How The Vikings Were Won To Christ: Terror From The North
How The Vikings Were Won To Christ: Terror From The North
How The Vikings Were Won To Christ: Terror From The North
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The Scandinavians were the last great group of Teutonic people to abandon heathenism and embrace
Christianity. The Viking marauders from the pagan North wreaked havoc throughout Northern and Western
Europe. Throughout the 9th and 10th centuries Vikings raided, killed and plundered. They also established
strong Viking settlements in Normandy, England, Scotland, Ireland, Iceland, Greenland,throughout the Baltic
and in Russia.
Conversion
At the time, probably nobody could have predicted that the violent Vikings would be conquered by the
Prince of Peace and become some of the most enthusiastic missionaries for the advance of Christianity.
Impacting Culture
Although the Vikings were famous for their hit and run raids, many Vikings actually settled in the British Isles
and deeply influenced English culture. The fact that we have a seven day week is due to the Biblical account
that God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh. However, the days of the week were
originally named by the Romans after the seven main celestial planets: The Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury,
Jupiter, Venus and Saturn. The Anglo Saxons replaced four of these with the names of Viking deities:
Tuesday is named after the Viking war god, Tyr (or Tiw); Wednesday after the Viking war god Wodin (Odin);
Thursday is named after the Viking god of war, Thor; and Friday after the Viking fertility goddess Frigg
(Frey).
Viking Words
Many English words have their roots in Scandinavian speech including: anger, die, scant, ugly, loose,
wrong, low, sky, take, window, husband, happy, thrive, ill, beer and anchor. The word berserk is actually
from the name of a Viking soldier.
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Denmark
Harold, King of Denmark, had been driven from his throne and had sought refuge at the court of Louis I,
King of the Franks. While at Louis's court King Harold heard the Gospel and turned to Christ, submitting
himself to being baptised. On the king's return to Denmark, Ansgar eagerly joined the king to preach the
Gospel to the Danes. At Hedeby Ansgar built a small wooden church, but persecution forced him to flee the
country.
Sweden
Ansgar responded to a request from King Bjorn of Sweden. This was early in the 9th century when the
Vikings were raiding, plundering and burning the coastal cities of Northern and Western Europe. Ansgar
narrowly escaped with his life when Norsmen burned the churches and monasteries in Hamburg. With two
co-workers Ansgar crossed the Baltic Sea to begin ministering in Sweden. On the way the vessel was
plundered by pirates and they arrived destitute in Sweden. King Bjorn welcomed the Christians to Sweden
and the first church was built in the country.
God's Judgment
More than any previous invasions and crises faced by the Christian church, the Viking raids wrought
desolation throughout the western Christendom. The Vikings laid waste to monasteries and churches,
shaking the churches to their foundations. A decline and decay in faith and morals had set in before the
Viking invasions and many saw the fury of the Norsmen as a judgment of God upon a backslidden, and
often apostate, church.
Resistance in Wessex
Churches and monasteries were destroyed, clergy and monks were slain, church buildings lay vacant, until
in the South of England the West Saxons were rallied by King Alfred the Great to steadfastly resist, and
ultimately defeat, the great Danish invasion.
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Duke Rollo of the Vikings, and some of his followers, received baptism and created the Duchy of
Normandy.
Impressed by Christ
The ethics of Christianity were so radically different to traditional Viking culture that it took literally centuries
for the Scandinavian people to be thoroughly evangelised and discipled. One of the chief attractions was
the conviction that Christ is a mighty Victor who has risen triumphant over death. The power of Christ
impressed the hardened Viking warriors. In Norway the king commanded his people to be converted to
Christ or be prepared to die. However, in Denmark and
Sweden the Vikings were converted by persuasion not force. Pioneer missionaries Willibrord and Liudger
attempted to take the Gospel to the Vikings, but with little visible success initially.
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Missions to Norway
The conversion of the Vikings in Norway was far more stormy than that of Denmark. Throughout the l0th
century Saxon missionaries from England laboured throughout Denmark establishing many mission
stations and congregations. From the time of King Alfred the Great the revived churches in England
evidenced a dynamic vitality in missions to the Vikings.
Olaf Trygvesson
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Olaf Trygvesson was the son of the King of Norway. His great grandfather, Harald Haarfager (Fair-hair), had
initially established the Kingdom of Norway. When Olaf's father was murdered in 968, Olaf fled the country
with his mother. Vikings captured their ship and sold the boy into slavery. Olaf ended up in the court of
Russia's Tsar Vladimir I, where he became a favourite of the Queen. When Olaf was just twelve years old,
the Tsar put a dozen ships under his command and sent
him off into battle.
Extortion in England
His next target was England where, after the battle of Maldon, near the mouth of the Thames, he forced the
Anglo-Saxon King, Ethelred the Unready, to pay a tribute of 10,000 pounds of silver. After this he moved
North plundering Northumberland and Scotland. He attacked the Hebrides and the Isle of Man. He
conducted raids of Ireland, Wales, Cornwell, and France again. With a fleet of over ninety-four ships he
again attacked England, killing and looting wildly until King Ethelred offered him a further 22,000 pounds.
Seeking Sorcery
Off the coast of Cornwell Olaf heard of a local fortune teller who was renowned to have a gift of prophecy.
Olaf rowed to the remote rocky retreat and asked the prophet if he could foresee anything in his future.
A Word of Prophecy
"Thou wilt become a renowned king and do celebrated deeds. And that thou not doubt the truth of this
answer, listen to this ... "
The old man predicted that Olaf would soon suffer a mutiny from his men, in which he would be wounded
and carried to his ship on his oblong shield. After seven days he would recover and he would be baptised
as a Christian. Many men wilt thou bring to faith and baptism, and both to thy own and others' good.
Mutiny
When the mutiny, wounding and recovery happened, precisely as the hermit had predicted, Olaf sought the
old man again to enquire how he could possess such knowledge. The man humbly confessed: "The God of
the Christians has blessed me."
Conversion
When King Ethelred heard of the conversion and baptism of his tormentor, King Olaf, he sent his bishop
and officials to present him with royal gifts and to offer Christian fellowship.
Confronting Apostasy
In 995, news from Norway reached Olaf that the leader Earl Haakon, the very man who had murdered Olaf's
father, had caused an uproar in the land by demanding the daughters of respected leaders of the
community. Although Earl Haakon had originally accepted Christianity, under threat from the German
Emperor Otto, he had since reverted to heathenism, restoring many heathen temples and persecuting
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Christians. Earl Haakon the Apostate had even gone so far as to offer his best horses and his youngest
son, a seventeen year old, as sacrifices to a heathen goddess.
Repent or Perish
Many of his relatives became his first converts and he appointed them as "Christ's captains."
"I shall make you great and mighty men for doing this work. All Norway must be Christian or die."
Heathen Sacrifice
At Trondheim, which had been the stronghold of the late heathen King Earl Haakon, Olaf burned the
heathen temples and destroyed the idols. The local chiefs rose in rebellion against him. Olaf mustered a
large army, and with thirty ships anchored in the River Nid, Olaf invited the local chiefs to a feast where he
indicated that he would be willing to perform a heathen sacrifice. When the chiefs were gathered together,
Olaf declared:
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"If I am to return to making heathen sacrifices then I will make the greatest sacrifice of all. I will not
sacrifice slaves but men. I will sacrifice the greatest of men only."
Olaf named the most prominent leaders of the opposition.
Baptism or Battle
As the horrified heathen howled in protest, Olaf gave them a straight challenge: "Baptism or Battle". He
held eleven leaders hostage until everyone was baptised. At nearby Trondheim the local Chief Ironbeard
demanded that the king offer sacrifices, as other kings before him had done. Olaf said he would make a
sacrifice, walked into the temple and smashed the idol of Thor to pieces with his axe. He then killed
Ironbeard and persuaded the rest of the village to abandon their heathen ways and to be baptised as
Christians.
Crusade Completed
This was the last resistance to Olaf's crusade to eradicate paganism in Norway. Now he focused on
winning Iceland and Greenland to Christ. But before he could do so, in the year 1000, King Olaf was killed
in the spectacular sea battle of Svold. The pagan queen Sigrid the Haughty, was furious that Olaf had
spurned her advances. She mobilised two pagan kings to trap Olaf off the coast of Denmark. Olaf died as
courageously as he had lived, rejoicing that he had succeeded in his
mission to convince the Vikings of Norway to abandon heathenism, to destroy their idols and to commit to
following the Christian Faith.
OIaf Haraldsson
Another prominent Norwegian king who consolidated the Christian Faith in Norway was Olaf Haraldsson. In
1007, when he was just twelve years old, Olaf Haraldsson was sent out as a sea king to raid Sweden. Later,
in Denmark, Olaf joined forces with Thorkel the Tall. They together launched raids on Jutland, Frisia, Holland
and England. They tormented King Ethelred the Unready, who had already suffered much at the hands of
the earlier Olaf Trygvesson. In 1009, Olaf and Thorkel attacked London and East Anglia. They martyred the
archbishop of Canterbury and plundered the Cathedral. Thereafter Olaf raided Brittany, France and Spain.
Transformed
Then Olaf had a traumatic spiritual experience and he saw a terrifying vision of Christ. Olaf abandoned his
heathen ways and committed to being a Christian. In 1015 he arrived in Norway and proclaimed himself
king. He immediately proclaimed the Christian Faith throughout Norway and built numerous churches. Olaf
became known as a great lawgiver. With Bishop Grimkell he established the Moster Law. While most of
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Smashing Idols
At Gulbrandsdal, local pagans confronted him with their huge wooden idol of Thor. Olaf distracted them by
drawing their attention to the bright sunrise behind them as a herald of his God. As his enemies turned to
face the sunrise, one of Olaf's warriors smashed the idol of Thor and revealed that its wood was rotten. As
gold spilled out, large rats, which had evidently been living off the food offerings, scattered. King Olaf
pointed out that the gold they had wasted on offerings to Thor's rotten idol would look far better as jewelry
on their wives and daughters.
Christ Triumphant
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The Vikings came to be convinced that the Christian God is more powerful than all other gods. They saw
how He answered the prayers of the Christians. They witnessed miracles. They saw how Christian kings
and missionaries were able to destroy idols and defy the heathen gods and taboos - without suffering any ill
effects. They saw that their pagan gods were powerless before the all powerful Jesus Christ.Christ was
honored and worshiped as the mighty Warrior who had triumphed over all the powers of death, hell and the
grave. He is the risen ascended Christ, King of kings and Lord of lords, with all other authorities in
subjection to Him.
"Yes, all kings shall fall down before Him; all nations shall serve Him." Psalm 72:11
Dr. Peter Hammond. Frontline Fellowship. P. O. Box 74 Newlands 7725 Cape Town. South Africa
Email: [email protected] Website: www.frontline.org.za
For further reading: "A History of the Expansion of Christianity", by Kenneth Scott Latourette, 1938,
Harper and Row.
"The Hammer and the Cross", by Michael Scott Rohan and AIIan J. Scott, 1980, Alder.
"The Christianisation of Scandinavia", edited by Birgit and Peter Sawyer and lan Wood, 1987. Viktoria
Bokforlag.
"The Last Apocalypse", by James Reston, 1998, Doubleday.
"The Barbarian Conversion", by Henry Holt, 1997
"Medieval Scandinavia", by Brigit and Peter Sawyer, 1993, University of Minnesota.
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