Zahn was important in the debate over warfare in the Second Vatican Council, specifically Schema 13. Through Richard Carbray and archbishop Thomas Roberts, Zahn was introduced to abbot Cuthbert Butler, OSB. Zahn gave talks on Franz Jägerstätter and wrote a speech for Butler, which he delivered to the Council. Gallagher implies this all led to Schema 13 supporting conscientious objectors and denouncing weapons of mass destruction.[2]
Authored works
Zahn was the author of several books and articles, often focusing on the topics of conscience and war. He wrote Military Chaplains, based on interviews he did with RAF Chaplains who had served in the war. He then wrote German Catholics and Hitler's Wars, in which he argued priests had aided Hitler by telling Germans it was their religious duty to fight.
He later wrote In Solitary Witness: The Life and Death of Franz Jägerstätter, about the Austrian farmer and conscientious objector who refused to swear an oath to Hitler and to fight in his army.[2][3] Zahn first heard of Jägerstätter in 1956, while doing research for German Catholics and Hitler's Wars.[4] He was impressed and inspired by Jägerstätter's story and felt that it deserved a wider audience: “it was enough to convince me that this was indeed an amazing story, one deserving the widest possible attention".[5]
^Zahn, Gordon (1964). In Solitary Witness. The life and death of Franz Jägerstätter. Springfield, Illinois: Templegate Publishers. ISBN0-87243-141-X.
^"Writers and Editors War Tax Protest" January 30, 1968 New York Post
^In 1992, Zahn was honored at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston with the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award for his lifelong commitment to the ideals of non-violence and conscientious objection and for his work with the Second Vatican Council to make the Catholic Church a church of peace.
"Pax Christi Award Recipients – Saint John's University Archives – CSB/SJU". csbsju.edu. October 31, 2009. Archived from the original on May 17, 2009. Retrieved November 10, 2009.