Dean G. Stroud
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Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
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published
2013
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5 editions
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“We have Gideon because we don't want always to be speaking of our faith in abstract, otherworldly, irrreal, or general terms, to which people may be glad to listen but don't really take note of; because it is good once in a while actually to see faith in action, not just hear what it should be like, but see how it just happens in the midst of someone's life, in the story of a human being. Only here does faith become, for everyone, not just a children's game, but rather something highly dangerous, even terrifying. Here a person is being treated without considerations or conditions or allowances; he has to bow to what is being asked, or he will be broken. This is why the image of a person of faith is so often that of someone who is not beautiful in human terms, not a harmonious picture, but rather that of someone who has been torn to shreds. The picture of someone who has learned to have faith has the peculiar quality of always pointing away from the person's own self, toward the One in whose power, in whose captivity and bondage he or she is. So we have Gideon, because his story is a story of God glorified, of the human being humbled.”
― Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
― Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
“Gideon conquers, the church conquers, we conquer, because faith conquers. But the victory belongs not to Gideon, the church, or ourselves, but to God. And God's victory means our defeat, our humiliation; it means God's derision and wrath at all human pretensions of might, at humans puffing themselves up and thinking they are somebodies themselves. It means the world and its shouting is silenced, that all our ideas and plans are frustrated; it means the cross. The cross over the world -- that means that human beings, even the most noble, go down to dust whether it suits them or not, and with them all the gods and idols and lords of this world. The cross of Jesus Christ --that means God's bitter mockery of all human grandeur and God's bitter suffering in all human misery, God's lordship over all the world.”
― Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
― Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
“Klemperer’s insight that Nazi speech dealt in superlatives. Hence, Hitler was the “smartest” leader of the “bravest” people of the “purest” blood, and Germany was the “greatest country” and “most glorious” of nations in the most “heroic” of wars and struggles against the “worst” of enemies in the “most dangerous” of times.”
― Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
― Preaching in Hitler's Shadow: Sermons of Resistance in the Third Reich
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