The Thirties: Final thoughts
Common decency says we should not liken anything today to 1930’s Germany. In light of what has happened recently and what may lie ahead, maybe it would be wiser if we did.
01 AUGUST 2024 · 15:47 CET
As the allied leaders appeased Hitler in the later 1930s, Albert C. Grzesinksi (ACG) noted how this played into his hands.
“The peace of Munich is a complete victory for Hitler. The Munich pact replaces the Versailles Treaty. Germany has won the [First World] war after all. An unforgettable lesson has been taught to the whole world, namely that nothing can be expected from lawful agreement, arbitration and peaceful negotiations. All that matters is power and might. What you can grab by force and threat is yours by right. It is a lesson that will not be forgotten by the Germans within and without the Fatherland. It will continue to plague the world in years to come.” (p350-351)
The Allies simply needed to call Hitler’s bluff. However, the British and the French gave up on their treaty with Czechoslovakia and tried to pursue peace.
Hitler lacked the strength and public support needed to wage a new war. But sadly, his lies won him the extra time he needed.
“The great Swedish Chancellor Count Axel Oxenstjerna was right when he said to his son: ‘Don’t you know, my boy, with what little intelligence the world is run?’ Oxenstjerna’s words are as true today as they were 300 years ago.” (p354)
As ACG came to the end of his book, preparing for publication in 1939, he wrote:
Hitler lacked the strength and public support needed to wage a new war. But sadly, his lies won him the extra time he needed
“At the apex of the German pyramid stands a dictator drunk with success and surrounded by a horde of daring adventurers. He and they live in a world of their own. Germany, they believe and make others believe, has become the hub of the universe. . . . It is a sad commentary on our times that the forces of progress, suffering from a strange malady of inertia and moral paralysis, have permitted a dictatorship to bring limitless misery to millions of people who once were happy.” (p356)
It is pretty sobering to read the final pages, knowing all that was to follow in the subsequent six years of Nazi tyranny.
“I have no intention of defending that which can not be defended. I have testified in previous chapters to the all too many sins of omission committed by the democratic state, statesmen and national leaders, and their failure to take timely and energetic action against the enemies of democracy and progress. Yet to arrive at a conclusive answer one must not look around for individual scapegoats. It is necessary to realise the collective responsibility and the collective guilt of the German people; that collective guilt which can perhaps best be explained by the lack of political instinct and political common sense of the Germans.” (p360)
As we look at threats to society today, we could soon be writing the same thing of our nation, or of the west.
“If individual guilt and responsibility have to be apportioned, then certainly all those are guilty who allowed things to come to such a pass.” (p365)
ACG referred to Reich Chancellor Bruening in 1930 and others who made influential decisions with devastating consequences. But what about a broader view? What about the population, the foreign leaders, community influencers like the church leaders, etc.?
This is still true today . . . totalitarian, globalist takeover agendas are flagrant, and too many heads remain firmly buried in the sand
“The longer National Socialism rules in Germany, the greater becomes the danger of a new and all-devastating war. It is the sacred duty of all those within and without Germany to whom justice and law, humanity, democracy and peace are not matters of mere lip service, to co-operate in the fight for the preservation of mankind.” (p368).
So, to come full circle, common decency dictates that we should not liken anything today to 1930’s Germany. In light of what has happened in recent years and what may lie ahead of us, maybe it would be wiser if we did.
Peter Mead is mentor at Cor Deo and author of several books. He blogs at Biblical Preaching.
Published in: Evangelical Focus - Biblical Preaching - The Thirties: Final thoughts