There are modern scholars who claim that an abuse of his preaching, which became well known to the West in the seventeenth century, fed Christian antisemitism, and some, such as Stephen Katz, go even further, saying it was an inspiration for
pagan Nazi antisemitism. Indeed, during World War II, the
Nazi Party in Germany abused his homilies, quoting and reprinting them frequently in an attempt to legitimize the
Holocaust in the eyes of German and Austrian Christians. Some authors say John Chrysostom's preaching was an inspiration for Nazi antisemitism with its evil fruit of the programme to annihilate the Jewish race. Steven Katz cites Chrysostom's homilies as “the decisive turn in the history of Christian
anti-Judaism, a turn whose ultimate disfiguring consequence was enacted in the political antisemitism of Adolf Hitler.” During World War II, the
Nazi Party in Germany used Chrysostom's work in an attempt to legitimize the
Holocaust in the eyes of German and Austrian Christians. His works were frequently quoted and reprinted as a witness for the prosecution. After
World War II, the Christian Churches denounced Nazi use of Chrysostom's works, explaining his words with reference to the historical context. According to
Walter Laqueur, it was argued that in the 4th century, the general discourse was brutal and aggressive and that at the time when the Christian church was fighting for survival and recognition, mercy and forgiveness were not in demand. ==Other Adversus Iudaeos literature==