It certainly was not Christian faith which drove people to follow the Nazis.
They certainly explicitly invoked their Christian credentials in their work.
The Christian faith promotes love and compassion for fellow human beings - not self centred pride and lust for power.
That's your take on Christianity - and I prefer your take to their's - but there are many intepretations, and not all of them are as tolerant. Unfortunately, given that these are matters of faith there is no 'right' take on it, there are just varying opinions.
There was a call to prayer from King George at critical points in the war - the evacuation at Dunkirk and the battle of Britain, which turned out to be major turning points against all the odds. People were queueing up to enter the churches to follow this call to prayer, and we have much to thank for those Christians who answered the call.
We do. We also owe much to those non-Christians who answered the call in exactly the same ways, and to the Christians who did but not because of their faith - it's almost as though there were a number of motivations for putting your life on the line for your country, your fellow men and the opposition to authoritarianist aggression.
That some Christians (thankfully) opposed Nazism neither means that Nazi Germany wasn't explicitly leveraging their Christianity for political and nationlist purposes, nor that the motivations of some of the people working within that regime weren't explicitly their take on Christianity.
O.