The Strong Believers (Norwegian: Sterktroende) is a theologically conservative Norwegian Christian movement, with roots in the Lutheran Church of Norway, in opposition to the Haugean movement. They split from the Church of Norway in 1890. [1]
The Strong Believers started in Rogaland, Norway, in the mid-1800s and were led by lay preacher Knud Spødervold (1791–1848), [1] the son of a farmer from Bjerkreim. In 1848 he published a book called Guds nådes husholdning ('The Dispensation of God's Grace'), in which he outlined his views and his interpretation of the Bible. Spødervold criticized Pietist revival preacher Hans Nielsen Hauge for being too concerned with the importance of works. Spødervold emphasized faith and justification instead of repentance and sanctification. He claimed that "it is impossible for a child of God to fall out of their state of grace". [2]
Strong Believers have been described as strict, as well as exclusionary towards outsiders. [2] They do not participate in any ecumenical Christian gatherings. Strong Believers adhere to older church customs and hymns, such as Danish hymnwriter Thomas Kingo's 1699 hymnal. [3] [4] [5] Unlike other Christian groups in the area, they have historically had a lenient approach towards alcohol, with founders known to drink alcohol while preaching. [6]
The movement initially consisted of four branches, one of which – Det gammel Lutherske-Samfund ('The Old Lutheran Community') – later returned to the state church in 1958 after splitting off in 1925. [7]
The movement still exists in Kristiansand and in the Egersund area under the official name Samfundet (The Community) in three branches. One branch is called The Community (Samfundet), or Lomelenders, after its leader in the 1880s, Bernt B. Lomeland. Another branch is Det Almindelige Samfund ('The Catholic Community', catholic here in the sense of 'universal') or Perane after Per Gravdal, founded in 1901. [8] The third group, Det Almindelige Lutherske Samfund ('The Catholic Lutheran Community', again in the sense of 'universal') or Larsane after founder Abraham Larsen, started in 1952 after a split from Det Almindelige Samfund. [9]
Bjerkreim is a municipality in Rogaland county, Norway. It is located in the traditional district of Dalane. The administrative centre of the municipality is the village of Vikeså. Other villages in the municipality include Bjerkreim and Øvrebygd.
Hans Nielsen Hauge was a 19th-century Norwegian Lutheran lay minister, spiritual leader, business entrepreneur, social reformer and author. He led a noted Pietism revival known as the Haugean movement. Hauge is also considered to have been influential in the early industrialization of Norway.
The Norwegian Lutheran Mission is one of several independent Lutheran organisations working within the Lutheran Church of Norway.
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Ole Christian Mælen Kvarme is a Norwegian bishop of the Church of Norway. He was bishop of Oslo in the Lutheran Church of Norway from 2005 and 2017. As Bishop of Oslo, Kvarme was the personal prelate of the Norwegian Royal Family.
Sven Eivindsen Aarrestad was a writer, politician, and leader in the Norwegian temperance movement during the 19th century.
The Catholic Church in Norway is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the Pope, the Curia in Rome and the Scandinavian Bishops Conference.
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Gisle Christian Johnson was a leading 19th-century Norwegian theologian and educator.
Johan Edvard Sverdrup was a Norwegian educator, author and church leader. Sverdrup was one of the key theologians in the Church of Norway in the first few decades of the 1900s.
Carl Fredrik Wisløff was a Norwegian lutheran theologian and preacher, who spent much of his professional career at the MF Norwegian School of Theology. He is considered among the most important lay preachers in 20th-century Norway.
The Haugean movement or Haugeanism was a Pietistic state church reform movement intended to bring new life and vitality into the Church of Norway, which had been often characterized by formalism and lethargy. The movement emphasized personal diligence, enterprise and frugality.
Daniel Smith Thrap was a Norwegian priest, historian and author.
Carl Olof Rosenius was a Swedish lay preacher, author and editor of the monthly Pietisten from 1842 to 1868. He was one of the country's most widely-heard preachers of his day and has been described as being of "extraordinary importance for the low-church evangelical revival not only in Sweden but also in the other Nordic countries".
Christianity is the largest religion in Norway. Norway has historically been called a Christian country. A majority of the population are members of the Church of Norway with 64.9% of the population officially belonging to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Norway in 2021. At numerous times in history, Norway sent more missionaries per capita than any other country. This changed considerably from the 1960s. In 2004, only 12% of the population attended church services each month. Norwegian citizens' tax funds are given to the Protestant Church until one registers as a member of another religious group, or as a member of the Humanist association.
The Community is a Christian denomination with historical and theological roots in the Lutheran tradition. The church has congregations located in the south-western part of Norway. The Community broke off from the Church of Norway in 1890 due to recent theological and liturgical developments within the church. A key figure in the founding of The Community was school teacher and lay preacher, Bernt B. Lomeland (1836–1900). The Community was split in 1900 after Lomeland's death, and Per O. Nodland founded The Catholic Community. The Community was split again in 1925 and as a result The Old Lutheran Community was founded. As of 2015, the Community has approximately 1,800 members in two congregations, with four churches, one meeting house, and four schools.
Bernt Berntsen Lomeland was a Norwegian school teacher and lay minister who established The Community (Samfundet) in 1890.
The Dissenter Act is a Norwegian law from 1845 that allowed Christian denominations other than the Church of Norway to establish themselves in the country. It was enacted on 16 July 1845, and remained in effect until it was replaced by the Act Relating to Religious Communities, etc. in 1969.
Olav Valen-Sendstad was a Norwegian theologian, priest, and philosopher.
Knud Kittelsen Spødervold was a Norwegian author and lay preacher and leader of the Strong Believers, a theologically conservative Norwegian Christian movement in opposition to the Haugean movement, with roots in the Lutheran Church of Norway.