Norwegian Unitarian Church

Norwegian Unitarian Church

Unitarforbundet Bét Dávid (Unitarian Union Beth David, The Norwegian Unitarian Church) (the Hebrew בֵּית דָּוִד house of David) is the denomination of Unitarian Christianity in Norway.

The Unitarian Church continues the Christian tradition, which today exists in the Hungarian and Romanian Unitarian Church. It shares this common background with the first Unitarian Church in Norway created by Kristofer Janson in 1895, but also places emphasis on practicing a common Jewish heritage, differentiating it from other denominations . The Norwegian Unitarian Church is located close to the Jewish-Unitarian Szekler-sabbatarianism and probably represents today one of the closest to the religious context called Judeo-Christianity. Proximity to Judaism is due to a belief that Christianity must be understood through a Jewish perspective. This is justified historically from the fact that Christianity was regarded as a part of Judaism prior to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in the year 70 AD. However, the Unitarian Church faith community is established in a clear liberal Christian historical tradition.

HIstory

In 1894, Hans Tambs Lyche (1859-1898) established Norway's first Unitarian periodical "Free word". The year before he made an unsuccessful attempt to establish the country's first Unitarian Church. Based on the preliminary work that Tambs Lyche did, Kristofer Janson founded the first Unitarian Church in Norway in 1895. Until 1900 this church was called Broderskabets Church, but was later simply referred to as the Unitarian Society. Because this church community did not accept Jesus' divinity, it was refused approval by Parliament in 1897 as a Christian church. Instead, it was approved as the country's other non-Christian dissenter societies. The first non-Christian dissenter society was the Jewish community. The Unitarian Society was in existence until 1937, when Unitarian pastor Herman Haugerud (1864-1937) died, leading to the closure of his congregation.

Among the most famous Norwegian Unitarians outside the Unitarian Society, we find names like Nina and Edvard Grieg. They were familiar with Unitarians in Birmingham in England in 1888. Nina Grieg, after her husband's death, helped to finance the church building for the Danish Unitarians. Also in Oslo Unitarians tried to erect a church building and money was collected. In this regard, the Hungarian Unitarian Church in 1909 sent contributions to the Unitarians in Oslo, and from then until today, there is a close contact between the Norwegian and Transylvanian Unitarian churches. For unknown reasons the planned church was never built.

Norwegian Unitarian Christianity today

In 1995, a hundred years after the first Unitarian Church (Broderskabets Church (Unitarian Society)) was founded, re-emerged part of this denomination as small Unitarian group in the Oslo area. On 1 January 2004 the religious community known as the Unitarian Union (The Norwegian Unitarian Church) was founded, establishing close contact with today's Transylvanian Unitarians in Hungary and Romania. In late April 2005 the church was registered with the County of Østfold, and the Royal Culture and Church Affairs granted exclusive rights to the name Unitarforbundet Beth David (The Norwegian Unitarian Church), which today is the church's official name. The more commonly used name today is simply The Norwegian Unitarian Church.

The first Norwegian baptism in a Hungarian Christian Unitarian church was performed on 12 April 2006, and from the introduction of gender neutral Marriage Act in Norway in 2009 the church began to conduct both same-sex and non-same-sex couples. In May 2009, it was decided by the Norwegian Unitarian group to establish a national umbrella organization (Unitarian Umbrella Organization of Norway) whose task is to be the official liaison between the Norwegian Unitarians and the International Council of Unitarian and Universalists (ICUU).

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