beings from the
folk community and lead them to the church. Everywhere, they are
collection points of decomposition, complaining and dissatisfaction, they
are pests against the folk.
Another political method of the church is the method of encirclement.
In domestic politics and in foreign affairs, the church has tried again and
again to throttle the German folk and encircle it with a block of
opponents. In the years 1919-1933, the church's political delegates tried
by every means, with the help of Marxists and democrats, to prevent the
German folk's folkish awakening and to suffocate the folkish forces in
the German folk. But especially since 1933, the church strives to work
with the most diverse other state enemies in order to form a unified block
against the National Socialist worldview.
The church works with Jewry. After all, due to its fundamental
position toward Jewry, a close bond between church and Jewry is clear
from the start. The founder of the Jesuit Order, Ignatius von Loyola,
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expressed this bond with these words: “I would consider myself lucky, if
I were a Jew, for I would then, after all, be a blood brother of Jesus Christ
and of the holy virgin Mary.”
Close personnel entanglements exist in all countries between Church
and Jewry. Important Jesuits and leading personalities of the church were
in the most diverse times pure-blood Jews, and even today priests and
pastors who are pure-blood Jews are active on both the Catholic and the
Evangelic side.
A specific publication for the hypothetical cooperation between
church and Jewry was founded in the years after 1933 under the
protectorate of Viennese Cardinal Innitzer, which has the pretty title
“The Fulfillment”, and whose circle of coworkers consists of Catholics,
Protestants and Jews. No less close is the economic cooperation between
church and Jewry. On both the Catholic and the Evangelical side, a
special assistance committee for needy non-Aryans was founded, and the
German and the American episcopates have united into an especially
close work association for the support of poor non-Aryans.
Freemasonry as well was used by the church for its political work.
Numerous influential pastors were—up to 1933—members of what-ever
Freemason lodges, numerous pastors were even high-level Free-masons.
But the Catholic Church created a communications line to Freemasonry
through the Congress of Aachen as well.
For the achievement of its political goals, the church does not shun
the coworkers of Marxism. The trial against the Dusseldorf Catholic
Chaplain Rossaint produced proof that in part the very closest
communication existed between Church organizations and Marxist
circles. Visa-versa, readiness for cooperation with the church in the
struggle against the folkish movement also revealed itself on the Marxist
side.
A unified front is often formed by the church emigrants and the other
Marxist or Jewish emigrants. The Protestant theology professor Barth,
the Catholic Jesuit priest-monk Friedrich Muckermann, the Catholic
emigrant Dietrich von Hildebrandt and the most diverse other church
emigrants have in recent years, in the vileness and depravity of their
agitation against Germany, in no way stood behind the worst Jewish filth.
The churches have managed to harness for their purposes even
mutually opposing political directions. They work with Marxist elements
in the same way as with reactionary and monarchist circles.
The church endeavors just as much for Germany's world-political
encirclement. It was one of the successes of Vatican diplomacy that the
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The Psychological Means of Human
Influence by the Priesthood
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opposed this natural cycle of celebrations with the artificial cycle of its
church year. Over the course of centuries it has managed to turn the
Christmas holiday and the Easter holiday, Lent and Advent, the up and
down of church holidays and the serious church times into the life
rhythm of the folk. Through this artificial life rhythm, an alien, largely
orient derived world is brought into the folk's life, the folk's life rhythm
is filled with oriental content.
As much as the church has subjugated the nation, as much as the
church seeks to impose the curse of original sin upon nature, just as
much does it seek, on the other hand, to also exploit peoples' invincible
joy in nature for its human influence.
Field crosses and forest chapels, valley processions and forest
religious services, herb blessing, horse blessing, cattle blessing, fire
consecration and flower decoration, all that ultimately only serves the
goal to lead people along this detour to the church's power and the
church's influence.
Another experience of psychology is that people are especially easy
to influence, if they are relaxed and excited by whatever great joy or
great suffering. At a marriage or baptism, the priest can get a lot across
to people at the baptism feast or the wedding feast, which he would
otherwise never manage. At a burial, he can extract from the deeply
moved family members many a promise about religious education of
children or funding of masses and similar things. When somebody has
become tired in a long illness, and his psychological and physical
strength is exhausted, it is often very easy for a tender nun, as a nurse,
to assert her psychological influence and to lead the ill person to the
church.
Another common human experience is that the drowning man grasps
at anything that could save him. This is also true of psychological
distresses. The priesthood hence often seeks to systematically bring
people into psychological conflicts and psychological distress in order to
make them dependent on them in this way.
The most valuable German youth is systematically ruined
psychologically in this manner. Hundreds of thousands of German
women and girls in confession are driven into conflicts in order to be
chained to the power hungry priesthood.
Over centuries of systematic influence, man has been inoculated with
a yearning for miracles and a belief in miracles. Many people no longer
rely on the natural forces of life and no longer trust in God's natural laws,
they always expect supernatural, extraordinary and miraculous
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interventions by the creator. This faith in miracles and this yearning for
miracles by people is systemically nurtured and again and again
stimulated anew in countless pilgrimage locations, in the honoring of
impossible relics, in the sale of rocks, medallions and other souvenirs
with allegedly miraculous powers; the people are in this way led again
and again to the church's sites of mercy.
Nordic man loves the heroic, loves struggle and resistance against an
opponent. This inner bearing is promoted by the church especially
among young people. The martyrdom disposition and the heroic attitude
against the state—which is presented to them as opponent—is
systematically called forth. In sermons and religious services, at church
assemblies and pilgrimages, this martyrdom disposition is artificially
produced with intricate psychological skill, the heroic ideal of German
man is hence put on a false track.
Much unnaturalness, anti-naturalness and hence inferiority is
produced among diverse people by the churches through the fight
against the sterilization law, through celibacy, through hysterical
manifestations among stigmatics on the Catholic side as well as among
the most diverse sects. But people who are not self-aware, who
constantly live with feelings of inferiority, who always feel like pitiful,
guilt-laden earth worms, can be influenced especially easily.
Numerous other ways could be listed by which the churches, through
utilization of all the laws of psychology, seek to make people dependent
upon them. Religious secrets lose their wonderful veil, the means of
mercy, their supernatural power, if one reveals the priesthood's natural
means of human influence. They are the means that a sly politician or
skilled businessman masters and applies in his profession just like the
priest makes use of them to earn his bread and for his power politics.
What could otherwise appear to someone as miraculous means of divine
mercy and Providence, reveal themselves here as simply sly
psychological or demagogic tactics. The person who knows these means
is already protected against the dangers of this human influence by the
priesthood. God's laws, after all, then mean more to him than the trickery
of a skillful priesthood.
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The Political Battle Methods
of the Church
IAllnpower.
its doctrines and its methods, the church shows itself as a political
Political, however, are also the methods with which it works.
means that any other political power puts into the service of its
propaganda and in the service of its human conquest are also utilized by
the church for itself. The most important means for any external power
is the financial foundation. The church possesses the most varied sources
of income in abundance. In many countries it receives state support for
its activity, state funds. In many countries it can levy church taxes or
church dues among its faithful and thereby assure itself a large portion
of its material and personnel requirements from these means. The priests
also have certain sources of income from their cult acts, from burials and
marriages, from baptisms and sacraments, yes, often from the
performance of routine prayers.
Certain taxes are to be paid for the bestowal of churchly honors, titles
and offices. Fees are to be paid for granting whatever churchly
dispensations.
Aided from that, the churches have their own sources of income in
independent enterprises, which are admittedly usually camouflaged on
the outside. They are often stockholders in large enterprises, banks and
industrial concerns. Their schools and hospitals, their welfare institutes
and orphanages, are frequently only outwardly splendid works of
Christian charity, but in reality very often simultaneously quite splendid
sources of income. Often huge sums flow to the priesthood from their
own agricultural operations, breweries, liquor factories, electricity works,
industrial enterprises and artisan shops.
Countless believers donate substantial sums to the church at
assemblies. Many people leave inheritances and donations to the church.
The net of the church's sources of income is as intricate and diverse
as the net of the church's power system is intricate and dense.
Corresponding to its nature, one denominational organization possesses
more of this, and the other more of that funding possibility.
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The church very soon also integrated into the great apparatus of its
power the newest achievements of human researcher spirit. When film
technology was invented and had as a result the creation of film art, the
faithful were admittedly at first warned against the visit to movie
theaters in numerous shepherd's letters and sermons. Films were
branded as the devil's work. But the priesthood very soon recognized that
one could also very effectively use this work of Satan for the conquest of
the world.
Their own church film organizations, film production companies, film
loan enterprises, film theaters and film periodicals were created in order
to put this modern means of propaganda into the service of church work.
The priesthood also established its own radio transmitters, or leased
radio transmitters for special events, it has sought to influence radio
programs, organized church morning celebrations and striven to fill the
entirety of radio programs with its spirit.
The church has simply adopted all the other means of modern
propaganda as well. Mass demonstrations and choruses, huge marches
and rallies—the priesthood has copied all means of modern advertising
from, above all, the large mass movements of the present.
The priesthood stresses again and again the purely religious character
of its churches and sects. But it proves again and again that it cannot
bring its ideas to victory by purely religious means. It again and again
confirms the fact that it requires all political power in order to conquer
people and to assert its power position. It thereby again and again admits
the political character of its power.
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The so-called Religious means of the
Priestly Human Influence
Aside from all the political means of struggle that also stand at the
disposal of any other political power, the priesthood also possesses
quite special, so-called religious means for human influence. According
to church doctrine, man—as a result of original sin, or the influence of
demonic powers—is only conditionally educable and only partially
influenceable. In order to be able to nonetheless reach a goal in the
beyond, man hence requires so-called supernatural, religious means. The
natural means of human influence do not suffice for the education to the
beyond, according to priestly doctrine.
All these religious means already work on the priests' faithful with
magical power from the start, because they see in the priest who employs
these means God's authorized representative and themselves ascribe to
these means supernatural, divine powers. The so-called religious means
of human influence are hence elevated for the priests' followers from the
common psychological sphere of effect into a magical, mystical sphere.
Among the religious means used in the same way among all
priesthoods is the sermon. It differs in several ways from the normal
propaganda and educational lectures of general public life. The sermon
is, firstly, usually held in the half-dark of cult rooms. It is as a rule ac-
companied by whatever cult acts and ceremonies. The priests of all
religions claim of themselves that in their sermons they proclaim God's
direct words. According to the corresponding churchly regulations, an
especially ingratiating tone should distinguish the sermons. The faithful
also do not receive the sermons with liveliness, with applause or
rejection, like common lectures, rather let the sermons flow over them
with reverence.
In their own theological discipline, in the Homiletik [the teaching of
the sermon and its history], the priests are thoroughly trained in the
technical requirements of the sermon. Through years of practice, they
are introduced to the mastery of this means of human influence. So the
sermon often becomes a very notable means of power for the church,
above all, among women. The figure of the preacher, his personal
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manner, his appearance and his acting abilities play a great role, as is
known from experience.
A means of churchly human influence employed with the sermon is
so-called religious class or catechism. All denominational groups
endeavor, for understandable reasons, to introduce the youth already at
the earliest age to the spirit of their churchly world. Given the folk-alien
nature of many religions and sects, the priests must usually limit
themselves to carrying out this religion class similarly to the sermons in
churches, other cult buildings or church-owned rooms. Occasionally,
larger religious communities have also managed to harness the whole
state power apparatus, the public schools and public education for the
special purposes of the priestly religion class. Since the taught content of
this denominational instruction does not grow out of natural faith in God,
rather consists of rigid church dogmas and so-called direct divine
revelations, the usual psychological laws for processing the material to
be learned do not apply to religion class. But the priests do indeed try,
usually by very natural means, to deepen and to simplify the
understanding of the so-called divine truths with vivid pictures,
figuration portrayals, punishments, rewards etc..
Extraordinary educational events as well are given a religious
framework and supplied with a religious character by the priesthood.
They serve to deepen church influence or to introduce certain people and
groups of people to a special task of the churchly power system. These
events carry designations such as silent hours, religious free-times, days
of reflection, exercises, folk missions and the like. They are organized for
children and adults, workers and academics, soldiers, officials and
teachers, businessmen and clerks, engaged couples and married people,
in short, for all social strata, ages and life conditions. Their visit is
frequently tied to special religious decorations, bestowing of mercy,
dispensations and promises of special divine assistance.
Especially effective means of human influence are the cult buildings
of the priesthood itself. They differ from the festival and celebration halls
of the natural communities. Mystical half-darkness, lavish pictorial and
figurative decoration with religious motifs, especially extensive use of
secretive and foreign symbols, incense scent and candlelight and much
more bestow a unique influence on the cult buildings of all churches and
sects. The denominational cult buildings receive their special stamp,
because according to the priesthood's doctrine God himself has taken up
residence in the cult buildings. A secretive awe hence passes from the
cult rooms to the people believing in the priests. If they seek strength or
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202
Priest Power
while sleeping, during illnesses etc., worn around neck or arm or sewed
into clothing. Religion-scientific collections and ethnological museums
often display a colorful jumble of such means of magic, good luck charms,
means of mercy and objects of reverence. These things often represent
very splendid financial sources of income on the side.
People who are somehow supposed to be consecrated in the service
of the divinity in a splendid manner are consecrated among the most
diverse priesthoods with anointments, complicated ceremonies and long
prayer formulas. Temple virgins and nuns, monks, priests and priestesses
of the most diverse grades and ranks are introduced into their hierarchy
through their own cult act. They thereby take on the character of
inviolable people, elevated from the folk, designated for something
higher, somehow belonging to the court of God himself. These
consecrations thereby again become a unique means for the elevation of
the priests' reputation and power.
Beyond that, there also exist among various churches numerous other,
so-called religious means. They may indeed take on different forms
among the various religions, but they display the same foundations
among all priest federations.
Finally, prayer should be mentioned. The natural God-believing man
thinks about the divinity out of his innermost on the most diverse
occasions in free, unforced form. Through the priesthood, prayers are
reshaped into rigid formulas, long prayer texts and litanies. With the
assistance of prayer bells, prayer belts and prayer mills, the same prayers
are recited often for hours. Long prayers are read off from certain
formula books. This manages to submerge the faithful again and again
into the church's world of ideas. This often manages to simultaneously
concentrate the whole psychological energy of millions of church-
faithful on the same prayer contents, so that millions of people are filled
with the same requests and wishes and inwardly and outwardly are
totally aimed along the same line. What significance this has for mass
influence is known by anybody who knows the laws of psychology. For
many people prayer is furthermore a means for inner calming, for release
from this life, for steering toward the beyond. But through the priesthood,
supernatural successes and mercy are attributed to prayer, but only the
natural, psychological effects are addressed. Prayer as well thereby
becomes, like all other so-called religious means, a magical instrument of
the priesthood and a means for their power politics. Aside from these
common religious means, in special cases extraordinary religious means
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as well are employed for human influence by the priest federations, such
as visions, stigmatizations and alleged miracles of the most diverse kind.
Many things that manifest themselves with these so-called religious
means of the priesthood can also be found among the basic elements of
natural faith in God. But the priests have expanded these basic religious
elements into an elaborate net of institutions, events, acts, ceremonies
etc. and misuse them as tools for their power. They have torn many
religious things from the natural sphere of the life laws and built them
into the artificial organism of their power system. Whoever wants to
know the priesthood's political means of power, must therefore not
bypass these so-called religious means of the priestly human influence.
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The Psychology of the Priesthood
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They experience the contradictions between the laws of life and the
norms of their church or sect. Life draws them to itself, and again and
again they seek to flee from life into their artificial, priestly world. From
their nature and their countenance one sees that they live in constant
conflict with themselves, that they are constantly tormented by conflicts,
that they are inwardly totally divided. They are unfortunate people, who
have become victims of their profession, because their faith in their
denominational doctrines was so great that they no longer found their
way back to life. Sometimes they seek to suffocate their psychological
conflicts through horrible bodily self-mutilations with lashings,
penitence belts, penitence shirts and other unnatural tools of torture.
Often they torture themselves for so long until they perish bodily and
psychologically. But the special tragedy of their inner bearing is that they
can no longer do otherwise than to push the people entrusted to them,
especially women and youths, into the same inner distortion, into the
same unnaturalness and opposition to nature. Millions of the most
valuable people have over the course of millennia been psychologically
and bodily ruined in this manner.
There are priests who see in their idea a great religious-political
power. They are honestly convinced that precisely the doctrine of their
church or sect is suited to bring happiness and peace to mankind. They
hence fight for this idea with fanaticism and enthusiasm. Their goal is to
shape all public life on the basis of this denominational spirit. They
openly admit that their goal is not a purely religious one, rather
encompasses all spheres of life. They feel themselves as teachers of the
politicians and rulers and as the God ordained directors of the fates of
individual people and of folks. The religious program usually does not
stand in the foreground with them, yes, it often recedes far behind the
claims of worldview and political power. These combative and active
priests are the great organizers and church rulers, the great writers and
journalists, the great diplomats and politicians of the churches. They are
often talented and pliable, schooled and well-educated, and familiar with
all life situations. They also know how to conduct diplomatic
negotiations, how to represent. They can act sovereign and
condescending or self-aware and reserved, just as the circumstances and
political necessities require. Various churches with an old tradition
possess their own educational system for the political new recruits of
their priesthood. Various churches have over the course of centuries
developed their own political tradition and own diplomatic style. One
often designates the Jesuits as the elite of priestly diplomacy. The course
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of world history in the last five millennia has often been substantially
influenced by this kind of priest. They belong to the most important
bearers of priest power.
There are other priests who come to the priesthood, because nature
has given them a soft, sentimental inclination and a petty vanity. They
feel drawn to the priesthood, because they like to parade around in long
coats and colorful clothing, because they take pleasure in the theatrical
ceremonies of many cult acts, in the scent of incense and flickering
candles, in mystic half-darkness and melodic church song. They are often
harmless natures who would like best to play around all day with their
liturgical ceremonies and show themselves to the folk in luxurious
garments. Their inner greatness is so tiny that this vanity and softness is
able to completely fill them. Their sermons, like their other religious
advice, drips with sentimentality and shallow babble. They have no
backbone and no strength inside. They are hence also only able to draw
people just as weak into their orbit.
There are still other priests who may have still joined their priesthood
with a certain idealism. But they have then—amid the dangers, which
precisely priesthood brings with it for weak character—slid down to
sensuousness and the slavery of the lowest instincts. The moral history
of all millennia reports—precisely of the priesthood—of especially base
behavior, repulsive perversions and cruelties. With effort they uphold
the reputation of their profession outwardly, but inside they are totally
given to the vice. Outwardly they preach of pretty virtues, but whoever
really comes close to them, they seek to drag into their own mud.
Occasionally, these totally fallen priests also vent their cruelty and base
instincts in horrible atrocities and inhuman harassment against their
underlings. They have a desire to torment and to pain their fellow human
beings and frequently select quite special victims for their passionate
cruelty. In the medieval witch trials this priestly sub-humanity became a
downright public plague. Hundreds of thousands of people, above all
women and girls, fell victim to these derailed priest instincts. Hundreds
of thousands of people were ruined psychologically by this brutality.
Another group of priests leads a frivolous double-life. It has become
clear to them that an unbridgeable chasm exists between their priesthood
and life. But they have accepted that they have landed in this profession.
Out of comfort they draw no consequences from their inner conflict,
rather simply seek to skip over this conflict. They preach full of
enthusiasm about whatever church doctrine and do not believe their
words themselves. They admonish their faithful to whatever virtue, but
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they themselves do not think of seeking this virtue. They warn their
community against whatever vice, but unscrupulously give in to this vice
themselves. They apply all religious means of mercy among the faithful,
but they themselves do not believe in the effectiveness of these means.
They have their own personal sphere, which stands in total opposition
to what they preach to their followers. They have not inwardly grown
together with their priesthood, they only wear it superficially in public,
just as they temporarily put on their robe for their cult acts. Their whole
life is trickery, a theater, a great deception. Their priesthood is usually
just a way to earn a living. Inner strength cannot flow from them.
There are also isolated so-called holy priests. They are filled with
whatever virtue and merge into this virtue. Many of them have chosen
for themselves the oath and meekness as ideal. They see their whole life
from this viewpoint. They endure all suffering, abuse and persecution
with a downright fanatical patience and devoted meekness. Any difficult
conflicts between priesthood and life cannot arise in them, because they
concentrate their whole life energy in the practice of meekness and
patience. They become one-sided in their so-called heroism, but they at
least have a set goal to which they are totally devoted. For many people,
this degree of virtue has something wonderful and attracting. They
become the enthusiastic followers of these so-called holy men. Many
priests also devote themselves with complete self-sacrifice to charity. In
the history of human charity, many priests of the most diverse churches
and sects have a great name. They have not concerned themselves with
dogma conflict and church discipline, they have simply devoted
themselves in a selfless manner to the soothing of distress in the most
diverse form. With glowing fanaticism, they have consumed themselves
in their works of charity. They were so filled with this charity that
whatever inner conflicts could no longer find space inside them. Whole
churches and sects have been nourished by the deeds of their idealists
for centuries, a single so-called holy priest had to again and again give
thousands of other priests their justification for existence.
Occasionally, one also encounters pronounced cynics among the
priesthood. They are usually priests whose former idealism was totally
destroyed by some very bitter experience, by some severe blow. They are
inwardly totally burned out and no longer capable of a new beginning.
They still perform their priestly functions, but they are inwardly no
longer touched in any way. They do not practice superficial trickery,
rather they systematically tear down with conscious cynicism any
positive values among everybody with whom they come into contact.
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With diabolical openness they destroy any idealism, and they seek to
drag everything that is good, beautiful and noble in the dirt. One can
seldom encounter greater cynics than among this kind of priest.
For another group of priests their profession is solely a trade or a
business going well. But in the process they are not always good
businessmen with an orderly business operation. In their church office
they frequently have disorganized records and no real business methods.
Their enterprise is often based on deception and swindle. They
themselves are deceitful swindlers. With miracle herbs and means of
magic they often ensnare a large following and earn huge sums with
their acts of magic. From the naiveness of their followers they often draw
tremendous profits. But like all swindlers, they know how to blind
externally and make a lasting impression on many people.
Many priests totally collapse under the conflicts which the doctrine
and the moral bearing of their church or sect bring with it. They do not
have the necessary physical energy in order to again recover from their
psychological collapse. Mechanically, they still perform the priestly
activities falling to them. Their energy no longer suffices for their own
activity, their own stirrings of the mind or of the soul. Physically as well,
they are usually hard hit by their psychological collapse. The little energy
still remaining for them they must use to laboriously care for their body.
In their community they often arouse compassion and with the
compassion a lot of sympathy as well. Therein then also lie the sole
possibilities for their priestly effectiveness. They are poor, unfortunate
people, who have completely fallen victim to their profession.
In all the centuries apostates have also existed among the priesthood.
They are priests who experienced the conflicts between priest power and
God's laws and then still possessed so much strength that they rebelled
against this priest power, to which they themselves belonged. They are
then immediately expelled from their communities as traitors and Judas
souls. They are outlawed and defamed by all conceivable means. The
priesthoods and their faithful seek to annihilate these apostates, to make
them morally impossible, to deliver them to distress and abandonment,
to brand them for their whole life as lepers.
A portion of these apostates consume themselves in senseless,
subjective, one-sidedly hateful, furious fighting against the priesthood.
Another portion of these apostates soon give up the fight and devote
themselves to a bourgeois profession, without—as a result of the years of
one-sided education to be priest—having gained the inner satisfaction
and inner freedom characteristic of natural human beings. In all times
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priests of all churches have also—after long inner fighting and changes—
again totally found their way back to the natural laws of life. The
outward return to the natural folk community went hand in hand with
their inner separation from the priest power. They have again journeyed
back to God's natural work of creation and have found their life joy in
living according to these natural laws of God and working with holy
enthusiasm for this order of creation.
One could still find many other small groups within the priesthood,
and one observes many overhangs from one group to another. But the
basic traits of these groups will be identified again and again among all
the priest powers of this world.
What is true of the priests, is also true in the same way of the
priestesses, of the monks and nuns. Certainly, the priest power loses a
large portion of its magic and majesty under an objective and sober
examination. The guilt for this certainly does not lie above all in the
method of observation, rather in the priesthood itself.
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Religious Service and Priesthood
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Whoever did not bow to the power of churches and sects was branded
as godless, as materialist or atheist and made despicable. Today the
natural laws of life have again made a breakthrough. Man by man and
folk by folk again find their way back to these eternally old and eternally
new laws of the order of creation. Free and happy, proud and devout, full
of confident certainty, more and more people affirm this very great
idealism, this natural belief in God, this honest religious bearing.
212
Source Literature
Of the extensive literature used, only the most important publications are
named here.
The Emergence of Priest Power in Germany
Dr.B. Kummer, Midgards Untergang, 3. Aufl. 1937.
Dr. M. Ziegler, Illusion und Wirklichkeit, 1938.
Dr. Fr. Murawski, Die politischen Kirchen und ihre biblischen Urkun-den,
5. u. 6. Aufl. 1938.
Dr. Carl Mirbt, Quellen zur Geschichte des Papstums und des Romis-chen
Katholizismus, 5. Aufl. 1934.
Hugo Koch, Rosenberg und die Bibel 1935.
Wilhelm Kammeier, Dogmenchristentum und Geschichtsfaschung, 1938.
Dr. Seppelt, Papstgeschichte, 1938 (kath.).
Dr. Fr. Banner, Konige und Priester, 1939.
H. Wolf, Angewandte Kirchengeschichte.
The Political Doctrine of Denominationalism
Alfred Rosenberg, Der Mythus des XX. Jahrhunderts.
Alfred Rosenberg, Blut und Ehre.
Alfred Rosenberg, Gestaltung der Idee.
Buchberger, Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche, 1931 ff, (kath.).
Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart, 1927 ff. (prot. Kirchen-
lexikon).
Ernst Kaempfer, Der politische Katholizismus, 3. Aufl. 1938.
Rainer Volk, Die katholische Aktion in deutscher Sicht, 1937.
Kurt Eggers, Rom gegen Reich, 2. Aufl. 1936.
The Power System of Catholicism
Dr. E. Eichmann, Lehrbuch des Kirchenrechts, 4. Aufl. 1934 (kath.).
J. Sägmüller, Lehrbuch des kathol. Kirchenrechts, 1925 ff. (kath.).
Staatslexikon der Görres-Gesellschaft, 1926 ff. (kath.).
Dr. Erwin R. von Kienitz, Die Gestalt der Kirche, 1937 (kath.).
Adam, Das Wesen des Katholizismus, 7. Aufl. 1934 (kath.).
Franz Xaver Kother, Vom Geheimnis der Papstkirche, 2. Aufl. 1935 (kath.).
Josef Bernhart, Der Vatikan als Thron der Welt.
The Church's Political Methods of Conquest
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214