ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1995, Roanoke Times DATE: Sunday, December 31, 1995 TAG: 9601020164 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-10 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: UPPSALA, SWEDEN SOURCE: THOMAS GINSBERG ASSOCIATED PRESS
FOR MOST SWEDES, the change may be invisible. For the church and religious freedom, the evolution is profound.
Each Sunday, church bells peal from idyllic churches across Sweden. Magnificent old granite and iron cathedrals grace the modern skylines.
But inside, many pews are empty - symptoms of apathy and falling membership that, along with more immigrants and religions, are about to force the separation of church and state in Sweden after four centuries.
The first step comes Monday, when children born to at least one Lutheran parent no longer will automatically become members of the state Lutheran church.
Over the next four years, the country will largely denationalize its Lutheran Evangelical Church of Sweden, one of the world's oldest remaining state churches.
By 2000, local parishes and the state must appraise and divide up vast amounts of property. The church must cut its $1.68 billion annual budget, most of which is collected through taxes.
After 2000, the church, rather than the state, will appoint bishops.
The king no longer must be Lutheran, although King Carl XVI Gustaf says he will remain one. Civil affairs minister Marita Ulvskog, the so-called ``church minister'' required by law to be Lutheran, could quit the church and openly admit what she already has told its leaders: She's a non-believer.
For most Swedes - unreligious and church-avoiding - the change may be invisible. For the church and religious freedom in Sweden, the evolution is profound.
``It will change the mentality of the church from a church equal to the postal system ... to a church being a community, interested in its individual members,'' says the Rev. Dr. Ragnar Persenius, the church's secretary for external affairs.
Undoing a 403-year-old knot takes time, and the split will not be total. The church will continue to collect its fees through taxes and will retain a monopoly over funeral homes and cemeteries, even those used by other faiths.
Lutheranism became the state religion in 1593 and, for three centuries, all Swedes had to belong to its church. Since the 1850s, they did not even have to be baptized to be counted as members. Not until 1951 could they legally quit the church and stop paying it 1.1 percent of their annual income in taxes.
A church-state ``divorce'' formally was proposed in the 1950s amid an influx of Jews, Catholics and Eastern Orthodox from Europe. In the last decade, Muslims went from a handful of Swedes to an estimated 250,000.
Today, 10 percent of Sweden's 8.6 million people are non-Lutheran immigrants. Church membership has gone from nearly everybody to 86 percent - and is still falling.
In Sweden, some think the union exacted a spiritual price.
``People may have taken [the church] for granted,'' says the Rev. Dr. Johan Dalman, a church theologian. ``This is what we hope will change.''
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