God, Germany, and Britain in the Great War : a study in clerical nationalism

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God, Germany, and Britain in the Great War : a study in clerical nationalism

A.J. Hoover

Praeger, 1989

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Note

Bibliography: p. [139]-152

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

God, Germany, and Britain in the Great War compares the patriotic preaching of two major combatants in World War II--Germany and Great Britain. The core material for the study is the war sermons of the British and German clergy of 1914-1918, but the author also employs numerous speeches, books, addresses, pamphlets, and journal articles to support his arguments. As Hoover demonstrates, the Protestant churchmen played a significant role in the First World War as religion became a key ingredient in the war fever experienced on both sides. Religious historians as well as historians of World War I will find Hoover's study both enlightening and provocative reading. Hoover explores the attacks made by each nation's clergy on the enemy and analyzes the public's responses to these attacks. Based on his close readings of the sermons, Hoover shows that ministers from each nation repeatedly stressed the national flaws of the opponent, predicting that these flaws would have to be eradicated before peace could be restored. Both found religious justification for their participation in the war, Hoover notes, in the belief that the other nation had sinned in special ways. Each defended the just war theory, carrying the justification of the ancient thesis to new and, argues Hoover, possibly invalid heights. In his final chapter, Hoover offers a measured critique of Christian nationalism summarizing its dangers and identifying implications for the future.

Table of Contents

Preface The Guns and Sermons of August The Sins of Germany--According to Britain Roots of German Madness The Sins of Britain--According to Germany Responses Varieties of Christian Nationalism The Just War The End of the Great War Afterword: Abusing Religion Bibliography Index

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