Nathan
Söderblom (January 15, 1866-July 12, 1931), near the beginning and near
the end of his illustrious career, found his name linked with that of another
Swedish citizen of the world, Alfred Nobel. He was called to San Remo in 1897
to conduct the memorial service for Nobel and in 1930 to Oslo to receive the Nobel
Peace Prize.
Lars Olof Jonathan (called Nathan) Söderblom was
born at Trönö, in the Swedish province of Hälsingland, to Jonas
Söderblom, a Pietistic pastor, and Sophia (Blume) Söderblom, among whose
ancestors there had once been a bishop of Oslo.
As a student at Uppsala
University, Söderblom won respect not only for his intellectual attainments
but also for his personal charm, abundant vitality, and talent as a speaker. He
took his bachelor's degree in 1886, with honors in Greek and competency in Hebrew,
Arabic, and Latin. This admirable linguistic background equipped him for the exacting
scholarship of the School of Theology at Uppsala where, for the next six years,
he continued his wide-ranging studies in theology and the history of religion.
From its founding in 1888, Söderblom was the editor for five years of Meddelanden,
the Student Missionary Association review, in whose pages he published the first
piece in what was eventually to become a personal bibliography of 700 items. In
1890 he attended the Christian Student Conference in New England and there, after
listening to a lecture by a visiting clergyman, wrote in his diary a sentence
that was to prove prophetic, «Lord, give me humility and wisdom to serve
the great cause of the free unity of thy church.»1
After being ordained a priest in 1893 and appointed chaplain to a mental hospital
in Uppsala, he cast about for a post that would enable him to marry Anna Forsell,
a gifted woman student - one of twenty among 1,700 men at Uppsala University -
who was later to bear him thirteen children, as well as to collaborate in the
preparation of many of his published works. He accepted a call to the Swedish
Church in Paris.
For seven years, from 1894 to 1901, Söderblom
preached in Paris, where his congregation included Alfred Nobel and August Strindberg,
as well as Swedish and Norwegian painters, authors, businessmen, diplomats, and
visitors to the city. Summers he spent in Calais in research and writing while
also serving as chaplain to Swedish seamen in the area. Meanwhile he pursued graduate
studies in theology, history of religions, and in languages predating those of
the classical ages, and eventually became the first foreigner ever to earn a Doctor
of Theology degree at the Protestant Faculty of the Sorbonne.
Söderblom's
experience in France strengthened his youthful resolve to promote «free
unity» among Christian churches. One of his biographers, Charles J. Curtis,
points out that fluency in French and understanding of French and Parisian culture
gave him an international outlook, that the theological currents of France merging
with those from his native land solidified his theological liberalism, and that
social work among the Scandinavians in France convinced him that in the life of
the church right action was as important as right belief2.
From 1901 to 1914, Söderblom occupied a chair in the School of Theology at
Uppsala University and concurrently, from 1912 to 1914, a chair at Leipzig University.
In these productive years he wrote a series of books on religious history, religious
psychology, and religious philosophy. With a group of brilliant colleagues and
students at Uppsala, Söderblom led a theological revival in Sweden, giving
stature to the field of comparative religion, pursuing the theme of the uniqueness
of Christianity in the historical and personal character of Revelation, incorporating
the study of non-Christian religions into the discipline of Christianity, and
stimulating intense studies in the life and thought of Martin Luther3.
Söderblom's election in 1914 as archbishop of Uppsala, and, in consequence,
primate of the Church of Sweden, was a surprise. Customarily, the king chose the
first name on a slate of the three who topped the list in the voting in the sixteen
electoral colleges. In first and second place were two distinguished bishops who
split eighty-two percent of the electoral vote almost evenly; in third place was
Söderblom, a priest and professor, with eighteen percent of the vote. Not
since 1670 had the bishops been passed over.
During the next, and
last, seventeen years of his life, Söderblom administered the duties of the
head of the ecclesiastical establishment, visiting churches throughout the nation,
raising funds to reopen old churches and build new ones, reviving the elaborate
ecclesiastical rituals of the past, imbuing the work of the church with evangelistic
fervor, directing conferences, advising the administration of Uppsala University
as ex officio pro-chancellor - and all the while carrying on with his own
research and writing.
Internationally, he is best known, however,
as the architect of the ecumenical movement of the twentieth century. He had already
begun to move toward intercommunion between the Swedish Church and the Church
of England as early as 1909; in 1920 he arranged to have Bishop Woods of Peterborough,
England, participate in the consecration of two Swedish bishops; the following
year Woods welcomed Söderblom's «Life and Work» movement to Peterborough.
Söderblom found that the ecumenical movement was hampered during this period
for various reasons: the French, German, and American church officials were conservative,
the Archbishop of Canterbury cautious, the patriarchs of the Eastern Orthodox
churches just emerging from isolation, the Roman Catholic Church decidedly opposed,
and the proponents usually men without power. Söderblom himself did have
power, however, since he was the head of a national church, and he possessed other
important attributes, including scholarly prestige and persuasive personal charm.
The Stockholm Conference in 1925, which brought together Anglican, Protestant,
and Orthodox Christians, was the culminating event in Söderblom's ecumenical
efforts. Rome was not represented and in his opening address, Söderblom regretted
the absence of the «Apostle Peter». The Conference, described in detail
in Söderblom's book Stockholm 1925, laid the basis for a future ecumenical
creed, emphasized the need to reconcile the competing philosophies of subjective
spirituality and of objective social action, and sought to find unity in appealing
for world peace.
Söderblom was proud of his election to the
Swedish Academy in 1921, of his Nobel Peace Prize in 1930, and of his invitation
to deliver the Gifford Lectures in Edinburgh in 1931. For this famous lectureship
he planned a great scholarly effort - one series of lectures to be delivered in
1931 and another in 1932, both series to be published in two volumes. He delivered
the first series of ten lectures between May 19 and June 8, 1931. An appropriate
title for his book eluded him, but on the last day of his life, July 12, he found
it: The Living God4.
| Selected Bibliography |
| Andrae, Tor J.E., Nathan Söderblom. Uppsala, 1931. |
| Aulén, Gustaf, «Nathan Söderblom as a Theologian», Church Quarterly Review, 115 (October, 1932) 15-48. |
| Bell, George K.A., The Stockholm Conference, 1925: The Official Report of the Universal Christian Conference on Life and Work. London, Oxford University Press, 1926. |
| Curtis, Charles J., «Nathan Söderblom: Pope John of Protestant Ecumenism», American Ecclesiastical Review, 156 (January, 1967) 1-9. |
| Curtis, Charles J., Söderblom: Ecumenical Pioneer. Minneapolis, Augsburg Publishing House, 1967. Includes a bibliography. |
| Hoffmann, Jean G.H., Nathan Soederblom: Prophète de l'oecuménisme. Genève,Éditions Labor et Fides, 1948. |
| Katz, Peter, Nathan Söderblom: A Prophet of Christian Unity. London, James Clarke, 1949. |
| Malmeström, Elis, Eklund, Söderblom och Billing. Stockholm, Gummesson, 1969. |
| Rouse, Ruth, and Stephen C. Neill, eds., A History of the Ecumenical Movement, 1517-1948. London, for the Ecumenical Institute by S.P.C.K., 1954. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, Christian Fellowship: The United Life and Work of Christendom. New York, Revell, 1923. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, «The Church and International Good Will», Contemporary Review, 116 (1919) 309-315. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, The Church and Peace. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1929. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, Kristenhetens möte i Stockholm, augusti nittonhundratjugufem: Historik, aktstycken, grundtankar, personligheter, eftermäle. Stockholm, 1926. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, The Living God: Basal Forms of Personal Religion. The Gifford Lectures. London, Oxford University Press, 1933. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, The Nature of Revelation, ed. by Edgar M. Carlson. Philadelphia, Fortress Press, 1966. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, Tal och skrifter. 5 dl. Stockholm, 1933. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, «The Unity of Christendom», American Scandinavian Review, 8 (1920) 585-592. |
| Söderblom, Nathan, «Why I Am a Lutheran», in Twelve Modern Apostles and Their Creeds, pp. 72-88. New York, 1926. |
| Sundkler, Bengt G.M., Nathan Söderblom: His Life and Work. London, Lutterworth, 1968. |
1. Bengt Sundkler, Nathan Söderblom,
p. 38.
2. Charles J. Curtis, Söderblom, pp. 44-46.
3. Ibid., pp. 47-48.
4. Sundkler, op.cit., pp.
424-426.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1926-1950, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
his autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.