- Roman Catholicism in Norway
Roman Catholicism in Norway is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the
Pope and the Curia inRome .There are about 46,000 Catholics in the country, 70% of whom were born abroad. The country is divided into three Church districts – the Diocese of Oslo and the
prelature s ofTrondheim andTromsø and 32 parishes.The Bishop of Oslo participates in the
Scandinavian Bishops Conference .Origin
The Catholic Church in Norway is as old as the kingdom itself, dating from approximately 900 A.D., with the first
Christian monarchs, Haakon I from 934.The country is considered to have officially converted upon the death of the king St. Olav at the
Battle of Stiklestad in 1030.The subsequent Christianisation took several hundred years. Largely the work of Anglo Saxon missionaries, the Norwegian Church has been considered the only daughter of English Catholicism. Cardinal
Nicholas Breakspear , later Adrian IV, established a church province in 1152, thearchdiocese of Nidaros (Trondheim ). The prosperous years of the High Middle Ages were followed by decline for Church and nation alike, although Norwegian Catholicism retained much of its vitality.Reformation
The
Lutheran Reformation lasted from1526 to1536 . Catholic Church property and Catholic priests' personal properties were confiscated by the Crown. Catholic priests were exiled and imprisoned unless they submitted to conversion to the Danish king's faith. Fr. Arason of Holar, executed in1550 , was the Bishop of Hamar from1513 to1537 ,Mogens Lauritsson , was imprisoned until his death in1542 . Fact|date=September 2007Many traditions from the Catholic Middle Ages continued for centuries more. In the late 18th century and into the 19th century, a strict and puritan interpretation of the Lutheran faith, inspired by the preacher
Hans Nielsen Hauge , spread through Norway, and popular religious practices turned more purely Lutheran.The Catholic Church per se, however, was not allowed to operate in Norway between 1537 and 1843, and throughout most of this period, Catholic priests faced execution. In the late
16th century , a few incidents of crypto-Catholicism occurred within theChurch of Norway . The Roman Catholic faith survived in remote parts of the Kingdom until approximately1700 . Christiania (Oslo ) had an illegal but tolerated Catholic congregation in the 1790s. In1843 the Norwegian Parliament passed a religious tolerance act providing for limited religious freedom and allowing for legal non-Lutheran public religious services for the first time since theReformation .Legalization
The first parish after the
Reformation was established in the capital in 1843; a few years later Catholic places of worship were opened in Alta (Finnmark), Tromsø and Bergen. In1897 , the constitutional ban onreligious order s was lifted, which in time led to the establishment of several communities and monasteries.In
1956 , the final constitutional restriction on Catholics was lifted when Jesuits were allowed to enter the country for the first time since the Reformation, though it is known that at least one Jesuit - Xavier Rénom de la Baume - was killed in action with French Alpine forces during theBattles of Narvik .Religious sisters working in hospitals and schools did much to overcome popular suspicions about Catholics.
Sigrid Undset , a Catholic convert, and the Rev. Hallvard Rieber-Mohn, O.P., also contributed to this. Protestants and Catholics were brought closer together in firm opposition to theQuisling regime during the German occupation (1940-1945).Catholic Immigrants
The Catholic church remained very much a minority church of a few thousand people right up to the decades following
World War II . Around the country, the local congreations consisted of a few families each. However, with increased immigration from the 1960s onwards, the Catholic Church grew quickly.At first, the immigrants came from
Germany ,The Netherlands andFrance . Immigration fromChile , thePhilippines and from a wide range of other countries began in the 1970s. This development has further increased in the last few years with economic immigrants fromPoland andLithuania . The official number of Catholics, however, decreased slightly in2004 . Fact|date=September 2007 This is because the Norwegian state demands a person's social security number ("fødsels-og personnummer") in order to grant the per capita subsidy. The real number of Roman Catholics in Norway is possibly as much as twice the official number of 50,000. Fact|date=September 2007References
* [http://www.katolsk.no/norge/ Catholic Church in Norway's website]
*cite book |last= Kjelstrup|first= Karl|title= Norvegia catholica : moderkirkens gjenreisning i Norge : et tilbakeblikk i anledning av 100-årsminnet for opprettelsen av St. Olavs menighet i Oslo, 1843-1943 |origyear= 1943|publisher= Oslo apostolic vicariate |location= Oslo |language= Norwegian |pages= 418
*cite book |last= Brodersen|first= Øistein Grieve|title= Norge-Rom, 1153-1953 : Jubileumsskrift, 800 år siden opprettelsen av Den norske kirkeprovins |origyear= 1943| location= Trondheim |language= Norwegian |pages= 49
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