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Resistance to the Reformation in 16Th-Century Finland
CHAPTER 10 Resistance to the Reformation in 16th-Century Finland Kaarlo Arffman 10.1 Introduction The Protestant Reformation is an interesting era for analyzing the nature of religion, in which the reformers wanted to reshape the Christian religion and lifestyle. Research into the resistance to the Reformation enables us to reach a better understanding of Christianity in Finland in the Late Middle Ages. In the Reformation era Finland was the eastern part of the Kingdom of Sweden. Originally, there was only one bishop for the whole of Finland, in Turku (in Swedish Åbo). However, in the years 1555–1564 and 1568–1578 another bishop headed the eastern parishes from Vyborg (Viipuri). Lutheran ideas had reached Denmark and Sweden already by the beginning of the 1520s and received endorsement, especially in the big cities. The kings of Denmark and Sweden supported Lutheran preachers but the theological opponents of Lutheranism were also able to express their opinions.1 After internal conflict and the victory of the convinced Lutheran, Duke Christian in Denmark, in 1536, the situation changed. The debate was over. The new king, Christian III, took the Church under his direction and began to shape it into a Lutheran one. Resistance became risky. In Sweden King Gustav Vasa followed the example of the Danish king.2 In Norway and Finland the influence of Lutheranism was weaker and slower in developing than in Denmark and Sweden. The king of Denmark ruled Norway and Christian III transformed the Norwegian church into a part of the Danish Lutheran church, albeit not without drama.3 The king advised his men to proceed more cautiously in the countryside parishes.4 In Finland 1 Martin Schwarz Lausten, Reformationen i Danmark (Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag, 1987), 52–69; Åke Andrén, Sveriges kyrkohistoria 3. -
Communion in Growth
Communion in Growth Declaration on the Church, Eucharist, and Ministry A Report from the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue Commission for Finland Communion in Growth Declaration on the Church, Eucharist, and Ministry A Report from the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue Commission for Finland Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland Catholic Church in Finland Helsinki 2017 Communion in Growth Declaration on the Church, Eucharist, and Ministry A Report from the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue Commission for Finland © Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland Catholic Church in Finland Language editor: Rupert Moreton, Lingua Fennica Book design: Unigrafia/ Hanna Sario Layout: Emma Martikainen Photo: Heikki Jääskeläinen: Icon of St. Henry the martyr, the first bishop in Finland by bishop Arseni of Joensuu ISBN 978-951-789-585-9 (paperback) ISBN 978-951-789-586-6 (PDF) Grano Helsinki 2017 CONTENTS Introduction .................................................................................................... 7 The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification and the Way Forward....................................................................................................... 7 Aim and Method of the Declaration............................................................ 9 I THE CHURCH AS COMMUNION IN THE TRIUNE GOD 1. Communion Ecclesiology as a Shared Framework ...................................... 13 2. The Sacramental Nature of the Church ...................................................... 18 3. The Common Understanding of the Church ............................................ -
The Church of Sweden in Continuous Reformation
Journal of the European Society of Women in Theological Research 25 (2017) 67-80. doi: 10.2143/ESWTR.25.0.3251305 ©2017 by Journal of the European Society of Women in Theological Research. All rights reserved. Ninna Edgardh Embracing the Future: The Church of Sweden in Continuous Reformation The whole world followed the events in Lund, Sweden, on October 31, 2016, when for the first time a joint ecumenical commemoration of the Reformation took place between the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Roman-Catholic Church. A photo distributed worldwide shows Pope Francis and the Archbishop of the Church of Sweden, Antje Jackelén, embracing each other. The photo contains both hope and tension. The Church of Sweden tries to balance the tension between its heritage as ecumenical bridge-builder, launched already by Archbishop Nathan Söderblom a hundred years ago, and its pioneering role with regard to issues of gen- der and sexuality. These seemingly contradictory roles are hereby set into the wider context of the journey Sweden has made from the time of the Lutheran reformation up to the present. A uniform society characterised by one people and one Christian faith, has gradually transformed into a society where faith is a voluntary option. The former state church faces new demands in handling religious as well as cultural diversities. Leadership is increasingly equally shared between women and men. The Church of Sweden holds all these tensions together through the approach launched on the official website of a church in constant need of reform. Por primera vez la Federación Luterana Mundial y la Iglesia Católica Romana celebraron conjuntamente una conmemoración ecuménica de la Reforma un hecho que ocurrió en Lund, Suecia, el 31 de octubre de 2016 y que fue ampliamente difundido por el mundo, a través de una fotografía distribuida globalmente donde aparecen abrazándose el Papa Francisco de la Iglesia Católica y la arzobispa Antje Jackelén de la iglesia de Suecia, reflejando esperanza y tensión a la vez. -
Policy Statement on Foreign Relations of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria
Policy Statement on Foreign Relations of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria A Contribution to the Global Communio Contents Foreword by Michael Martin 4 1. WHY? Foundations 6 1.1 Reasons for ELCB’s Global Ecumenical Work 6 1.2 Entities Responsible for the Partnerships within the ELCB 8 1.3 Priorities of the ELCB’s Partnerships 10 1.4 Context of the Partnerships 11 1.5 Incentives for the ELCB´s Foreign Relations 12 1.6 Challenges, Disparities, Power Issues 12 2. HOW? The ELCB’s Policy Statement on Foreign Relations 14 2.1 The Diversity of Relationships – Partnership is “Journeying Together, Side by Side” 14 2.2 Church in Relationship – The Emmaus Process 14 2.3 Characteristics of Partnership 15 2.4 Principles of Partnership 16 2.5 Partnership and Development – Partners in the Development Process 18 2.6 Forms of Church and Partner Cooperation 20 2.6.1 Partnership Cooperation 20 2.6.1.1 Contractual Partnership 21 2.6.1.2 Partnerships Resulting from Bavarian Missions 21 2.6.1.3 Partner Relationships in Forums 22 2.6.1.4 Amicable and Neighborly Relationships 22 2.6.1.5 Church-Reconstruction Assistance and Temporary Cooperation 23 2.6.1.6 Issue-Based Partnership 23 2.6.2 Ecumenical Cooperation 24 2.6.2.1 The Global Lutheran Community 24 2.6.2.2 Congregations of Various Languages and Origins 24 2.6.2.3 Interconfessional Cooperation 25 2.6.3 Project Support within Partner Relationships 25 2 3. FOR WHAT PURPOSE? Communio as a Vision of Church 27 3.1. -
Kasselstrand2014.Pdf
This thesis has been submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for a postgraduate degree (e.g. PhD, MPhil, DClinPsychol) at the University of Edinburgh. Please note the following terms and conditions of use: • This work is protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights, which are retained by the thesis author, unless otherwise stated. • A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. • This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the author. • The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the author. • When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given. “Tell the Minister Not to Talk About God:” A Comparative Study of Secularisation in Protestant Europe Isabella Kasselstrand PhD in Sociology The University of Edinburgh 2013 2 Declaration This is to certify that the work contained within this thesis has been composed by me and is entirely my own work. No part of this thesis has been submitted for any other degree or professional qualification. Isabella Kasselstrand 3 4 Abstract Secularisation is at the centre of a vibrant debate in the sociology of religion. In the last two decades, literature has started to challenge old predictions and interpretations of the future of religion, but few studies present a detailed contextual examination of religious change in contemporary societies. Offering a comparative analysis of Scotland and Sweden, two nations in the relatively secularised Northern Europe, this thesis argues that diverse historical and political trajectories shape distinct patterns of religious beliefs and practices. -
The 'Long Reformation' in Nordic Historical Research
1 The ‘long reformation’ in Nordic historical research Report to be discussed at the 28th Congress of Nordic Historians, Joensuu 14-17 August 2014 2 Preface This report is written by members of a working group called Nordic Reformation History Working Group, that was established as a result of a round table session on the reformation at the Congress of Nordic Historians in Tromsø in Norway in August 2011. The purpose of the report is to form the basis of discussions at a session on “The ‘long reformation’ in Nordic historical research” at the Congress of Nordic Historians in Joensuu in Finland in August 2014. Because of its preliminary character the report must not be circulated or cited. After the congress in Joensuu the authors intend to rework and expand the report into an anthology, so that it can be published by an international press as a contribution from the Nordic Reformation History Working Group to the preparations for the celebration in 2017 of the 500 years jubilee of the beginning of the reformation. Per Ingesman Head of the Nordic Reformation History Working Group 3 Table of contents Per Ingesman: The ’long reformation’ in Nordic historical research – Introduction – p. 4 Otfried Czaika: Research on Reformation and Confessionalization – Outlines of the International Discourse on Early Modern History during the last decades – p. 45 Rasmus Dreyer and Carsten Selch Jensen: Report on Denmark – p. 62 Paavo Alaja and Raisa Maria Toivo: Report on Finland – p. 102 Hjalti Hugason: Report on Iceland – (1) Church History – p. 138 Árni Daníel Júlíuson: Report on Iceland – (2) History – p. -
How the Church Built the Swedish Model
The Preferability of Consensus: How the Church Built the Swedish Model A European Case Study ANDERS BROGREN From heathendom to Christianity “A.D. 793. This year came dreadful fore-warnings over the of land the Northumbrians, terrifying the people most woefully: these were immense sheets of light rushing through the air, and whirlwinds, and fiery dragons flying across the firmament. These tremendous tokens were soon followed by a great famine: and not long after, on the sixth day before the ides of January in the same year, the harrowing inroads of heathen men made lamentable havoc in the church of God in Holy-island, by rapine and slaughter.” This entry from A.D. 793 in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes one of the first encounters between the Christian church and the Nordic peoples. It was not a happy one. The Vikings came as invaders from the sea. They were robbers on plundering expeditions. Soon they took power over England and Ireland. They extended their ravaging expeditions to France and even to the Mediterranean. However, the gospel was preached in the domain that was later named the Kingdom of Sweden by Ansgar (who was eventually made archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen). He was sent to Scandinavia by the emperor Louis the Pious, son of Charlemagne, around 830, and a second time around 850. Ansgar celebrated the mass amidst foreigners living in the small town of Birka, not far from today’s Stockholm. He preached the gospel and founded a small congregation. Sadly, it faded away after a few decades. Of far greater importance for the process of christianisation was the Viking emigration to the British Isles. -
Sweden and the Five Hundred Year Reformation Anamnesis a Catholic Perspective
Sweden and the Five Hundred Year Reformation Anamnesis A Catholic Perspective Talk by Clemens Cavallin at the The Roman Forum, Summer Symposium, June 2016, Gardone, Italy. To Remember the Reformation According to Collins Concise Dictionary, “Commemoration” means, “to honour or keep alive the memory of.”1 It is weaker than the wording “Reformation Jubilee,” which generated 393 000 hits on Google, compared with merely 262 000 for “Reformation Commemoration.”2 According to the same dictionary, the meaning of “Jubilee” is “a time or season for rejoicing.” For a Swedish Catholic, there is, however, little to rejoice about when considering the consequences of the reformation; instead, the memories that naturally come to mind are those of several centuries of persecution, repression and marginalization.3 The rejoicing of a jubilee is, hence, completely alien for a Swedish Catholic when looking back to the reformation, but it is also difficult to acquiesce to the weaker meaning of “honoring” the reformation, as implied by the notion of commemoration. The reformation in Sweden was not especially honorable. The second part of the meaning of commemoration “to keep alive the memory of” is more suitable, but then in a form of a tragic remembering; we grieve over what we have lost. In the village where I live, for example, there is a beautiful white stone church from the 12th century. It was thus Catholic for five hundred years before the reformation, but has since then been a Lutheran Church. Instead, I have to travel by car for half an hour to attend mass in the Catholic Church, which is a former protestant Free Church chapel from the 1960s.4 All the priests are Polish, and so is, I guess, half the parish. -
Una-Theses-0194.Pdf (11.05Mb Application/Pdf)
RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS IN SWEDEN FROJl THE MEMORABLE UPPSALA SYliOD IN FEBRUARY 1593 TO THE ISSUANCE ON OCTOBER 23 1860 OF THE TWO ROYAL ORDIN'ANl.IES PROVIDI G FOR - GREATER RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN SWEDD A Thes1s Subn1tted to The Facui ty of the Graduate school of the univexs1ty of M1nnesota Hel'IDan Olof Olson 1n Partial Ful.f'111ment of the ReqU1rements for the Degree of Kaster of Arts 19.1$ 1 • 1 ICI ...•'' .ICC ~ CONTENTS page Bibliography • • • • • . II Preface . VIII Introduction • • • • • • • • • • . 1 survey of Religious Movements from 159S to 1688 • • • 6 The Refol'll&d • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . The catholics • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Reaction against orthodoxy • • • • • • • • • . S5 Religious Liberty for Dissenters • • • • • • . SS The Jews • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . 42 P1et1sm . 45 D1pJ>011an1sm and the sJtev1lt1ans • . • • • • . 5S The Moravtans • • • • • • • • • • • . 58 swedenborg1an1sm • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • 6S taes tad1an1sm . 67 Methodism • • • . 70 The Baptists . '15 The Janson! tes • . 81 Crying Voices . 85 Ordinances Prov1d1ng for Religious Liberty • • • • . 9S supplement (A world survey of Present cond1t1ons) • • 125 •l) ,,, tf'>'l..t'!.!) I ' .. -II- BIBLIO'G RAPHY Printed sources Acta his~or1co-ecc1esiast1ca, Weimar 1736~58. Allmanna Orcsunds-posten, Hels1ngborg 1851, 52, (The oresund Post). Anjou, L. A., Svenska Icyrkans h1stor1a ifrAn upvsaia m~te Ar 1593, Stockh. 1866, (History of the Swedish uhurch from the Uppsala Synod 1593). Bender, w., Johann Konrad Dippel. ner Fre1ge1st aus d Pietismus, Bonn l882, (John Conrad Dippel, the Free-thinker of the Age of p1et1sm). Borgman, E. w., Ndgra bidrag till svenska kyrkans h1stor1a, Stockh. 1873, (Some uontr1but1ons to the History of the Swedish Church}. Bergroth, Elis, Ara Dissenters, Kuop1o 1893, (our Dissenters). Bexe11, s. p., Bidrag till svenska kYrkans och riksdagarnas historia, Kristianstad 1839, (contributions to the History of the Swedish uhurch and the R1ksdag). -
A History of the Christian Church During the Reformation by Charles Hardwick Fifth Edition, Revised by W
A History of the Christian Church During the Reformation by Charles Hardwick Fifth Edition, Revised by W. Stubbs Macmillan, 1876. [Spelling selectively modernized. Notes moved and in square brackets for web reading. Bible citations converted to all Arabic numerals.] Preface The following Chapters are intended as the sequel and companion to “A History of the Christian Church during the Middle Age.” The author had indulged the hope of giving this new portion to the public at a less distant interval, but found his progress constantly retarded by other duties and engagements. In traversing ground which furnishes so many topics, always full of deep and sometimes melancholy interest to the student of Church history, he was actuated by the principles which guided him throughout the composition of the previous volume. His earnest wish has been to give the reader a trustworthy version of those stirring incidents which mark the Reformation period; without relinquishing his former claim to characterize particular systems, persons, and events, according to the shades and colours they assume, when contemplated from an English point of view, and by a member of the Church of England. Cambridge, February 5, 1856. This third edition is substantially a reprint of the second, which was published in 1865 under the editorship of the Rev. Francis Procter. A few passages have been rewritten and the whole carefully revised. William Stubbs, Kettel Hall, Oct. 1872. Contents Introduction Chapter I – The Saxon School of Church Reformers, And Its Propagation Germany, Prussia, Denmark, Norway, and Iceland, Sweden, Poland, Bohemia and Moravia, Hungary and Transylvania, Spain, Italy. -
Utrecht and Uppsala in Communion
Utrecht and Uppsala on the way to communion Report from the official dialogue between the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht and the Church of Sweden 2013 Index 1 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Two churches with one faith and one mission .............................................. 4 1.2 Two churches on the way to communion and visible unity for the sake of the world 4 1.3 A changing ecumenical landscape ............................................................... 5 1.4 Implications of church community ................................................................ 6 1.5 Preliminary remarks on terminology ............................................................. 6 1.6 The disposition of the document ................................................................... 7 2 Occasional contacts and the start of the dialogue ............................................... 9 3 Presentation of the Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht ................... 11 3.1 Historical development ............................................................................... 11 3.1.1 The Old Catholic Church in the Netherlands ....................................... 11 3.1.2 The Old Catholic Churches in Germany, Switzerland and the Habsburg Monarchy ........................................................................................................... 12 3.1.3 The Old Catholic Churches of Slav origin ........................................... -
A New Oath on Wool and Silk
HAVE GERMAN WILL TRAVEL GESCHICHTE "Bei uns ist immer was los!" PROTESTANT REFORMATION (1517 to 1648) The Luther effect: How Protestantism went global A new oath on wool and silk This tapestry embroidered with silk and wool shows the interweaving of Lutheran faith into the state. The Swedish parliament adopted a new law in 1686 that sealed the unity of the church and state, and Lutheranism became the state religion. The textile from around 1690 shows the swearing-in of the representatives of the estates on both the Bible and the Swedish Book of Law. The museum in Berlin's Martin-Gropius-Bau promises global time travel across five centuries and four continents. Half a ~ nium after Martin Luther nailed bis 95 theses to the door of the church in Wittenberg on October 31, 1517, the German Historical Museum explores the impact of Protestan_j;!filll,_ ___ How has Protestantism affected other denominations and religions? How have people from different cultures adopted Protestant teachings? And which conflicts have arisen? Germany, Sweden, the US, Korea and Tanzania are the five countries the exhibition takes a closer look at with numerous examples. The conclusion is not hard to guess: The Reformation has dramatically impacted modern culture everywhere - from theology and law to business ethics and the humanities. From the Thuringian town of Wittenberg, Protestantism has reached the farthest corners of the globe. Spanning 3,000 square meters (over 32,000 square feet), the exhibition incorporates more than 500 objects, including rare works of art and everyday historical artifacts. It makes use of multimedia methods of presentation that Luther could hardly have imagined in his day - which paralleled the advent of the printing press.