I googled "Hitler's polling" and it hit on the August 1934 Referendum (the last free election), where Hitler won 90% of the vote. The leader of the Hitler-supporting "German Christians" Ludwig Müller commented that "true Christians" voted for Hitler "to defend our religion."
Whereas one of my favorite stories about Dietrich Bonhoeffer is from a year earlier in Sept 1933 when he and his buddies were nailing theological flyers on trees from the trunk of his father's car *in Wittenberg* when Ludwig Müller got elected.
Minor correction to the process behind the tweet above: I googled "Hitler approval rating" (Not "Hitler's polling") and it took me to: quora.com/What-were-Hitl… and that took me to the 1934 New York Times article.
Here is someone making the connection more explicitly.
Here is how Masha Gessen and Timothy Snyder recommend resisting an autocrat or tyrant. (Whereas Bonhoeffer recommends the Sermon on the Mount, which is Matthew 5-7, which has some similarities to what Gessen and Snyder say).
Conceivably a Christian could vote for a candidate because that candidate defends religious liberty. For example, last October, Alan Jacobs weighed that consideration in the case of Trump and found it an insufficient reason to vote for him. blog.ayjay.org/the-most-impor…
Winston Smith is correct that the referendum was certainly not "free" and fair.
"Leadership" is often an incoherent field of study. Often it's anecdotal. "Here's what I did to ... win the game ... make a lot of money ... win the war ... win an election."
But below I sketch a few conceptual foundations of Leadership and note their practical value. 👇
Properly, Leadership is a subdiscipline of Ethics (how to live well), which is a subdiscipline of Philosophy.
Within Christianity, Leadership is also properly a subdiscipline of Ethics (how to live well with the presupposition God has spoken in Scripture and in Jesus Christ), which is a subdiscipline of Theology.
Number of independent members of the board at Samaritan's Purse. 9 of 16 in 2020. They lost 3 independent members and added another family member since the previous year in 2019.
- 79% of Americans are comfortable with a female pastor, but only 39% of evangelicals.
- 72.8% of evangelicals are fine with a woman preaching on Sunday morning.
- 3% of evangelical congregations and 30% of mainline congregations have a female senior pastor.
See sources below.
According to a 2016 Barna survey,
79% of Americans would be comfortable with a female priest or pastor. barna.com/research/ameri…
But only 39% of evangelicals would be.
Only 13.5% of U.S. congregations in 2018-2019 had a female as the head or senior clergyperson.
Or slicing the data differently, only 7.4% of U.S. attendees attend a congregation with a female as the head or senior clergyperson.
Thread of comments on books from 2019-2021 on women and Christianity. They are all worth reading.
Books on: famous women leaders, practical support for women, biblical description, history of masculine militarism, bad sex in Christian marriages, and the history of patriarchy.
The Preacher's Wife: The Precarious Power of Evangelical Women Celebrities
October 1, 2019
by Kate Bowler @KatecBowler
History of prominent women leaders in American Christianity.
Better Together: How Women and Men Can Heal the Divide and Work Together to Transform the Future
February 11, 2020
by Danielle Strickland @djstrickland
These pieces are revealing. For them, Christianity is using any means necessary to rally people to make America more like 1980's white Christianity. It is not humbly reading the Bible together so as to learn how to act like Jesus.
They did in their youth read the Bible and became convinced about what it was saying to American culture. And now they are in a position of power to rally people to that. But did we stop reading the Bible afresh? Is Christian political coercion of non-Christians the right goal?
Is not the political witness of Christians primarily one of example, of love, of integrity, and sharing of the hope that there is a God who is bringing a kingdom of love? Yes, advocate in the public sphere for the common good. Be salt and light. But still act like Jesus!