Reinventing Protestant Germany: Religious Nationalists and the Contest for Post-Nazi Democracy

Book cover with a bold red background. The design features a large black-and-white illustration of a Gothic church steeple with a cross at the top, extending upward along the left side of the cover. The title appears in large black and white block letters at the top and center, with the author’s name in black at the bottom right.
Bloch, B. Reinventing Protestant Germany: Religious Nationalists and the Contest for Post-Nazi Democracy. Harvard University Press, 2025.

IRH Fellow:

Brandon Bloch (Resident Fellow, 2023–2024)

Synopsis:

Germany’s Protestant churches, longtime strongholds of nationalism and militarism, largely backed the Nazi dictatorship that took power in 1933. For many Protestant leaders, pastors, and activists, national and religious revival were one and the same. Even those who opposed the regime tended toward antidemocratic attitudes. By the 1950s, however, Church leaders in West Germany had repositioned themselves as prominent advocates for constitutional democracy and human rights.

Brandon Bloch reveals how this remarkable ideological shift came to pass, following the cohort of theologians, pastors, and lay intellectuals who spearheaded the postwar transformation of their church. Born around the turn of the twentieth century, these individuals came of age amid the turbulence of the Weimar Republic and were easily swayed to complicity with the Third Reich. They accommodated the state in hopes of protecting the Church’s independence from it, but they also embraced the Nazi regime’s antisemitic and anticommunist platform. After the war, under the pressures of Allied occupation, these Protestant intellectuals and their heirs creatively reimagined their tradition as a fount of democratic and humanitarian values. But while they campaigned for family law reform, conscientious objection to military service, and the protection of basic rights, they also promoted a narrative of Christian anti-Nazi resistance that whitewashed the Church’s complicity in dictatorship and genocide.

Examining the sources and limits of democratic transformation, Reinventing Protestant Germany sheds new light on the development of postwar European politics and the power of national myths.