- Paul Petter Waldenström
Paul Petter Waldenström (
20 July 1838 –14 July 1917 ) was a Swedishtheologian who became the most prominent leader of thefree church movement in late 19th centurySweden .Waldenström was born in
Luleå in northern Sweden, son of a district physician. He began his academic studies atUppsala University in 1857, completed his Ph.D. degree there in 1863, and was ordained a clergyman in 1864. He had been employed as anadjunct in theVäxjö högre allmänna läroverk (the secondary school inVäxjö ) already in 1862 and in 1864, when his doctorate qualified him for this, received alecturer ship in Christianity, Greek and Hebrew at the secondary school inUmeå . From 1874 until 1905 he was lecturer in the same subjects at the secondary school inGävle . He was awarded aDoctor of Theology degree fromYale University in 1889 and was awarded the laurel for a second time as a "jubeldoktor " ("jubilee doctor") in Uppsala in 1913.Work in the free church movement
Although he worked as a school teacher his whole life, Waldenströms notability comes from his work as a theologian, editor of Christian periodicals and a preacher. He was long a leading member of the
Swedish Evangelical Mission ("Evangeliska fosterlandsstiftelsen"), a movement within the state church, but was among those who left the organisation in 1878 to form theSwedish Mission Covenant ("Svenska missionsförbundet", since 2003 theMission Covenant Church of Sweden , the "Svenska missionskyrkan"), which long had an ambivalent relationship to the state church, torn between the relative moderation of Waldenström and the greater radicalism of the first presidentErik Jakob Ekman (1842-1915) and his followers. After Ekman's resignation in 1904, Waldenström became the president of the society. In 1868 he began editing the "Pietisten", which was a publication associated with the free church movement. This proved to be very influential both in Sweden and abroad; in America, theEvangelical Covenant Church was greatly influenced by his life and writings.Theological contributions
Waldenström's influence can be partially summed up in the maxim often associated with his movement: the cry of "where does it stand written" (Swedish: "Var står det skrivet?") reflects his passion for the
Bible . The fact that Waldenström spent 11 years translating the New Testament from Greek to Swedish shows his devotion to the Holy Texts. His influence is not limitied to translation andexegesis , for perhaps his greatest legacy is his understanding of Justification andAtonement . He rejected that the prevailing notion that God's wrath was satisfied by thecross because it made God the object of reconciliation and lacked scriptural support. He instead asserted that man, not God, was the object of the Atonement; that God was the initiator, not the recipient of the work of reconciliation in Christ.References
*"Nordisk familjebok", vol 31, col 398ff [http://runeberg.org/nfck/0217.html]
*Karl A. Olsson, "By one spirit: [a history of The Evangelical Covenant Church of America] ". Chicago, Ill.: Covenant Press, 1962.
* Waldenstrom's Commentaries [http://www.pietisten.org/series/WaldenstromsCommentary.html]
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