Hitler took the jews out of political power, and sent them to camps.
Jesus said he came for good of the jews and not the gentiles, who he referred to as dogs who should recognize the jews as their masters in exchange for scraps, he also promoted the destruction of the most advanced gentile society at the time, a society that had been gracious enough to support and protect both him and his followers.
He never removed a single jew from a position of power, talked about upholding jewish law, and talked up the pharisee until they rejected him as the Jewish messiah (it is on then that the "synagogue of satan" and "den of vipers" came out, and even then he talked about not being jewish as if it were an insult, insulting them by calling them posers).
Hos followers were all jewish, this was a requirement, as stated before, he explicitly rejected any gentile that wanted to be his disciple, except in the capacity as a lower class that served the jews.
Not to mention the generally Jewish stuff he said, like equating success with evil and poverty with goodness, promoting celibacy and antinatalism, breaking up the family unit, jewush supremacy and loxism, and so on.
Hitler was not a Christian, he claimed to be publicly, but he was already preparing to phase out the religion even before the second war started.
A Christian beleives in God and heaven, they talk about religion as being true, not just as being politically useful, Hitler was only concerned with Christianity in the terms of the political implications of endorsing or rejecting it, it was clear that he was aware that just publicly rejecting the religion immediately would make him lose valuable supporters, and that he saw it as an obstacle for the belief system he was planning on making dominant over Germany, his beleifs, which had centered around the German ethnicity (volk).
So what he had planned on was phasing Christianity out gradually over time, and we already saw the beginning of this process, eventually Christians would have been the next to be on the pointy end of his long knives.
His way of thinking and his actions were not those of a true believer in Christian concepts, but a politically minded person who thought of religion in purely practical terms, no Christian leader would talk about how much better it would be if his country had a more martial religion like Islam. Which is what Hitler had actually said.
In short, Jesus was not "based", and Hitler was not a fan of Christianity.
Mr H saw that satan had subverted christianity, jesus didnt live to see it, xcept in our hearts, hope both feel peace
Regarding calling gentiles dogs: To quote from Life Application Study Bible in reference to Matthew 15:24:
Jesus' words do not contradict the truth that God's message is for all people. After all, when Jesus said these words, He was in Gentile territory on a mission to Gentile people. He ministered to Gentiles on many other occasions also. Jesus was simply telling the woman that Jews were to have the first opportunity to accept Him as the Messiah because God wanted them to present the message of salvation to the rest of the world. Jesus was not rejecting the Gentile woman. He may have wanted to test her faith, or He may have wanted to use the situation as another opportunity to teach that faith is available to all people. Had she taken what He said as an insult, as it may sound to us today, her faith would have been damaged and her daughter would not have been healed. It is obvious that she understood His reference as nothing more than a metaphor. Much the same as we are referred to as sheep.
(post is archived)