How Europe’s only Indigenous group is inspiring a greener Christianity

How Europe’s only Indigenous group is inspiring a greener Christianity

Reception of the South Sami Hymn Book. Erik-Oscar Oscarsson, chairman of the Sami Council in the Church of Sweden, holds the new South Sami hymn book. The new hymn book contains 75 hymns, translated into South Sami from the Swedish and Norwegian hymn books, or with original texts in South Sami. Image by Carl-Johan Utsi/Ikon.
Inari in Lapland, Finland. Image by Karl Chan via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).Inari in Lapland, Finland. Image by Karl Chan via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

Johnsen concluded that this understanding of nature, as a sacred place possessing its own power, voice and personality, has given rise to a unique ecological worldview distinct from traditional Christian notions of man’s dominion over creation — “a sacramental view of nature and its benefits,” as he puts it, which sees interacting with the world and its creatures as possessing a kind of innate holiness.

“God, as the creator and sustainer of life, constantly gives us life through the blessings of nature, undeservedly,” he said. “The reindeer meat, the fish and the mullet berries are in a certain sense a sacrament … where God’s invisible grace is given to us through a visible sign.”

This belief also endows humanity with a special duty of care — an obligation to respect and preserve these blessings. “We are the only creatures that can destroy [nature] for everything else,” Sjöberg explained. “So, we have to be even more humble. We have to ask permission when we cut wood. We have to say grace and bless it … because otherwise we can so easily destroy it for future generations.”

These lessons run throughout Sámi folk stories and family lore, which emphasize the total interdependence of human beings, animals and the landscape. “Every element in existence is constituted through its relationships,” the South Sámi theologian Bierna Leine Bientie wrote. “Therefore, the relationships are more important than the elements in and of themselves.”

Reception of the South Sami Hymn Book. Midsummer Day. Image by Carl-Johan Utsi/Ikon.
How, how much and what to include?

In recent years, the former state churches in Sámi territory have all sought to make amends for trying to erase and suppress Sámi identity, traditions and spirituality. Truth and reconciliation processes are underway or completed in all three countries; in Sweden, the national Lutheran church made a historic apology in 2021.

Occurring amid a growing climate crisis, those processes have also involved addressing the way these churches have historically ignored Sámi teachings and participated in the degradation of the environment in pursuit of energy and profit.

As an Arctic people, the Sámi have been particularly impacted by climate change, which has disrupted many traditional activities. Thawing and freezing driven by warmer-than-average winter temperatures can lock vital pastures beneath layers of ice, forcing herders to abandon historic and even sacred pasturing sites. Invasive species, like pink salmon, are transforming the ecosystems in rivers and lakes maintained by Sámi fishers for centuries. And the vast and open lands of the north are often targeted for green energy projects, like windmills and dams, or exploited for valuable minerals that can be used to make batteries.

Former state churches like Sweden’s, meanwhile, are often the owners of vast tracts of lands, including valleys, mountains and forests sacred to the Sámi. This has, at times, put them at odds with Sámi Christian activists calling for the return of lands or co-management with Sámi communities.

But a message of cooperation seems to have been accepted by some in the church hierarchy. In October 2023, amid historic protests against an illegal wind farm development in Fosen, Norway, Oslo’s Trinity Church opened its doors to protesters, becoming a hub for organizing.

“They actually went to the action for the first 24 hours,” Sjöberg said. “Then, they asked the activists, ‘What can we do for you?’ Like Jesus did in the Bible.”

Reindeer appliqué work on curtains. Image by Magnus Aronson/Ikon.
A member of the Sámi Indigenous people tends a reindeer in Sweden. Image by Staffan Widstrand/Rewilding Europe.

A growing number of progressive theologians want to go further in responding to the climate crisis by reforming the church’s theology itself to reflect the sustainable values of Indigenous Christian communities.

“In the 21st century, it’s just something that theologians have to talk about,” said David Lewis, a Ph.D. researcher in theology. “We have a climate crisis on our hands.

Not everyone is so convinced. Nordic churches have also been reluctant to end their logging of Sámi forests, which provide significant funds for church upkeep. Motions to protect the forests have consistently been voted down at synods; an internal review of the Church of Sweden’s forest management found a “strong financial focus” prioritized over environmental and sustainability goals.

There are other barriers to acceptance too. “Ecotheology is getting less controversial, even among the conservatives,” explained Tom Sverre Tomren, a theologian at VID Specialized University in Oslo. But some northerners still associate environmentalism with animal rights activists or urban conservationists who balk at Sámi hunting or close off traditional harvesting sites, he said.

More conservative wings of the church, like the Laestadian revivalist movement, are also more reluctant to incorporate some Sámi traditions in Christian worship, preaching a theology that sees traditional forms of animism as idolatry or blasphemy. Joiking in church remains controversial in many dioceses; one Norwegian vicar called the singing a remnant of the “old religion.” “This is something that, for centuries, people have been taught is the voice of the devil,” Webber said. “And if you teach people that it is wrong, then people will start thinking this way.”

Nordic — and Sámi — society is also rapidly secularizing, raising the question of whether ecotheology can have much influence at all. One study found just 30% of Swedish youth were confirmed in the church in 2014, compared with more than two-thirds in 1988, with similar drops in other Nordic countries. Twenty years ago, the leader of Norway’s Sámi Church Council, Ole Mattis Hetta, warned about how this transformation might threaten the survival of the traditional Sámi view of nature “as something God-given.” He once told Bientie in an interview, “The respect for nature and the sense of maintaining harmony that existed among the Sami only 30-40 years ago seems to be gone. This is the scourge of modernism, not a consequence of Christianity, but of the secularization of the Sami.”

A chasuble with bird embroidery in Jokkmokk’s old church. Image by Emma Berkman/Ikon.

Other Sámi, meanwhile, fear the opposite — that the church might move too quickly to appropriate the same Indigenous traditions they once forced into the shadows. “I don’t know how much of our Christianity should be in the church,” Sjöberg said. “And I’m not sure that the church should be the driving force in this process.”

For Jernsletten, “It’s positive that the church wants to be inspired by the Indigenous traditions.” But both she and Sjöberg cautioned that until only recently, Sámi spirituality was an intensely private thing, often kept within families and very localized and diverse.

Still, Jernsletten said, it is work that increasingly must be done. More and more, Sámi are called upon to explain their spirituality in legal battles and political appeals to defend sacred sites and traditional practices.

Those conversations, she said, can be “very difficult.” But in the end, it may be worth it: A church that understands and respects Sámi faith, she said, will be a better ally in those fights.

 

Banner image: Service in Östersund. Image by Magnus Aronson/Ikon. 

Finland’s debate over Indigenous identity and rights turns ugly

Related listening from Mongabay’s podcast: We speak with Tero Mustonen about Snowchange Cooperative’s program that is rewilding Arctic and Boreal habitats using Indigenous knowledge. Listen here:

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Christianity, Climate Change, Conservation, Conservation and Religion, Fish, Fishing, Human Rights, Indigenous Communities, Indigenous Culture, Indigenous Cultures, Indigenous Groups, Indigenous Peoples, Indigenous Rights, Logging, Mining, Religions, Traditional Knowledge, Traditional People

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