Asking “Whether Soldiers, Too, Can Be Saved,” Martin Luther's 1526 treatise concluded resoundingly in the affirmative: “For the very fact that the sword has been instituted by God to punish the evil, protect the good, and preserve peace is powerful and sufficient proof that war and killing … have been instituted by God.”Footnote 1 Luther's contention, penned amid the confessional wars of the early Reformation, appeared equally true to German Protestant nationalists of the nineteenth century. Beginning during the Napoleonic occupations and extending beyond German unification in 1871, a chorus of pastors and lay intellectuals invoked the divine mission of the German nation in its struggle against foreign domination from without and Catholic subversion from within. The First World War radicalized church-based nationalism, with Protestant pastors emerging as early enthusiasts of the war and continuing to extol the promise of a divinely endowed victory long after the domestic mood soured. German defeat left the Protestant milieu unreconciled to the Weimar Republic, while churchgoing Protestants formed a key bloc of the Nazi electorate.Footnote 2 During the Second World War, as in the First, Protestant conscientious objection was almost nonexistent. Not only did millions of church members fight at the front, but 480 Protestant pastors served as Wehrmacht chaplains, witnessing genocidal warfare and providing solace to its perpetrators.Footnote 3
The years after 1945 saw a break with this heritage. During the controversy over rearmament that erupted with the founding of the West German state, the newly formed Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland (Protestant Church in Germany, EKD) launched a national campaign for the right of conscientious objection to military service. Following the introduction of military conscription in 1956, Protestant pastors and lay intellectuals advocated for an expansive reading of the right to conscientious objection enshrined in West Germany's Basic Law, opposing the narrow interpretation upheld by the governing Christian Democratic Union (CDU). Protestant pastors chaired the Central Office for the Rights and Protection of Conscientious Objectors during its first decade of operation, while the EKD's youth commission established a parallel advocacy center for conscientious objectors.Footnote 4 Even moderate church leaders who favored rearmament backed a far-reaching right of conscientious objection.
The Protestant campaign for conscientious objection marked a dramatic about-face in the post-Nazi era. Often early sympathizers with National Socialism, its leaders reinvented themselves as detractors of overreaching state authority in the Federal Republic. The Protestant Church, however, has remained underexplored in studies of West Germany's democratic reconstruction. Recent works that return religion to the foreground of the early Federal Republic focus on transformations of political Catholicism, especially the Catholic roots of the CDU.Footnote 5 Protestants who criticized the CDU agenda of rearmament and Western integration fit uneasily into this narrative. The smaller literature on postwar German Protestantism centers on the continuities of Protestant nationalism after 1945 rather than Protestant engagement in democratic politics.Footnote 6
While Protestants have remained at the margins, scholarship on West German democracy has undergone a sea change in the past decade. Challenging models of “liberalization” or “recivilization” that portrayed a rapid transition to democracy under Allied aegis, recent works have painted a more ambivalent picture of the postwar era.Footnote 7 In new interpretations, gradual shifts in values and emotional regimes, which laid the foundation for a democratic culture, coincided with widespread evasion of the Nazi past. Till van Rahden reinterprets democracy as a “form of life” that emerged haltingly through debates over the nature of authority and representation. Frank Biess has shown how West German democracy rested less on anti-Nazi consensus than on fears of nuclear annihilation, internal enemies, and authoritarian backsliding, which continually threatened to upend the facade of postwar stability. Such fears, as Monica Black illuminates in her study of postwar controversies around witchcraft and faith healing, penetrated to the very heart of local life.Footnote 8 The works of van Rahden, Biess, and Black illustrate the precarity of West German democracy, a conclusion confirmed by scholarship revealing the ongoing stigmatization of Black Germans, sexual minorities, and immigrants in the Federal Republic.Footnote 9
By examining the Protestant campaign for the right of conscientious objection, this article integrates the Protestant Church into new narratives of West German democratization. Like van Rahden's “clumsy democrats” and Black's “wonder doctors,” the campaign's protagonists bore ambiguous personal histories. Their struggle to reestablish a civil society on the ashes of Nazism underscores the fragility of early West German democracy. At the same time, this article suggests two revisions to the emergent picture of the postwar decades. First, it argues that postwar democratization rested not only on evasions, but on illusory narratives of the Nazi past. Protestant pastors and lay intellectuals who advocated for conscientious objectors did not simply conceal their checkered records under Nazism, but constructed distortive accounts of anti-Nazi resistance in order to assert a leading role in postwar reconstruction. Resistance narratives paradoxically fostered a reorientation toward democracy. By locating their campaign as a product of continuity rather than rupture with the recent past, Protestant activists could engage in democratic politics without repudiating longstanding nationalist ideologies.
Moreover, the Protestant campaign for the right of conscientious objection illustrates how West Germans repurposed anti-democratic symbols as a basis for democratic practice.Footnote 10 In accounting for their ostensible anti-Nazi opposition, the campaign's leaders reframed the idea of conscience (Gewissen), a category with deep theological roots, as a locus of freedom from political authority—at odds with the term's earlier connotation of loyalty to the state. Even as they retained the nationalist and anti-Catholic views long associated with conscience discourse in Protestant Germany, pastors and lay intellectuals deployed the term to advocate for the expansion of West Germans’ constitutional rights. The postwar debate about conscientious objection helped reconcile a nationalist milieu to democratic language and institutions, at the same time that it ensconced falsified narratives of the Nazi past in law and politics.
Following the Protestant campaign for the right of conscientious objection from theological tracts, periodicals, and church commissions to the press, parliament, and court system, this article shows how debates about conscience rights became central to the consolidation of West German democracy. The first section surveys Protestant discourses of conscience in the era of Imperial Germany and the world wars, demonstrating how conscience language was frequently deployed to support military service. I then trace how pastors and lay intellectuals after 1945 reframed the category of conscience around a narrative of anti-Nazi resistance, enabling a new defense of the right of conscientious objection. Although the initial Protestant campaign for conscientious objection reflected less democratic convictions than opposition to Cold War rearmament, the decision for rearmament in 1955 brought a shift. Forced to appeal to West Germany's democratic institutions for revisions to conscription policy, Protestant activists moved away from resistance language to define freedom of conscience as a bedrock value of the Federal Republic. Legal victories before the Federal Constitutional Court by the early 1960s encouraged the campaign's leaders to identify their church as the very source of West German democracy, while alienating a radical wing that questioned whether law alone sufficed to protect fundamental rights. Yet both sides in the 1960s Protestant debate about conscientious objection positioned themselves as defenders of democracy—a dramatic reversal from two decades prior.
Inwardness and Patriotism
Like other keywords of the modern political lexicon, whether democracy, nation, or human rights, the idea of conscience derives its potency from the ability to be mobilized behind disparate, often conflicting political agendas. In the postwar United States, Catholics cited the authority of conscience to oppose the Vietnam War and abortion rights in equal measure, while Evangelicals invoked conscience to defy non-discrimination laws and the separation of church and state.Footnote 11 The backdrop to the Protestant campaign for conscientious objection in West Germany was an iteration of conscience discourse with a long heritage in German-speaking Protestant theology, one that centered the Protestant subject's unmediated connection to God. Protestant conscience language stood in a paradoxical relationship to politics. Although its proponents claimed that judgments of conscience were distinct from—and superseded—political calculations, appeals to conscience necessarily raised political questions about the relationships among individual, church, and state.
The power of conscience discourse in postwar German Protestantism derived from a mythology of the Reformation that constructed Martin Luther as a crusader against church and state overreach alike. Luther famously defended his ninety-five theses before the Diet of Worms in “conscience bound to the word of God.” Yet for Luther, the conscience was hardly the basis for an individual right, let alone license to flout political authorities. Instead, Luther tied the judgment of conscience to the objective truths of the Bible—narrowing the definition of conscience from Scholastic sources, which obliged the individual to follow the dictates of conscience when the law remained unclear.Footnote 12
Only in the late eighteenth century, under the influence of Pietist revivalism and Enlightenment challenges to church authority, did Protestant thinkers redefine conscience around a language of interiority and subjectivity. For Immanuel Kant, the conscience figured as the source of universal moral laws derived through rational self-examination. The theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher, the progenitor of nineteenth-century liberal Protestantism, retained Kant's emphasis on the subjective sources of objective moral truths while rearticulating this tenet in a theological key. Conscience, for Schleiermacher, served as the “voice of God in the mind,” the locus of the “original divine revelation.”Footnote 13 Liberal theology's interiorization of conscience both reflected and enabled new forms of religiosity outside institutional churches. A mid-nineteenth-century male bourgeoisie that abandoned village-centric churches could reimagine its professional and political engagement as a form of service to God. Schleiermacher's definition of piety as a “feeling of utter dependence” formed the theological lodestar of what Lucian Hölscher has termed this “citizen's religion (Religion des Bürgers).”Footnote 14
By the 1860s, Protestant liberals could mobilize conscience language for nationalist purposes. The conscience, on this view, oriented the citizen toward the good of the divinely willed nation, beyond the contingencies of everyday politics. Even before German unification in 1871, liberal politicians contrasted Protestant freedom of conscience against Catholic subservience to clerical authority—a canard repeated by Protestant National Liberals in their bid to exclude Catholic institutions from public life during the Kulturkampf.Footnote 15 By the turn of the twentieth century, with Protestants ensconced as leaders in the civil service, universities, and professions, liberal as well as conservative Protestant writers celebrated the German state's harmonization of individual conscience and patriotic loyalty. In a 1909 address before the German Protestant Association, the liberal theologian Friedrich Naumann characterized the state as “the will of all and at the same time the will that extends to all.”Footnote 16 Naumann's conservative counterpart, the Lutheran theologian Reinhold Seeberg, similarly defined the state as an “organ of the highest moral ideals.” A “mature” political culture, according to Seeberg, valued not “freedom from the state” but “freedom within the state.”Footnote 17
In line with this nationalist orientation, Protestant pastors and intellectuals in Imperial Germany rarely questioned the male citizen's obligation of military service. The two kingdoms theology that guided Luther's own reflections on soldiering remained widespread: the Christian owed obedience to the state in the worldly sphere, while the gospel reigned only within the church as a precursor to the coming kingdom of God. But Protestant support for military service also reflected the presumed alignment between individual conscience and national duty. War did not violate the biblical commandment against murder, Seeberg wrote in 1911, because it transcended “the motive of personal egoism” to fulfill “the necessary conditions of life for the entire people.”Footnote 18 With the Catholic Church seeking to display its nationalist credentials after the Kulturkampf, the German Peace Society counted only 117 of 35,000 Protestant and Catholic clerics among its members before the First World War.Footnote 19
Militarist sympathies shaped Protestant reactions to the outbreak of war in 1914. Leading theologians, including Naumann and Seeberg, numbered among the signatories of the October 1914 appeal of German intellectuals defending Germany's invasion of Belgium.Footnote 20 In a 1916 address before the General German Christian Student Conference on “War and Conscience,” the Lutheran theologian Karl Heim invoked the prevailing discourse of conscience in support of the military effort. The Protestant was called by God to preserve “the life and health of the Volk”; the war was “not only a tragic necessity, but an order of God.”Footnote 21 Beyond theologians, Protestant pastors across Germany hailed the war as an opportunity to achieve the spiritual unity that had eluded Germans since 1871.Footnote 22 Protestant enthusiasm for the war fit with broader trends in World War I Germany. Whereas Britain, Canada, and the United States created tribunals that adjudicated claims to conscientious objection, Imperial Germany maintained no legal mechanism for the purpose.Footnote 23 With Mennonites’ widespread abandonment of pacifism following German unification, no major religious community opposed military service.Footnote 24 Even against this backdrop, one survey concludes, “No sector of the population was more ardent a supporter of the war than the German Protestant Church.”Footnote 25
Declining membership in the Protestant churches after 1918, a product of their “enormous loss of credibility” following German defeat, reinforced the dominance of conservative nationalism among pastors and lay churchgoers.Footnote 26 The discourse of conscience was folded into Protestant opposition against the Weimar Republic. The Berlin church historian Karl Holl unleashed a burst of energy in Luther scholarship with a 1921 essay defining Lutheranism as a “religion of conscience” in opposition to Enlightenment individualism. Luther's conscience, according to Holl, was the locus not of rights or freedoms but of God's claim on the person, subordinating self-love to service of neighbor and community.Footnote 27 Following Holl, a generation of Lutheran theologians described the ideal polity as a “community of conscience” organized around divinely ordained hierarchies of family, church, and state—a foil to the pluralist democracy of the Weimar Republic, where Protestants could no longer claim to represent the nation.Footnote 28
The rise of the Nazi dictatorship brought only limited shifts to the Protestant language of conscience. Longstanding nationalism and hostility to the Versailles settlement fostered widespread Protestant enthusiasm for Nazi rule. Even as church leaderships fragmented over Nazi efforts to take control of regional churches, pastors on all sides of the ensuing “church conflict” hastened to display their political reliability. Pastors and laypeople who opposed the insertion of Nazi racial dogma into church legislation established alternative seminaries, leadership councils, and declarations of faith outside the Nazi-dominated state churches, coalescing around the Confessing Church. The church opposition, however, insisted on the purely religious nature of its critique of Nazism, and most Confessing pastors retained nationalist politics.Footnote 29 While abandoning heady pronouncements about the alignment of conscience and state interests, Confessing Church statements continued to distinguish divine authority over conscience from state authority in the political realm. A 1936 announcement in the journal Junge Kirche typified this stance: The church could reconstitute itself in the “new political reality” so long as it separated “Christian conscience” from “political reason.”Footnote 30 In a report prepared for the 1937 international ecumenical conference at Oxford, Confessing Church leaders admonished Protestants to suffer passively when the state violated biblical precepts, while otherwise continuing to “obey the state according to God's will and be responsible for its well-being.”Footnote 31
During the Second World War, Protestant pastors and churchgoers again favored military service. In part, this was a matter of sheer self-preservation, after the military criminal code of August 1939 made conscientious objection a capital crime. Many of the men executed for the offense belonged to the Jehovah's Witnesses, which alone among Christian communities in Nazi Germany upheld a tradition of noncompliance to state authority.Footnote 32 But even Confessing Church pastors who would later advocate for conscientious objectors registered for military service out of a sense of national duty. The Confessing Church leader Martin Niemöller, a World War I submarine commander who voted for the Nazi Party in 1933, volunteered to resume his naval service from his Sachsenhausen cell after his imprisonment for denunciations of Nazi church policy.Footnote 33 The theologian Helmut Gollwitzer, who took over Niemöller's Berlin congregation following the senior pastor's imprisonment, later recalled that he had worn the Wehrmacht uniform “without any qualms of conscience, and not just out of weakness. No clear voice had encouraged me to take any other course.”Footnote 34 Confessing Church pastors also joined the military chaplaincy, using field sermons to frame the war on the eastern front as a Christian struggle against godless Communism.Footnote 35
Only as the certainty of German defeat came into view did small groups of devout Protestants invoke the language of conscience to deny the legitimacy of the Nazi regime. The 1943 memorandum of the Freiburg Circle, a network of conservative pastors and lay intellectuals who gathered covertly to plan for a post-Nazi constitution, listed as its first “demand” the “legally secured freedom of conscience, as much religious conscience as political convictions.”Footnote 36 Still, wartime appeals to conscience formed a basis less for resistance than for obscuring Protestants’ role under Nazism. By emphasizing violations of Christian conscience to the exclusion of genocide and mass atrocity, Protestant conservatives perpetuated the myth that Christians were the first and primary targets of Nazi aggression. The sole act of organized conservative resistance, the failed coup d’état of July 20, 1944, received no support from the churches and sought less to end Nazi terror than salvage the war against the Soviet Union.
Resistance and the Politics of Rearmament
Allied occupation transformed the calculus of Protestant politics. Whereas resistance against Nazism was a perilous task undertaken at the margins of institutional Protestantism, after 1945 resistance narratives provided access to privileges from occupation authorities: the restoration of religious education, return of confiscated church property, permission to levy the traditional church tax, and autonomy over clerical denazification. US and British occupation authorities, in particular, looked toward the churches as moral guides of Germany's reconstruction, relying on the assurances of Anglo-American church leaders with ties to their German counterparts.Footnote 37 With the founding of the West German state in May 1949, resistance claims retained political currency.
The language of conscience, remolded to fit the new political imperatives, featured centrally in postwar Protestant representations of the Nazi era. Accounts of anti-Nazi resistance accentuated one element of Protestant conscience discourse—its stress on cultivated interiority—while jettisoning the presumed alignment of conscience and state interests. According to a narrative that circulated through sermons, church periodicals, and petitions to occupation authorities, Nazi incursions had rent this traditional alignment apart, with the result that Protestants turned to conscience to disobey unjust authority. As early as 1946, the Freiburg Circle jurist Erik Wolf inaugurated a book series documenting the “struggle of the Confessing Church,” whose foreword conjured the movement's “voice of truth, of conscience, of responsibility” under Nazism.Footnote 38 Another Freiburg Circle veteran, the historian Gerhard Ritter, gave a series of lectures interpreting conscience as a source of responsible action in a sinful world.Footnote 39 Most ubiquitously, Martin Niemöller, lauded by American admirers for exemplifying the “right to live as our conscience dictates,” presented himself on tours abroad as an emblem of Christian resistance.Footnote 40
While concurring that conscience had motivated reflection and resistance during the Nazi era, political divisions among Protestants prompted disagreement over the meaning of this legacy. The majority of the executive council of the Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland (EKD), the new national church federation formed in August 1945, sought to reconstitute the traditional proximity between church and state in order to establish the church as a partner in the postwar struggle against Communism.Footnote 41 Led by the Württemberg bishop, Theophil Wurm, this conservative wing required a narrative of National Socialism that distanced a heritage of anti-Nazi resistance from the exigencies of the postwar era. The Lutheran theologian Walter Künneth, whose own writings of the early Nazi years had aimed at a Christian foundation for National Socialism, presented such an account in his 1947 The Great Decline. Chronicling the ostensible clash between Christianity and Nazism, Künneth extolled “God-given conscience” as the foundation of anti-Nazi resistance. At the same time, Künneth invoked the longstanding distinction between matters of conscience and ordinary political judgments. The true path of conscience demanded “a readiness for martyrdom,” the total abandonment of this-worldly concerns. By situating the “resistance of conscience” within the exceptional circumstances of an anti-Christian regime, Künneth simultaneously laid the ground for the postwar return of state authority.Footnote 42
Whereas the EKD's conservative mainstream treated the Nazi years as an aberration from the norm of obedience, a minority faction around the EKD Bruderrat (Brethren Council), the successor to the leadership council of the Confessing Church, called for a more critical confrontation with the statist past of German Protestantism. Representing the wing of the Confessing Church that had refused all cooperation with the official state churches, the organization's inaugural statement faulted Protestants for having “condoned and approved the development of absolute dictatorship.”Footnote 43 Yet far from repudiating Protestant nationalism, the Bruderrat represented an alternative strand, one that prioritized German unity over anti-Communism. Led disproportionately by Confessing Church pastors with ties to eastern Germany—including Martin Niemöller, who had presided over a Berlin parish, and the Silesian-born Hans Joachim Iwand—the Bruderrat favored a united, neutral Germany at a time when national division threatened to leave eastern Germany's Lutheran heartlands behind the Iron Curtain. Calling for the extension of wartime resistance to confront the Allied occupiers, the Bruderrat required an even more distorted account of its own faction. The Bielefeld pastor Wilhelm Niemöller, Martin Niemöller's brother and an early Nazi Party member, established an archive of the Confessing Church that centered its confrontations with pro-Nazi German Christians, setting the tone for postwar hagiographies. Wilhelm Niemöller's 1948 Struggle and Witness of the Confessing Church concluded that the organization should not “keep silent and die” but remain a “light to the world.”Footnote 44 The conservative nationalist Hans Joachim Iwand similarly enjoined Confessing Church veterans to retain their oppositional stance in West Germany. Iwand thereby elided the gap between religious and political resistance, and between Nazi and postwar conditions.Footnote 45
As a new Cold War order came into view, the question of conscientious objection would exacerbate Protestant controversy over the Nazi legacy. After four state governments introduced laws on conscientious objection—a symbolic act at a time when Allied forces had dismantled the German military—the Parliamentary Council that drafted West Germany's Basic Law took up the issue in late 1948.Footnote 46 While the liberal Theodor Heuss called for the statutory regulation of draft refusal on the Anglo-American model, delegates of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) proposed incorporating a right of conscientious objection in the new constitution. The SPD gained support for its position, however, by interpreting conscientious objection in a narrow sense, restricted to pacifist denominations that experienced persecution under Nazism. In light of the suffering of Jehovah's Witnesses, asked one SPD delegate, “Why should we stand behind England—why should we [not] be more ambitious here?”Footnote 47 Its incorporation into an article on religious freedom enabled conservative Christian Democrats to join in support of a right of conscientious objection. The final formulation, proposed by the CDU delegate Hermann von Mangoldt, was incorporated into the Basic Law as Article 4, Paragraph 3: “No person shall be compelled against his conscience to render military service involving the use of arms.”Footnote 48 The restrictive interpretation assumed by the Parliamentary Council proved useful to the first West German government under CDU Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, whose foreign policy prioritized a military alliance with the United States.
Although the EKD remained outside the constitutional debate, the controversy over West German rearmament that erupted soon after the promulgation of the Basic Law brought conscientious objection to the fore of Protestant politics. With the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950, which sparked fears of a Soviet invasion of West Germany, Protestant conservatives aligned with Adenauer's foreign policy of rearmament and Western integration.Footnote 49 Denying that conscientious objection represented a legitimate response to West German rearmament, conservatives continued to underscore the disjuncture between Nazi-era resistance and postwar military discipline. Walter Künneth again emerged as the leading proponent of this position. In an August 1950 memorandum for the EKD's Commission on Public Responsibility, Künneth dismissed the constitutional right of conscientious objection altogether by emphasizing the religious, apolitical nature of conscience. Following his account in The Great Decline, Künneth interpreted refusal of military service as an act of witness to the final redemption of the world. Because true conscientious objection demonstrated “readiness for martyrdom,” this act could not be regulated by law.Footnote 50
The EKD Bruderrat, by contrast, maintained the immediate relevance of anti-Nazi resistance for the Cold War present. With the onset of negotiations over West German defense in the summer of 1950, the Bruderrat positioned itself at the forefront of a national campaign against rearmament, opposing military service until the signing of an all-German peace treaty. The conflict came to a head in late August when the lay Protestant politician Gustav Heinemann, Adenauer's Interior Minister and the president of the EKD synod, tendered his resignation following the chancellor's disclosure of secret communications with US authorities.Footnote 51 In response to the revelations, Martin Niemöller and his Bruderrat allies published a pamphlet that deepened the polarization of the church and led Adenauer to take to the radio in defense of his policies. The pastors announced their refusal of “military service in the contemporary situation of Germany, without regard to whether or not this right remains secured in the constitution.”Footnote 52 If the right to conscientious objection were revoked, Niemöller warned in an open letter to Adenauer, “then we will again have to announce that one must obey God more than human beings.”Footnote 53 Heinemann reasoned similarly in defense of his dissent in the Bruderrat monthly Stimme der Gemeinde: “The experiences of the Third Reich made the question of the limits of obedience toward authority immediate for German Protestants.”Footnote 54
As much as Protestant supporters of rearmament, Niemöller and his circle distinguished matters of conscience from mere party politics. Bruderrat pastors diverged, however, by presenting German division itself as an issue of existential significance. Opponents of rearmament mobilized a theological conception of conscience toward their agenda. In the course of 1951, as the EKD chancellery established communications with West German security officials over the drafting of a conscription statute, Protestant critics took umbrage with government proposals to restrict conscientious objection to absolute pacifists who refused to fight in any war.Footnote 55 Instead, they called for the inclusion of selective conscientious objectors, who opposed fighting in a particular war—including a war between East and West Germany. Protestant supporters of selective objectors continued to define conscience as the immediate apprehension of a divine message, rather than obedience to a fixed norm or external authority. Individuals whose “moral personality” led them to oppose a civil war among Germans, Heinemann argued at an October 1951 conference of Protestant leaders and West German politicians, deserved the support of the Protestant Church: “It is unevangelical to bind the conscience of the individual to the decision of a community.”Footnote 56 The Nazi past continued to form the crucial reference point, as defenders of selective objection drew analogies to anti-Nazi resistance. According to the EKD administrator, Hansjürg Ranke, himself a former Nazi Party and SA member, “The status confessionis of the church during the rule of National Socialism … was always adopted only in the face of very concrete decisions of the state.”Footnote 57
The Protestant campaign for selective conscientious objection also rehearsed deep-rooted anti-Catholic tropes. Not only was the CDU dominated by a Catholic leadership, but the Vatican supported West German rearmament in response to the consolidation of Communist regimes across Eastern Europe. Beginning with the 1948 Christmas address of Pope Pius XII, official Catholic pronouncements permitted war in defense “against unjust aggression.”Footnote 58 West Germany's Fulda Bishops Conference, led by the Cologne Cardinal Josef Frings, concurred with the Vatican position in a statement of November 1950. Catholics, the bishops concluded, were obliged to perform military service in a just, defensive war, a determination that the church alone could make.Footnote 59 For Protestant detractors, the Vatican's just war doctrine reflected a Catholic tradition of subservience to abstract principles and clerical authority rather than the voice of conscience. His Catholic counterparts, Hansjürg Ranke quipped following a meeting of Protestant and Catholic representatives with West German defense officials, took a “reluctant” stance toward conscientious objection “after the Pope spoke out against [it] once.”Footnote 60 Martin Niemöller accused “so-called Protestant Academies” that provided a platform to opponents of conscientious objection of acting as “wholly Catholic Academies.”Footnote 61
Catholic discussions of military service across postwar Western Europe were in fact equally contentious, as both confessions confronted the legacies of World War II and the challenges of decolonization. With the outbreak of the Algerian War in 1954, a cohort of French Catholic priests announced their opposition to military service, some in dialogue with their Protestant counterparts.Footnote 62 In West Germany, the Catholic theologian and war veteran Bernhard Häring, whose experience of the eastern front led him to question doctrines of military obedience, delinked decisions of conscience from the tenets of natural law in his influential The Law of Christ.Footnote 63 Similar debates about conscience rights broke out among US Catholics following the reenactment of the draft in 1948.Footnote 64 By reducing the Catholic debate to the pronouncements of Pius XII and Cardinal Frings, Protestant commentators in West Germany invoked a timeworn opposition between Catholic obedience and Protestant freedom of conscience. In doing so, they reasserted their own claim to national leadership.
Democratizing Conscience
Early Protestant advocacy for conscientious objection rested less on principled support of democracy than longstanding objectives of national unity and confessional supremacy. Political developments of 1952, however, demanded a new strategy. On February 25, against staunch Social Democratic opposition, Adenauer's government concluded negotiations for a European Defense Community (EDC) that would incorporate a West German contingent into a common Western European military. Despite protests set off by Joseph Stalin's note proposing a neutral, demilitarized Germany, Adenauer forged ahead with the EDC treaty, signed in Paris on May 27.Footnote 65 As the prospect of reunification appeared ever more remote, Protestant critics of the West German government reframed conscientious objection as an alternative to, rather than expression of, resistance against the state—a means to accommodate individual dissent against the decision for rearmament. This approach required a new adaptation of conscience discourse, one that looked toward the democratic state as the protector of the inner freedom that Protestants had long associated with their confession. Although the campaign remained mired in nationalism and anti-Catholicism, pragmatic appeals to democratic values brought its leaders into alliance with institutions that boasted far more secure democratic credentials, reshaping their attitudes toward democracy itself.
Conscientious objection reemerged as a subject of national contention in July 1952, just weeks after the EDC signing ceremony. The cause was the distribution of leaflets by ten pastors in the Rhineland city of Duisburg inviting young men of conscription age to register as conscientious objectors with their local pastor's office, either as absolute pacifists or as selective objectors until the “enactment of a just, all-German peace treaty.” At one level, the controversy reenacted the fault lines that followed Martin Niemöller's statements in the fall of 1950. The Duisburg pastors were members of the Rhineland Kirchliche Bruderschaft (Church Brethren Society), the successor organization to the regional Confessing Church leadership council, and they backed Niemöller's stance against rearmament. The Communist press celebrated the pastors’ call for conscientious objection, while Bundestag President Hermann Ehlers, a Protestant delegate of the CDU, denounced the Duisburg pastors for inciting “resistance” against the Federal Republic.Footnote 66 Yet in a statement defending the action, sixty-five pastors affiliated with the Kirchliche Bruderschaft eschewed the language of resistance. Instead, the Rhineland pastors characterized the decision between military service and conscientious objection as one of Christian conscience, which “cannot be taken away from us by any political entity.”Footnote 67 Acknowledging the likelihood of conscription, they called for a new relationship between individual and state on the basis of a Protestant notion of conscience.
The former Confessing Church pastor and Wehrmacht soldier Helmut Gollwitzer played a critical role in translating the demands of the Rhineland Kirchliche Bruderschaft into a language of constitutional rights. Captured by the Red Army at the end of the war, Gollwitzer served as a prisoner of war in the Soviet Union until his repatriation to West Germany in December 1949. After taking a position in systematic theology at the University of Bonn, Gollwitzer renewed his Confessing Church contacts, including the circle around Martin Niemöller, Hans Joachim Iwand, and the Rhineland Kirchliche Bruderschaft. Gollwitzer was unique among Protestant opponents of rearmament, however, for his commitment to democracy, in large part the product of his Soviet experience. As Gollwitzer remarked in one of his first lectures upon returning to Germany, Christians in the West could continue to fight for personal and religious freedoms, an opportunity foreclosed in the East.Footnote 68
Gollwitzer's 1953 political manifesto The Christian Community in the Political World, published in the aftermath of the controversy over the Duisburg pastors, applied this view to the problem of conscientious objection. An ostensible legacy of anti-Nazi resistance remained central to Gollwitzer's framing of conscience. Protestant opposition to Nazism, Gollwitzer maintained, confirmed that decisions of conscience responded to concrete situations, not general norms. In contemplating the ethics of disobedience, the resistance hero Dietrich Bonhoeffer “sought to free the command to truthfulness from the rigidity of principles.”Footnote 69 Given this approach to conscience, the Protestant Church could sooner support selective conscientious objectors than absolute pacifists—the opposite of the proposed conscription statute. Yet in a democracy, law, rather than passive suffering or active resistance, became the mediating link between individual conscience and state authority. If the government continued to discount selective objectors, then “the church will have to intervene before the state to demand legal protection, because the state is not master over conscience.”Footnote 70
Gollwitzer's call for the expanded legal recognition of conscientious objectors gained wider traction following the federal elections of September 1953, which dealt a blow to the anti-rearmament movement. The neutralist All-German People's Party, founded by Gustav Heinemann following his departure from the CDU, failed to meet the 5 percent threshold for entry into the Bundestag, while the anti-rearmament SPD was unable to break out of its working-class base. Adenauer's CDU expanded its share of the vote to an unprecedented 45 percent, the result of a booming economy, and quickly ushered in the necessary constitutional amendments to authorize military conscription.Footnote 71 The results motivated Protestant critics of rearmament to move beyond sheer denunciation of government policy, fostering a rapprochement among factions of the church. In late 1953, the conservative-dominated EKD Council adopted a proposal by the most vociferous Protestant detractor of the CDU, Martin Niemöller, calling for clarification on the scope of the right of conscientious objection. Diverging from his earlier exhortations toward resistance, Niemöller instead recommended that the government immediately present young men with the opportunity to register as conscientious objectors, “fundamentally or under particular conditions.”Footnote 72 Even the most stalwart Protestant conservatives could recognize the validity of selective conscientious objection when framed as a matter of Protestant ethics. Ulrich Scheuner, a constitutional law professor at Bonn whose Nazi past included membership in the SA and a stint as a Wehrmacht lieutenant, emerged as an early defender of the CDU's position on conscription.Footnote 73 By 1954, however, Scheuner could cite Gollwitzer's The Christian Community in the Political World to argue that “There can also be cases of true concerns of conscience against service in a particular war.” Protestant communities, Scheuner noted, were less concerned than the Catholic Church with “objective truth and tradition” as the measure for decisions of conscience.Footnote 74
To be sure, calls for the expansion of conscience rights did not necessarily indicate a principled embrace of democracy. At a November 1954 meeting of the Rhineland Kirchliche Bruderschaft, after a French parliamentary vote against the EDC treaty catalyzed a renewed campaign against rearmament, Hans Joachim Iwand continued to speak a language of unabashed nationalism. Germany, Iwand declared, was “leaderless” (führerlos). Protestants faced a fight against two fronts, “East and West.”Footnote 75 But in the group's public statements, appeals to the democratic pretensions of the West German government held sway. The declaration that followed the November meeting, signed by more than 1,400 pastors, admonished that “the coming conscription legislation cannot restrict this basic right.”Footnote 76 A petition by a group of prominent church leaders and theologians to the Bundestag a month later, whose signatories included Gollwitzer, Iwand, Niemöller, and the Confessing Church pastor Heinz Kloppenburg, issued a similar appeal. “A free commonwealth that does not dispense with its moral grounding,” the petition pleaded, would become “impossible” if the state were to “defy such conflicts of conscience.”Footnote 77
The emergent consensus around conscientious objection enabled the EKD to present a unified front to the West German government as the anti-rearmament movement waned. In early February 1955, the French parliament approved West German entry into NATO under the threat of Britain's withdrawal of troops from the European continent. Following the Bundestag's ratification of a new round of Paris treaties in March, a majority of the EKD synod voted against Gustav Heinemann's reelection as president. Heinemann's ouster was a clear bid by conservatives to signal that the church no longer stood in the way of rearmament.Footnote 78 At the same time, however, the synod voted unanimously to form a commission seeking the widening of the right of conscientious objection in West Germany, as well as its introduction in the East. The commission members represented a broad political spectrum: the leader of the Rhineland Kirchliche Bruderschaft, Joachim Beckmann; the conservative jurist Ulrich Scheuner; the theologian Helmut Gollwitzer; the EKD liaison to the Bonn government and former Wehrmacht chaplain, Hermann Kunst; as well as representatives of both West and East German regional churches.Footnote 79
The commission's discussions made plain the shared understanding that had emerged through the preceding years of debate: freedom of conscience was both a Protestant tenet, recovered in a legacy of anti-Nazi resistance, and a foundation of democratic legitimacy. Members agreed that the Protestant teaching of conscience widened the scope of individual freedom and responsibility beyond Catholic doctrine. At its final meeting in November 1955, the commission determined to support Martin Niemöller's “evangelical” concept of conscience as “always conscience in actu,” against “the Catholic and moralist understanding.”Footnote 80 Moreover, the commission underscored that West German democracy was better suited than East German Communism to protecting conscientious objectors. Whereas the challenge in West Germany was to ensure that Article 4 of the Basic Law did not become a “false paragraph,” noted one commission member, the East German government had not addressed the issue at all.Footnote 81
The commission's concluding memorandum, approved by the EKD Council in December and distributed to both German governments, upheld these principles. Against “the widespread misunderstanding that the obligations of conscience lie only in bonds to unchanging principles,” the memorandum urged both German states to recognize selective conscientious objectors as well as absolute pacifists. Although the law required a universal standard applicable across religion and ideology, it should not exclude the “Protestant teaching.”Footnote 82 The memorandum's positive reception by Protestant leaders, from the peace activist Friedrich Siegmund-Schultze to the Lutheran bishop Hanns Lilje, indicated the appeal of this view across political lines in the church.Footnote 83
The legislative campaign that followed the memorandum's distribution further aligned the EKD's case for conscientious objection with struggles to expand West German democracy. Although the president of the East German Volkskammer refused to consider the EKD's petition to amend the East German constitution, the church diplomat Hermann Kunst was invited to represent the church at a June 1956 hearing before the Bundestag Defense Committee.Footnote 84 In response to the West German government's proposed conscription statute, which restricted conscientious objection to absolute pacifists, Kunst continued to marshal a narrative of Protestant resistance. Protestants’ support for selective objectors, Kunst asserted, followed from the 1934 Barmen Declaration of the Confessing Church, which refused to regard the state as “the single and totalitarian order of human life.” Rather than calling for the extension of resistance into the postwar era, however, Kunst sought to guarantee freedom of conscience through the expansion of a constitutional right. Although conscience might well set the individual against the expectations of government, “it is not good for a state when it does not respect the conscience of its citizens.”Footnote 85
Most consequentially, EKD advocacy before the Bundestag paved the way toward an unexpected partnership with the Social Democratic Party. In the wake of West Germany's NATO entry in May 1955, Social Democrats pivoted from opposition against rearmament to support for expanded conscientious objector rights, aligning with the Protestant Church. Moreover, a rising cohort of reformist party leaders, who sought to transform the SPD from a working-class Marxist party into a catch-all Volkspartei, aimed to overcome the historical adversity between the SPD and the churches as a critical means toward broadening the party's appeal.Footnote 86 This newfound alliance obscured a legacy of division, as Social Democrats who had experienced exile and imprisonment found themselves working alongside former Nazi Party members and Wehrmacht chaplains. Nevertheless, the defense of democracy adumbrated by the EKD, rooted in freedom of conscience rather than class-based economic demands, resonated with the goals of SPD reformers. At the third parliamentary reading of the conscription statute on July 6, 1956, the Protestant SPD delegates Adolf Arndt, Fritz Erler, and Ludwig Metzger cited the EKD memorandum as well as Hermann Kunst's address before the Bundestag Defense Committee to call for expanding the rights of selective objectors. Echoing the confessional tropes of the Protestant debate, Arndt warned that the government draft “aimed to replace the decision of conscience with doctrine,” at odds with Protestant principles.Footnote 87
The Protestant-SPD alliance did not succeed at the legislative level. After a debate that stretched into the early hours of the morning, the CDU-led coalition voted down a final SPD amendment to acknowledge selective objectors.Footnote 88 The conscription statute, which came into effect three weeks later, retained the government's original formulation. According to paragraph 25, only individuals who opposed “any use of weapons between states” could be recognized as conscientious objectors.Footnote 89 Protestant reactions were decidedly negative. The Confessing Church journal Junge Kirche as well as Ulrich Scheuner decried the law's inconsistencies with the Protestant position.Footnote 90 Despite its legislative failure, however, the EKD's parliamentary campaign marked a key shift in the Protestant politics of conscience. While continuing to cite anti-Nazi resistance as a source of moral legitimacy, Protestant church leaders, politicians, and lay intellectuals now rooted their arguments for conscience rights in the Basic Law.
From Resistance to Rights
Protestant advocacy before the West German Bundestag laid the groundwork for a far more successful legal campaign for conscience rights after the enactment of the conscription law. Conscientious objection remained a limited phenomenon in the first decade of conscription. An average of just four thousand men, less than 1 percent of West German conscripts, applied for conscientious objector status each year between 1957 and 1967. Predominately religious pacifists, 80 percent of the group had their claims recognized by local draft boards.Footnote 91 Nevertheless, Protestant jurists played critical roles in appealing negative decisions to local, regional, and federal courts.Footnote 92 Between 1956 and landmark decisions of 1960–1961, more than 270 appeals by conscientious objectors reached West Germany's Federal Constitutional Court, relying on a provision in the court's statute that enabled individual citizens to petition the court over violations of basic rights.Footnote 93 In petitions to the Federal Constitutional Court, Protestant SPD jurists including Adolf Arndt and Gustav Heinemann, who joined the Social Democrats following the demise of his All-German People's Party, mobilized a Protestant language of conscience toward the expansion of a basic right.Footnote 94 The resulting decisions embedded Protestant arguments for freedom of conscience in constitutional law, leading a growing cohort of Protestant intellectuals to identify their church with the origins of West German democracy itself.
The key architect of the legal campaign for conscientious objection was Adolf Arndt, who exemplified the reformist generation that assumed leadership of the SPD in the 1950s. Born to a middle-class family and educated in law during the 1920s, Arndt was forced from his position as a judge with the rise of Nazi dictatorship due to his father's Jewish heritage. He went on to defend trade unionists in court. Long a “believing Protestant,” Arndt established a close friendship with a Berlin Confessing Church pastor before his conscription into forced labor during the final year of the war. Arndt's decision to join the SPD in the fall of 1945 reflected the party's opening to the educated bourgeoisie, as well as his identification with its legacy of anti-Nazi opposition. Elected to the Bundestag from Hesse in 1949, Arndt quickly emerged as the SPD's leading jurist.Footnote 95 Arndt's postwar writings aimed at a theory of law that transcended religious and ideological divides, emphasizing the law's roots in common humanity and struggles for justice that bound together democratic citizens.Footnote 96 Nevertheless, Arndt forged active connections to the Protestant Church. He participated in early meetings of EKD and SPD representatives, and cited Protestant theologians to criticize Catholic calls for a return to natural law.Footnote 97 His universalism remained compatible with the longstanding pretension of Protestant intellectuals to speak on behalf of the nation as a whole.
Arndt's synthesis of Protestant and Social Democratic legal theories informed his petitions to the Federal Constitutional Court, filed over a period of four years following the start of conscription. Representing five university students who refused military service “only in a divided Germany,” one of them Martin Niemöller's son, Arndt drew liberally from both Protestant and Catholic sources in his petitions.Footnote 98 Not only did the EKD memorandum recognize selective conscientious objectors, Arndt noted in a petition of March 1957, but the standard work of Catholic moral theology acknowledged the individual's obligation to follow even an “errant conscience.”Footnote 99 Yet Arndt also rehearsed the confessional polemics advanced in the Protestant campaign. Citing a Catholic CDU parliamentarian, Arndt warned that the Catholic notion of “objectively correct conscience” impermissibly narrowed the Basic Law's right of conscientious objection.Footnote 100 Only an expansive recognition of conscientious objectors that encompassed the “much farther reaching doctrine of faith of the Protestant Church” would realize the meaning of the Basic Law.Footnote 101 Like Protestant nationalists a half-century earlier, Arndt invoked conscience as a mediating link between the individual and the political community—but rather than an obedient subject, the model citizen became an engaged critic.
Arndt's petitions to the Federal Constitutional Court also reflected the trope of Christian anti-Nazi resistance. Reiterating arguments advanced over the preceding years, Arndt called for a new relation between individual and state on the basis of an anti-Nazi legacy. The Basic Law's right of conscientious objection, he pleaded to the court, was “an answer to the crisis of conscience in the years of National Socialist tyranny and total war.” Even if the church could call on its members to “suffer in the fulfillment of its commands,” it did not follow that “the state is also authorized to require a believer to incur suffering … on account of his belief.” Arndt conjured an ecumenical history of resistance that went beyond hagiographies of the Confessing Church, citing the suffering of Jehovah's Witnesses as well as Catholic priests who had refused military service. Nevertheless, Arndt's petitions restated the myth of West German democracy's anti-Nazi origins, prominently articulated by his Protestant contemporaries.Footnote 102
The arguments of Arndt and other Protestant jurists resonated with West Germany's federal courts. During their first decade of practice, these courts sought to actualize their newfound power of judicial review over government legislation through an expansive basic rights jurisprudence.Footnote 103 In its first decision on conscientious objection, the Federal Administrative Court drew on the writings of Protestant jurists to rule in favor of a twenty-one-year-old locksmith who had belonged to his local Protestant youth association. Declaring himself an absolute objector to military service on the basis of his childhood experience of war, the petitioner had found his claim rejected by his local draft board for lack of adequate proof. In overturning the draft board's decision, the court followed Ulrich Scheuner to define conscience as “the most inward, and therefore not further justifiable experience” of the individual's “freedom and responsibility.” Because they could not require “unfulfillable demands of proof,” draft boards could rely only upon the “personal believability of the claimant,” favoring individual petitioners in conflicts with the state. The court cited Adolf Arndt to characterize the right of conscientious objection not as a “right of exception” but a “fundamental right” that placed conscientious objection “at least on the same level as the obligation of military service.” Finally, by defining conscience in expansive terms, the Federal Administrative Court extended conscientious objector status beyond religious pacifists. Political views, as well as religious or ethical convictions, could give rise to the “emotional considerations” characteristic of a decision of conscience.Footnote 104
The Federal Constitutional Court soon affirmed this position. In December 1960, the court ruled on the contested paragraph 25 of the conscription statute in a case involving a twenty-two-year-old selective objector, who refused “on grounds of conscience to serve in a war with weapons in a divided Germany.” Although the Federal Constitutional Court affirmed the conscription law's validity, it also accepted, following the precedent of the Federal Administrative Court, that decisions of conscience could reflect both political and religious views. The conscription statute acknowledged pacifists who “reject war itself in every historical situation.” However, the law neglected another category of individuals who opposed all military service: those whose decision of conscience was “driven by experiences or considerations that are valid only for the immediate historical-political situation, without needing to be valid for every time and for every war.” On the Federal Constitutional Court's reasoning, individuals who refused to fight in any war under the conditions of a divided Germany were also entitled to recognition as conscientious objectors. An April 1961 ruling addressing the petitions of forty-three conscientious objectors, including those represented by Arndt and Heinemann, upheld this decision. The court echoed Adolf Arndt in its determination to widen the scope of conscientious objector rights: the state's “protection of the free self-determination of the individual” also served as a “community-building value.”Footnote 105
Contesting Democracy
The federal court decisions of 1958–1961 marked the culmination of the Protestant debate about conscientious objection. No prominent voice advocated for the older view equating conscience with military duty. The very success of the legal campaign, however, exposed new fault lines. Protestant SPD politicians, including Adolf Arndt, Fritz Erler, and Gustav Heinemann, spearheaded the Bad Godesberg party program of November 1959, which announced the SPD's abandonment of Marxism and rapprochement with the churches. The Godesberg program's section on law, drafted by Arndt, repeated the language of Protestant petitions for conscientious objectors. The Basic Law's fundamental rights represented not merely individual liberties but rights that “co-found the state and build community.”Footnote 106 For Protestant SPD reformers, the Federal Constitutional Court rulings on conscientious objection vindicated the legalistic conception of democracy outlined in the Godesberg platform. Although the decisions did not go as far as Protestants would have liked, Heinemann opined in Junge Kirche, they marked a welcome expansion of West Germans’ democratic rights.Footnote 107
At the same time that Protestant SPD leaders celebrated the Federal Constitutional Court decisions, more radical Protestant activists insisted that the protection of democracy required citizens’ ongoing vigilance. Following the introduction of conscription in 1956, the Kirchliche Bruderschaften continued their advocacy against Cold War rearmament with a campaign against the NATO plan to station American nuclear missiles in West Germany. Although Adolf Arndt defended opposition to nuclear weapons as a valid basis for conscientious objection, the failure of the antinuclear campaign, and the SPD's subsequent acceptance of NATO integration, rent a cleft between the two factions.Footnote 108 The Evangelische Arbeitsgemeinschaft zur Betreuung der Kriegsdienstverweigerer (Protestant Committee for Assistance to Conscientious Objectors, EAK), a division of the EKD's youth commission formed in 1956, emerged as an outpost for pastors disaffected with the Godesberg turn. Going beyond the argument that political conditions could motivate a decision for conscientious objection, EAK pastors enjoined the state to create civilian service opportunities that promoted the aim of world peace.Footnote 109 Rather than praising the Federal Constitutional Court's expansion of conscientious objector rights, the left-wing Protestant press attacked the rulings for upholding the general obligation of conscription.Footnote 110
The split in the Protestant conscientious objector movement deepened in the mid-1960s amid the national debate about proposed constitutional amendments authorizing the suspension of basic rights during declared emergencies. First formulated by the CDU in the mid-1950s, emergency laws served as a seismograph for renewed conflict over state power and the Nazi past, as well as a catalyst for the nascent New Left. While contesting the incursions on parliamentary prerogatives in the original draft, the SPD proposed an alternative version of emergency laws that paved the way to the party's entry into a grand coalition government in 1966.Footnote 111 The SPD defense of emergency laws was rooted in a narrative of West German democracy that emerged in part through the legal campaign for conscientious objector rights. In the view of Protestant SPD jurists such as Arndt and Heinemann, the development of basic rights jurisprudence had secured the West German state's democratic bona fides. By guaranteeing the institutions of democracy against external attack and internal subversion, emergency laws would safeguard the “value system” of the Federal Republic.Footnote 112
The more radical strain of the Protestant campaign for conscientious objection, in contrast, became the seedbed of opposition against emergency laws, not least because a key provision involved conscription into civilian defense. Viewing emergency laws less as guarantees of democracy than as anti-democratic threats, the opposition movement again looked toward conscience as the ultimate source of resistance against unjust authority. A report of the national-level Association of Conscientious Objectors, led by the Confessing Church pastor Heinz Kloppenburg, warned against granting “a blank check to proclaim the total state.” If public opposition failed to prevent the passage of emergency laws, then “resistance against the civilian service law—similar to the right of conscientious objection—will be restricted to a small circle of citizens who are ready, at least for their own person, to bear the consequences of their conscience.”Footnote 113 At the 1966 Frankfurt Congress on the Emergency of Democracy, whose board included Helmut Gollwitzer, Heinz Kloppenburg, and Martin Niemöller, participants in a session on “Freedom of Conscience and the Right of Resistance” called for civil disobedience, political strikes, and refusal to participate in civilian defense if the emergency laws were enacted.Footnote 114
Still, the division of the Protestant conscientious objector movement during the 1960s, exemplified in the debate about emergency laws, reflected a larger transformation of Protestant political culture in the early Federal Republic. Protestant nationalists before 1945 widely associated the obligations of conscience with duty to the state. By contrast, pastors and lay intellectuals on both sides of the 1960s debate defended conscientious objection as a basic right and regarded the church as a progenitor of democratic values. Moreover, this shift was facilitated less by a reckoning with Protestant complicity under Nazism than a shared myth of resistance. For the Protestant mainstream of the 1960s, anti-Nazi resistance paved the way toward the institutionalization of Protestant values in the Basic Law. In a 1965 address before SPD jurists, Gustav Heinemann located the theological basis of West Germany's “democratic Rechtsstaat” in a tradition of fundamental rights recovered by the Confessing Church. He echoed the conclusions of a conference on the Rechtsstaat organized by Protestant jurists and theologians the year prior.Footnote 115 Opponents of emergency laws presented an equally limiting narrative of the Nazi past. At a May 1968 march in Bonn, amid the final parliamentary reading of the legislation, 500 Protestant pastors carried banners comparing the emergency laws to the 1933 Enabling Act and declaring “Never Again—Throne and Altar.”Footnote 116 While gesturing toward the Protestant role in establishing dictatorship, these messages neglected the complicity of the churches in the years thereafter, including during the destruction of European Jewry.
The continuities between the Protestant campaign for conscientious objection and the debate about emergency laws disrupt depictions of a sharp break between the restorationist 1950s and revolutionary 1960s. Instead, a shared narrative of anti-Nazi resistance formed the backbone of Protestant politics in the Federal Republic during the entire generation after World War II. As pastors and lay intellectuals cited a legacy of resistance in their activism before West Germany's democratic institutions, this narrative came to buttress, rather than compromise, their growing identification with West German constitutional democracy. The portrait of the Nazi past constructed by the postwar Protestant Church would take decades to dislodge. Only in the 1980s did the Holocaust assume a prominent status in West German public memory, at the same time that a new generation of scholars challenged the commonplace of Confessing Church resistance.Footnote 117
The Protestant campaign for conscientious objection in turn invites historians to disaggregate the multiple meanings of democracy in the early Federal Republic. For all its limitations, the campaign contributed to the consolidation of democracy in important ways. In seeking to expand the political reach of their church and gain credibility for a narrative of anti-Nazi resistance, Protestant church leaders, pastors, and intellectuals shifted the logic of conscience from one of obedience to one of critical citizenship. Advocacy for conscientious objectors led longstanding conservative nationalists to frame their political interventions in the language of democratic values, forging alliances with the Social Democratic Party and Federal Constitutional Court. Yet an ideology of democracy based on individual rights conflicted with one centered on vigilant oversight of state power; neither required foregrounding the memory of Nazi atrocities. The institutional democratization toward which Protestants fundamentally contributed did not require a democratization of memory, which continued to lag decades behind.
Acknowledgments
Earlier versions of this article were presented at the German Studies Association, the Center for European Studies at Harvard University, and the German Studies Seminar at the Newberry Library. For their questions and feedback, I would like to thank especially Doris Bergen, Jeremy Best, Benjamin Goossen, Peter Gordon, Mark Ruff, Amy Rutenberg, Liat Spiro, and Stefanie Woodard, as well as Monica Black and the anonymous reviewers for Central European History. Research for the article was supported by the Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies at the Free University of Berlin.