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  1. Gottgläubig (с нем. — «верующий в бога», как движение — Gottgläubigkeit ) — в нацистской Германии официальное обозначение вероисповедания лиц, отказавшихся от членства в одной из христианских церквей, но сохраняющих при этом какие-либо религиозные верования от христианства до германского неоязычества, нехристианского теизма, деизма и пантеизма .

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GottgläubigGottgläubig - Wikipedia

    In Nazi Germany, Gottgläubig (literally: "believing in God") was a Nazi religious term for a form of non-denominationalism and deism practised by those German citizens who had officially left Christian churches but professed faith in some higher power or divine creator.

  3.  Gottgläubig (3,5 %)  Juden (0,4 %)  Andere Religionen (0,1 %)  Nichtreligiös (glaubenslos) (1,5 %) Die nationalsozialistischen Machthaber standen christlichen Überzeugungen meist kritisch und ablehnend gegenüber. Jedoch trat nur Rosenberg – als einziger NS-Politiker der ersten Garde – nach der Machtübernahme, am 15 ...

  4. Jan 16, 2023 · gottgläubig (strong nominative masculine singular gottgläubiger, comparative gottgläubiger, superlative am gottgläubigsten) believing in God, particularly being devout. 1799, Daniel Jenisch, Diogenes Laterne ‎ [1], Rein, →OCLC, page 251: Fichte, der gottgläubigste Philosoph in ganz Teutschland, (denn so zeigt er sich in seiner ...

  5. 1)You say that the term for atheists and irreligious people was banned by the Nazis but Wikipedia cites a source which claims 1.5% of Germans identified as irreligious on the 1939 census. Did they use a different, legal term?

  6. In Nazi Germany, gottgläubig (literally: "believing in God") was a Nazi religious term for a form of non-denominationalism practised by those Germans who had officially left Christian churches but professed faith in some higher power or divine creator.

  7. Jun 5, 2013 · With the breakdown in relations with the Protestant Church in 1937 came a reorientation in Nazi thinking. Whereas the party had previously welcomed the participation of Protestant pastors in the movement and counted church-friendly elements even among the party leadership, with the cancellation of church elections in 1937 emerged a new tenor in Nazi religious attitudes and relations between ...

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