I did simplify a lot, granted.
I guess it'd be more accurate to say that the Nazi party was based on totalitarianism and racial purity. Jews were not the only victims. Blacks and homosexuals were also targeted, as were political dissidents (especially communists).
... However, Jews were singled out, especially in the rhetoric. I think we agree that "antisemitism played a huge role".
I will stand by my statement that antisemitism is a direct result of Christianity. I already provided citations from the Bible, barely even going into the widespead constant persecution Jews have suffered in Christian states throughout history.
Yes, there have been places and situations where Christians didn't persecute Jews, especially in the present day. The persecution hasn't been literally constant.
It's true that there have been non-Christian groups who also persecuted Jews (mainly the other Abrahamic religion, Islam), so I was wrong to imply that antisemitism is *solely* a result of Christianity. It still does result, directly, from Christianity.
As for Nazi Germany being Christian... Well, it was, but it is admittedly complicated. More so than I realized. From what I'm reading, the "Positive Christianity" movement Hitler introduced included some really significant modifications to basic Christian doctrine. Like... it threw out the Old Testament, and tried to somehow make Jesus Aryan. Despite somehow being supposed to be compatible with existing Christianity. Sounds like the sort of doublethink one would expect under Nazi Germany.
So while it was still based on Christianity, and used antisemitic themes which existed in Christianity, it was hardly Christianity as we know it.
I didn't say anything to dishonor that hero, or any of the other heroes who risked everything to oppose the evil of the Third Reich. I said that the Catholic Church supported it, not that every bishop did.
But uh, I think I was wrong to say even that... It's something I've heard a lot, but I'm not actually seeing hardly any evidence of it. I mean, Pius XI did sign a treaty of sorts:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReichskonkordatWhich *diminished* the church's vocal criticism of the Nazi party... As in, the church (and Pius XI himself, I'm finding) was decidedly outspoken against the Nazi movement until this treaty was signed. The trade off seemed to be that clergy would stop opposing the Nazis politically, and the Nazis would... not kill them, basically. I can hardly blame the Catholic Church for this, and I apologize for spreading a misconception. Or at least, making an argument without properly researching it first.