Catholic Church in Norway
The Catholic Church in Norway is part of the worldwide Catholic Church., there were over 151,000 registered Catholics in Norway. It is claimed there are many Catholics who are not registered with their personal identification number and who are not reported by the local church; the full number may be as high as 230,000, 70% of whom were born abroad. That constitutes about 5% of the population, making Norway the most Catholic country in Nordic Europe.
However, in early 2015, the Bishop of Oslo was charged with fraud for reporting to the government as many as 65,000 names of people claimed as members of the church who had not actually signed up. As the government gives a subsidy to religious organizations according to the number of members, the diocese was ordered to repay the government. The government reports for January 2015 that there were 95,655 registered Catholics, down from the 140,109 reported for January 2014.
Structure
The Catholic Church is the second largest religious community in Norway by number of registered members. The country is divided into three Church districts – the Diocese of Oslo and the prelatures of Trondheim and Tromsø, whose bishops participate in the Nordic Bishops Conference. The country is further divided into 38 parishes and three chapel districts.Four religious orders have returned to Norway: the Cistercians, Dominicans, the Poor Clares, and the Trappistines. In 2007, monks from the Abbey of Cîteaux dedicated a new monastery at Frol, near Levanger in Nord-Trøndelag, naming it Munkeby Mariakloster. Trappistine nuns, likewise, bought land near the ruins of a pre-Reformation monastery on the island of Tautra in the Trondheimsfjord, moved to the site, and built a new cloister, workplace, guesthouse, and chapel, calling the new monastery Tautra Mariakloster. In addition to these four, 17 other orders are also working in the country, for instance the Sisters of St. Francis Xavier, which is a unique order as it was founded in Norway in 1901. The Benedictines, who had a monastery on the island of Selja in the Medieval ages, were asked to return to Norway.
There are few Catholic welfare institutions in Norway today. There are no Catholic hospitals or orphanages, but the Catholic Church operates primary and secondary schools in Oslo, Arendal and Bergen, and Bodø. The Sisters of Saint Elizabeth operated St. Elizabeth's home for elderly in Oslo, until it was completely destroyed by fire in December 2014. Fransiskushjelpen, a charity established in 1956 and run by Franciscans, remains active; Caritas Norway is a Catholic international relief and development organisation.
Origin
The Catholic Church in Norway is almost as old as the kingdom itself, dating from approximately A.D. 900, with the first Christian monarchs, Haakon I from 934. The country is considered to have officially converted upon the death of the king St. Olav at the Battle of Stiklestad in 1030. The subsequent Christianisation took several hundred years.Largely the work of Anglo-Saxon missionaries, the Norwegian Church has been considered the only daughter of English Catholicism. Cardinal Nicholas Breakspear, later Pope Adrian IV, established a church province in 1153, the Archdiocese of Nidaros.
Reformation to 1843
The Lutheran Reformation in Norway lasted from 1526 to 1537. Catholic Church property and the personal property of Catholic priests were confiscated by the Crown. Catholic priests were exiled and imprisoned unless they submitted to conversion to the Danish king's faith. Bishop Jon Arason of Holar, executed in 1550, was the last Catholic bishop of Iceland. The Bishop of Hamar from 1513 to 1537, Mogens Lauritssøn, was imprisoned until his death in 1542.Many traditions from the Catholic Middle Ages continued for centuries more. In the late 18th century and into the 19th century, a strict and puritan interpretation of the Lutheran faith, inspired by the preacher Hans Nielsen Hauge, spread through Norway, and popular religious practices turned more purely Lutheran. The Catholic Church per se, however, was not allowed to operate in Norway between 1537 and 1843, and throughout most of this period, Catholic priests faced execution. In 1582, the scattered Catholics in Norway and elsewhere in Northern Europe were placed under the jurisdiction of a papal nuncio in Cologne, however, with threatening punishment Catholic pastoring could not materialise. In the late 16th century, a few incidents of crypto-Catholicism occurred within the Lutheran Church of Norway. However, these were isolated incidents.
The Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, on its establishment in 1622, took charge of the vast Northern European missionary field, which – at its third session – it divided among the nuncio of Brussels, the nuncio at Cologne and the nuncio to Poland.
In 1688, Norway became part of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Nordic Missions. The Paderborn bishops functioned as administrators of the apostolic vicariate. Christiania had an illegal but tolerated Catholic congregation in the 1790s. In 1834, the Catholic missions in Norway became part of the Apostolic Vicariate of Sweden, seated in the Swedish capital of Stockholm. In 1843, the Norwegian Parliament passed a religious tolerance act providing for limited religious freedom and allowing for legal non-Lutheran public religious services for the first time since the Reformation.
Since legalisation in 1843
The first parish after the Reformation was established in the capital in 1843; a few years later Catholic places of worship were opened in Alta, Tromsø and Bergen. Whereas Norway north of the polar circle became the Apostolic Prefecture of the North Pole in 1855, the rest of Norway stayed with the Swedish vicariate. When a new Norwegian Catholic missionary jurisdiction was established, it was not at any of the ancient episcopal sees but a mission “sui iuris” on 7 August 1868, created out of parts of North Pole prefecture and the Norwegian part of the Swedish vicariate. On 17 August 1869, the mission became the Apostolic Prefecture of Norway. On 11 March 1892, the Apostolic Prefecture of Norway was promoted to Apostolic Vicariate of Norway, with an altered name as the Apostolic Vicariate of Norway and Spitsbergen between 1 June 1913 and 15 December 1925. In 1897, the constitutional ban on religious orders was lifted, which in time led to the establishment of several communities and monasteries.On 10 April 1931, the Apostolic Vicariate of Norway was divided into three separate Catholic jurisdictions:
- Southern Norway: Apostolic Vicariate of Oslo, upgraded to the Diocese of Oslo in 1953
- Central Norway: Its jurisdiction became the Prelature of Trondheim in 1979.
- Norway north of the polar circle: Its jurisdiction now forms the Prelature of Tromsø.
Sigrid Undset
Catholic immigrants
The Catholic Church remained very much a minority church of a few thousand people up to the decades following World War II. However, with increased immigration from the 1960s onwards, the Catholic Church grew quickly: from 6,000 in 1966 to 40,000 in 1996 and to over 200,000 in 2013.At first, the immigrants came from Germany, the Netherlands, and France. Immigration from Chile, the Philippines, and from a wide range of other countries began in the 1970s. Among the largest groups are Vietnamese and Tamils. This development has further increased after 2008 with a high number of economic migrants from Poland and Lithuania. Poles, who number an estimated 120,000 as of 2006, are currently the largest group of Catholics in Norway., besides members of the Latin Church, there were Chaldean Catholics with their own priest.
Members
| Year | Members | Percent |
| 1971 | 9,366 | 0.24% |
| 1980 | 13,923 | 0.34% |
| 1990 | 26,580 | 0.62% |
| 2000 | 42,598 | 0.98% |
| 2010 | 66,972 | 1.37% |
| 2011 | 83,018 | 1.68% |
| 2012 | 102,286 | 2.04% |
| 2018 | 157,220 | 2.96% |
| Municipality | Catholics | Percent | Catholics | Percent | Catholics | Percent |
| 20px Oslo Municipality | 14,908 | 2.8% | 13,300 | 2.5% | 34,000 | 5.4% |
| 20px Bergen Municipality | 3,873 | 1.6% | 4,044 | 1.7% | 13,000 | 4,8% |
| 20px Bærum Municipality | 1,816 | 1.7% | 1,666 | 1.6% | ___ | - |
| 20px Stavanger Municipality | 1,720 | 1.5% | 1,568 | 1.3% | 10,000 | 7.7% |
| 20px Trondheim Municipality | 1,434 | 0.9% | 1,416 | 0.9% | 5,000 | 2.7% |
| 20px Kristiansand Municipality | 1,251 | 1.6% | 1,150 | 1.5% | ___ | - |