Baptists in Finland

Evangelical church in Finland
Part of a series on
Baptists
Baptism at Northolt Park Baptist Church, in Greater London, Baptist Union of Great Britain, 2015.
Background
  • Christianity
  • Protestantism
  • Puritanism
  • Anabaptism
Doctrine
Key figures
icon Christianity portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Finnish-speaking Baptist church in Kissanmaa, Tampere.

Baptists in Finland have existed since the middle of the 19th century.[1] They are part of the Baptist branch of evangelical Christianity and belong to three different Finnish church associations. Swedish-speaking Finns formed the Swedish Baptist Union of Finland (Swedish: Finlands svenska baptistsamfund), while Finnish-speaking Baptists are united in the Finnish Baptist Church (Finnish: Suomen Baptistikirkko); two Finnish congregations are a part of the Seventh Day Baptists. In addition, a few independent Baptist churches exist, including Grace Baptist Church (Finnish: Armon Baptistiseurakunta) in Tampere. The congregation was formerly known as Perinteinen Baptistiseurakunta in Finnish and International Baptist Church in English. Agape International Baptist Church in Pedersöre is also among the independent Baptist churches.

History

Beginnings in Åland

After a request for preachers to revive the faith of the local church congregation, preacher Karl Justin Mathias Möllersvärd was sent by the Evangelical Alliance in Stockholm, Sweden, in 1854.[1][2][3] Möllersvärd was the first to preach Baptist teachings in Finland and sparked a revival, though he did not stay long due to fierce opposition.

The movement, however, continued to grow. In 1855, a resident of Åland returned from Stockholm with material about Baptist beliefs written by former Lutheran priest Anders Wiberg. Farmer Johan Erik Östling was inspired to travel to Stockholm the next year and be baptized, making him the first Finnish Baptist.[3]

Several baptisms were performed in Föglö the following year; they joined together with those who had already been baptized in Sweden to found the first Finnish Baptist church in 1856 in Föglö, Åland.[4]

At that time, Finland was still part of the Russian Empire. The Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland dominated religious life and tried by all means to hinder the emergence and spread of free churches. The Conventicle Act, which outlawed religious meetings other than those of the state church as a means of stopping the growing Pietist movement, was enacted in 1726. A number of Baptists faced hearings at the cathedral in Turku to defend their faith before the Lutheran clergy in 1859.[3][5] The movement happened to unexpectedly capture the interest of Lutheran priest Henrik Heikel, who spoke with the Baptists to learn more about their beliefs. He himself did not convert, but his interest was to play a key role in the church's spread.[3]

Of the event, Wiberg wrote, "As the poor Ålanders were leaving the consistory, Prof. [Henrik] Heikel asked them in a friendly manner, to call at his house. They thought, what does it mean? Does he intend to make some further inquiries, in order to make the sentence against us more sure? In calling, however, they were happily disappointed. The professor entertained them with food, and treated them in the most friendly manner. His children, then young, were witnesses to all this, and they received a favorable impression of the Baptists which has followed them up to the present moment."[6]

The movement's growth

The Swedish Baptist Church of Vaasa in November 2022

Heikel moved to mainland Finland with his family in 1860. Pedersöre in Ostrobothnia was to become their home as he was installed as priest of the Lutheran church there. The family maintained contact with the Baptists in Åland; after his death in 1867, his son Viktor and daughter Anna were baptized as Baptists by Wiberg in Stockholm. Their conversions led to many more after Anna returned with literature and began to hold meetings. The family received a visit from a Baptist pastor, Adolf Herman Valén, who had been at the hearing with Heikel ten years earlier; they held meetings together and his preaching led to more conversions to the movement. He was the first Baptist to preach on the mainland. The first Baptist baptisms on the mainland were performed the same year, with Maria Ekqvist and Petter Stormåns being the first to be baptized.[3][7]

Jakobstad Bethany Church.

The movement continued to grow in the following years and a Swedish-speaking congregation was founded in Jakobstad (Finnish: Pietarsaari), near Pedersöre, in 1870, by thirteen people including four members of the Heikel family.[1][8] That year, the Conventicle Act was also repealed in Finland. (In 1891 the Jakobstad Baptist church would undergo a split due to differing views, particularly over open or closed communion.)[9] Ostrobothnia has since remained a hub of the Baptist movement in Finland. Today, the only two Swedish-speaking Baptist churches outside the region are located in Helsinki and Karis.[1]

The Baptist movement did not take long to reach the Finnish-speaking population as well. Some of the people who had been baptized in Ostrobothnia were bilingual and began to preach in Finnish, founding several Finnish-speaking churches. Henrik Nars, from Purmo, was one such preacher. In 1870, a solely Finnish-speaking sailor named Henriksson evangelized in the southwestern Finnish countryside of Satakunta after being converted in England. The Luvia Baptist congregation near Pori (Swedish: Björneborg) traces its origin, also dated 1870, to his work.[3]

In 1871, John Hymander, also a Finnish speaker, who had been a priest in the Lutheran church for 40 years, left his position in Parikkala in South Karelia and was baptized by the Baptists in Stockholm. He was known to have had a friendly relationship with the Heikel family. Several in Hymander's family soon followed in baptism and a Baptist church was founded in Parikkala in 1872.[3][10]

More Finnish-speaking Baptist churches were soon founded in Jurva (1879), Turku (1884), Kuopio (1886), Tampere (1890), and Ylistaro (1894).[5]

Reverend Erik Jansson was also a key figure in the church's spread beginning in the 1880s. After joining evangelist Dwight L. Moody's church in Chicago, Jansson returned to Finland and later joined the Baptist church in 1881. He became pastor of the Petalax Baptist Church, which at times had over 400 members and baptized 1000 people.[3][11]

After the Swedish Baptists had exclusively supported the development work in Finland over the first few decades, the Home Mission Society of the American Baptist Churches USA contributed financially starting around 1889.[12]

Organizing

In 1883, the Swedish-speaking congregations around Jakobstad formed a regional association, Vasa svenska distriktsförening, or the Vasa Swedish District Conference. Some Finnish-speaking congregations also joined.[1] In 1889, Baptists were permitted by the newly-enacted Dissenters' Act to register as an independent body alongside the Evangelical Lutheran Church; both Swedish- and Finnish-speaking churches were part of the association. Cooperation between Finnish and Swedish-speaking Baptists continued; eventually, in 1903, the Finnish-speaking Baptist churches founded a separate national conference. Suomen baptistiyhdyskunta, the Finnish Baptist Union, was registered in 1928. The Swedish-speaking churches cooperate through Finlands svenska baptistmission, the Swedish Baptist Mission of Finland. A registered religious organization, the Swedish Baptist Union of Finland (Swedish: Finlands svenska baptistsamfund) was founded in 1980; not all churches belong to the Union, so the two organizations co-exist.[1]

Publications

In 1892, the Swedish-language journal Finska Månadsposten ('the Finnish Monthly Post', now known as Missionsstandaret, 'The Mission Standard', or MST for Människa, Samtid, Tro, 'Human, Contemporary, Faith'),[13] founded by I. S. Osterman, was first published. In 1896 the Finnish-language counterpart Totuuden Kaiku ('Echo of Truth', now Kodin Ystävä), edited by writer Veikko Palomaa [fi], was founded.[5]

Theology, structure, statistics

Map of the Baptist churches in Finland. The Baptist church is a relatively popular denomination in the region of Jakobstad and Vaasa.

It is not only their membership in different language groups that distinguishes the two Baptist unions from one another, but also their respective theological orientations. While the Finnish Baptistikirkko holds more conservative evangelical positions on many issues, the Swedish-speaking Baptistsamfund leans more toward liberal views and practices women's ordination and open communion.[1] The education of ministers takes place in different institutions. While Swedish speakers study at the ecumenical Åbo Academy, Finnish speakers attend a Bible institute run with other free churches.[citation needed]

In international mission work, the Finnish Baptistikirkko cooperates with Danish as well as Swedish Baptists and supports missionaries in Africa, Asia and South America. It also participates in various missionary projects in Estonia. The Swedish-speaking Samfund is one of the sponsoring churches of the European Baptist Mission [de].

Both associations are organized congregationally at the local level and synodally as a national association. They are member churches of the European Baptist Federation[14] and thus also of the Baptist World Alliance. The Seventh Day Baptist congregations also belong to the Baptist World Alliance through their international organization.

The Swedish Baptist Union of Finland (Finlands svenska baptistsamfund) includes 13 congregations with approximately 1000 members.[15] The Finnish Baptist Church (Suomen Baptistikirkko) consists of 14 congregations with approximately 1500 members.[16] The Seventh-day Baptist Fellowship includes two congregations with 35 members. The membership and congregation numbers of the independent Baptist churches are unknown.

Seventh Day Baptists

The history of the Finnish Seventh Day Baptist churches begins in the 1980s. They are associated with Thomas McElwain, an American who taught in the Department of Comparative Religion and Social Policy at the University of Turku.[17] Between 1986 and 1990, he served as volunteer director of the Seventh Day Baptist Mission in Northern Europe. In addition to the congregation founded by McElwain in Turku, there is another in Helsinki.[18] Both congregations are nationally involved in the Baltic Convention association, which they founded with Estonian Seventh Day Baptists.

In Tampere, one of the independent Baptist churches emerged among Russian immigrants. It came from the pioneering work of Tom and Linda Ruhkala, a couple sent by Baptist Mid-Missions. Since 2006, events in English have been offered alongside Russian- and Finnish-language services.[19][20]

See also

  • Betelseminariet – Seminary in Stockholm where Finnish Swedish-speaking Baptists studied[3]
  • Religion in Finland

Further reading

  • Albert W. Wardin (ed.): Baptists around the World. A comprehensive Handbook. Broadman & Holman Publishers: [no city given] 1995. ISBN 0-8054-1076-7
  • Euvo Aaltio: A History of the National Baptists in Finland. Baptist Theological Seminary: Rüschlikon (Switzerland) 1958
  • David Eden: Svenska baptisterna in Finland historia. 1856–1931. A. B. Frams: Vasa 1931

External links

  • Official website of the Swedish-speaking Finlands Svenska Baptistsamfund (in Swedish)
  • Official website of the Finnish-speaking Suomen Baptistikirkko Archived 2017-12-07 at the Wayback Machine (in Finnish)
  • Website of the English-speaking International Baptist Church Tampere
  • Grace Baptist Church/Armon Baptistiseurakunta
  • Agape International Baptist Church
  • Seventh Day Baptist World Federation

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Baptismen i Finland och som en världsvid trosgemenskap". Finlands Svenska Baptistsamfund (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 2021-11-09. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  2. ^ Edstöm, Jan (1995). "Det ekumeniska läget i Finland i 1995" (PDF). Teologisk Forum (in Swedish). IX (1). ISSN 0802-1457. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-06-24 – via Nordisk Utdanningsråd for Metodistkirkens Sentralkonferanse.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Sundqvist, Alfons (January 1954). "Glimpses of the Baptist Work in Finland" (PDF). The Fraternal. 91. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-08-04.
  4. ^ Robert E. Johnson, A Global Introduction to Baptist Churches, Cambridge University Press, UK, 2010, p. 192
  5. ^ a b c "Historiaa". Baptisti.fi (in Finnish). Archived from the original on 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  6. ^ Wiberg, Anders (1864). "Mission in Sweden". Annual Report of the American Baptist Missionary Union. Vol. 50–56. American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. p. 285. Archived from the original on 2022-05-15. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  7. ^ "Helsingfors baptistförsamling" (in Swedish). 2016-03-07. Archived from the original on 2016-03-07. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
  8. ^ Wardin, Albert W. (2013). On the Edge: Baptists and Other Free Church Evangelicals in Tsarist Russia, 1855-1917. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 33. ISBN 9781620329627.
  9. ^ "Susanna kom Anna in på livet". Missionstandaret (in Swedish). 4 (111). 2003. Archived from the original on 2007-10-28.
  10. ^ The Baptist Missionary Magazine. 1873-07: Vol 53 Iss 7. Internet Archive. Open Court Publishing Co. 1873.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  11. ^ Holmqvist, Leif-Erik (11 March 2005). "Han döpte tusen personer i Finland" (PDF). Missionsstandaret (in Swedish). 113 (3). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-06-23.
  12. ^ Laubach, David C. American Baptist Home Mission Roots: 1824–2010 Archived 2011-08-12 at the Wayback Machine, Valley Forge: American Baptist Home Mission Societies, April 2010
  13. ^ "MST - Tidskrift.fi". www.tidskrift.fi (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 2020-08-04. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  14. ^ "Finland". European Baptist Federation (EBF). Archived from the original on 2021-06-24. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  15. ^ "Om oss". Finlands Svenska Baptistsamfund (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  16. ^ "Suomen Baptistikirkko". Baptisti.fi. Archived from the original on 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-06-24.
  17. ^ "About Thomas McElwain". submission.org. Archived from the original on 2021-06-24. Retrieved 2021-06-24.
  18. ^ Sanford, Don A. (1992). A Choosing People: The History of Seventh Day Baptists. Nashville: Broadman Press. pp. 127–286. ISBN 0-8054-6055-1.
  19. ^ "Finland". Baptist Mid-Missions. Archived from the original on 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  20. ^ "Welcome!". Grace Baptist Church / Armon Baptistiseurakunta - Tampere, Finland. Archived from the original on 2021-12-08. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Baptist World Alliance member fellowships
All-Africa Baptist Fellowship
Central and Eastern Africa
Burundi
Cameroon
Central African Republic
Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Baptist Community in Central Africa (CBCA)
  • Baptist Community of the Congo River
  • Baptist Community of Congo
  • Baptist Evangelical Convention of Congo (CBECO)
  • Community of Autonomous Baptist Churches-Wamba-Bakali
  • Community of Baptist Churches in Eastern Congo (CEBCE)
  • Community of Baptist Churches Union of Congo (CUEBC)
  • Community of Baptist Churches in North Congo (CBCN)
  • Community of United Baptist Churches (CEBU)
  • Union of Baptist Churches in Congo (UEBCO)
Ethiopia
Equatorial Guinea
  • Equatorial Guinea Baptist Church
Kenya
Madagascar
Republic of Congo
Rwanda
South Sudan
  • Baptist Convention of South Sudan
Sudan
Tanzania
Uganda
Southern Africa
Angola
Botswana
  • Baptist Convention of Botswana
Madagascar
Malawi
Mozambique
Namibia
South Africa
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Western Africa
Benin
Burkina Faso
  • Union of Evangelical Baptist Churches Burkina Faso
Gambia
  • Baptist Union in the Gambia
Ghana
Ivory Coast
Liberia
Niger
  • Union of Evangelical Baptist Churches of Niger
Nigeria
Sierra Leone
Togo
North East Asia
China - Hong Kong
China - Macau
Japan
South Korea
Taiwan
West and South Asia
Bangladesh
India
Nepal
Sri Lanka
South East Asia
Australia
Cambodia
Fiji
  • Fiji Baptist Convention
Indonesia
Malaysia
Myanmar
New Zealand
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Singapore
Thailand
Vietnam
Eastern Europe
Armenia
  • Union of Evangelical Christian Baptist Churches of Armenia
Azerbaijan
  • Union of Evangelical Christians-Baptists of Azerbaijan
Belarus
  • Union of Evangelical Christian Baptists of Belarus
Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Baptist Church in Bosnia/Herzegovina
Bulgaria
  • Baptist Union of Bulgaria
Croatia
Czech Republic
Estonia
  • Union of Free Evangelical & Baptist Churches of Estonia
Georgia
Hungary
Latvia
  • Union of Baptist Churches in Latvia
Lithuania
  • Baptist Union of Lithuania
Moldova
Poland
Romania
Russia
Serbia
Slovakia
  • Baptist Union of Slovakia
Slovenia
  • Union of Baptist Churches in Slovenia
Ukraine
  • All-Ukrainian Union of Associations of Evangelical Christians-Baptists
Uzbekistan
  • Union of Evangelical Christian-Baptists of Uzbekistan
Central Western Europe
Austria
  • Baptist Union of Austria
Belgium
France
Germany
Italy
Netherlands
Portugal
  • Portuguese Baptist Convention
Spain
Switzerland
  • Union of Baptist Churches in Switzerland
United Kingdom
Nordic countries
Denmark
Finland
Norway
Sweden
Middle East
Israel
Jordan
  • Jordan Baptist Convention
Lebanon
Palestine
  • Council of Local Evangelical Churches in the Holy Land
Latin American Baptist Union
Central America
Costa Rica
El Salvador
  • Baptist Association of El Salvador
  • Baptist Federation of El Salvador
Guatemala
Honduras
Mexico
Nicaragua
Panama
South America
Argentina
Bolivia
  • Baptist Convention of Bolivia
  • Baptist Union of Bolivia
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Ecuador
  • Baptist Convention of Ecuador
Guyana
  • Baptist Convention of Guyana
Paraguay
Peru
  • Baptist Evangelical Convention of Peru
Uruguay
  • Baptist Evangelical Convention of Uruguay
Venezuela
Caribbean Baptist Fellowship
Antigua and Barbuda
  • Antigua Baptist Association
Bahamas
Barbados
  • Barbados Baptist Convention
Belize
Bermuda
  • Bermuda Baptist Fellowship
Cuba
Dominican Republic
  • Dominican Baptist Convention
Haiti
Jamaica
Trinidad & Tobago
North American Baptist Fellowship
Canada
United States
  • v
  • t
  • e
Eastern Christianity
Eastern Orthodox
Catholic
Western Christianity
Catholic
(Main article)
Protestant
Lutheran
Anglican
Baptist
Methodist
  • Methodist Church [fi]
  • Swedish Methodist Church of Finland [fi]
  • Salvation Army
Adventist
Pentecostal
Other
  • Finnish Free Church [fi]
  • Mission Church of Finland [fi]
Restorationist
Interdenominational
organisations
  • Suomen Evankelinen Allianssi