Baptist Union of Sweden
| Baptist Union of Sweden | |
|---|---|
| Classification | Baptist (Swedish Baptists) |
| Orientation | Protestantism |
| Theology | Baptist |
| Headquarters | Sweden |
| Separations | Free Baptist Union (1872), Swedish Pentecostal Movement (early 1900s), Örebro Mission (1936) |
| Part of a series on |
| Baptists |
|---|
| Christianity portal |
The Baptist Union of Sweden (Swedish: Svenska Baptistsamfundet) was a Baptist union in Sweden. In 2011–2012, they merged to form a new denomination, Joint Future Church, now called Uniting Church in Sweden.
The first known Baptist church in Sweden was organized on September 21, 1848, in Vallersvik, where a group of people committed the first-known Baptist baptism in Sweden. The Conventicle Act was in effect at the time, outlawing all religious meetings other than those of the Lutheran Church of Sweden. The new movement's leader, F.O. Nilsson, was exiled. Others were fined or jailed. A few years later, in 1858, the law was abolished, and religious groups other than the official state church (free churches) were allowed to work.