Lars Paul Esbjörn
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Lars Paul Esbjörn (October 16, 1808 – July 2, 1870) was a Swedish-American Lutheran clergyman, academic and church leader. Esbjörn was a founder of the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church and of Augustana College. He served as the first president of Augustana College from 1860 until his resignation in 1863.[1]
Background
Esbjörn was born in Delsbo and schooled in Hudiksvall, both in Hälsingland, Sweden. He was educated in Gävle and studied theology at Uppsala University. He was ordained at Uppsala Cathedral, became curate at Östervåla parish in Uppsala County, then chaplain at the Swedish Oslättfors Iron Works and curate at Hille parish in Gävleborg County.[2]
Ministry
Esbjörn and a group of 146 Swedish immigrants sailed from Gävle to New York in 1849. Only Pastor Esbjörn and handful of his faithful followers arrived in Andover, Illinois. Together they built Jenny Lind Chapel, which became the "mother church" of the Swedish Lutheran community. The church was built with funding provided mainly by Jenny Lind, while she was at that time on a concert tour in the eastern United States.
Esbjörn would be Andover’s pastor from 1850 to 1856. Esbjörn followed some of the immigrants to Moline, Illinois during 1850 where he organized First Lutheran Church. Esbjörn divided his time between Andover and Moline.[3]
For a decade, Esbjörn struggled to minister to the Swedish Lutheran community within the Synod of Northern Illinois. Esbjörn was a Professor of Theology at Illinois State Normal University in Springfield, Illinois from 1858 to 1860. After serving two years as Scandinavian professor at this German-dominated Synod school, where he disagreed with the doctrinal looseness of many of the faculty, Esbjörn resigned and moved to Chicago where he and other Scandinavian church leaders felt that it was time to form their own synod.[4] They organized the independent Augustana Synod of the Lutheran church in the Jefferson Prairie Settlement in 1860. He was also fundamental in the beginnings of Augustana College. The college and seminary started in Chicago during 1860, moved to Paxton, Illinois in 1863, and finally to Rock Island, Illinois in 1875.[5] Esbjörn served as the first president of Augustana College and Theological Seminary from 1860 to 1863, when it was based in Chicago. He opposed its move to rural Paxton, and the move, combined with an appointment in the Church of Sweden in his home diocese of Uppsala led Esbjörn to tender his resignation from the college.[6]
Esbjörn returned to Sweden where he died on July 2, 1870 and was buried in the cemetery of the Lutheran Church in Östervåla. On June 13, 1948, after remodeling, Jenny Lind Chapel was dedicated as a shrine of the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church. In 1975, Jenny Lind Chapel was declared to be a national historic site.[7]
References
- ↑ "Lars Paul Esbjörn (1808-1870)". Presidents of Augustana College. Augustana College. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
- ↑ Lars Paul Esbjörn (Christian Cyclopedia. The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod)
- ↑ Jenny Lind Chapel (The Lutheran Journal. Vol. 60, No. 3, 1991 and Vol. 61, No. 1, 1992)
- ↑ The Augustana Synod : a brief review of its history, 1860-1910 (Rock Island, Illinois: Augustana Book Concern, 1910 p.92)
- ↑ History (Augustana Heritage Association)
- ↑ Conrad Bergendoff, Augustana...A Profession of Faith: A History of Augustana College, 1860-1935 (1969)
- ↑ Jenny Lind Chapel (Augustana Lutheran Church. Andover, Illinois)
Additional Resources
- Blanck, Dag The Creation of an Ethnic Identity: Being Swedish American in the Augustana Synod, 1860-1917 (Southern Illinois University Press. 2006)
- Granquist, Mark and Erling, Maria The Augustana Story: Shaping Lutheran Identity in North America (Augsburg Fortress Publishers. Minneapolis, MN. 2008)
External links
- Legacy of Lars Paul Esbjorn
- Augustana Heritage Association
- Historic Churches of the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church
- Jenny Lind Chapel
- Finding aid for the Lars Paul Esbjörn and Esbjörn Family Papers (1778-1960), held by Augustana Special Collections, Rock Island, Illinois.