Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:28:39.311Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Messianism, Holiness, Charisma, and Community: The American-Swedish Colony in Jerusalem, 1881–1933

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Yaakov Ariel
Affiliation:
Mr. Ariel is assistant professor of religious studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Ruth Kark
Affiliation:
Ms. Kark is professor of geography at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.

Extract

One of the most interesting Protestant sects that settled in Palestine from 1881 onwards, and that operated successfully for more than fifty years, was the American-Swedish “Colony” in Jerusalem.1 Known in its early years as the “Spaffordites,” the group was also called the “Overcomers,” since the members' journey to Jerusalem was spurred by their desire to overcome a series of personal tragedies. The history of the “American Colony,” as it was known in Jerusalem, reveals the power of religious beliefs to motivate and shape the lives of adherents. In this case, believers emigrated, built a new community with its own order and sense of purpose, demonstrated dedication, and made sacrifices in following what they considered to be divine commands. The American Colony also exemplifies the limited possibility of sustaining a religious community based upon intense beliefs, as one generation struggles to convey its religious tenets and social principles to the next. To reconstruct the religious influences, principles, and practices of this unique group in Palestine, the American Colony should be placed in the context of nineteenth-century American evangelical Protestantism, which included elements of revivalism, dispensational premillennialism, evangelism, and holiness teachings.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Kark, Ruth, “Millenarism and Agricultural Settlement in the Holy Land in the Nineteenth Century,” Journal of Historical Geography 9 (1983): 117;CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Murray, Robert, Till Jorsala (Stockholm, 1969), pp. 236239.Google Scholar

2. Vester, Bertha Spafford, Our Jerusalem (Garden City, N.Y., 1950), pp. 161.Google Scholar

3. See Garrett, Clarke, Respectable Folly: Millenarians and the French Revolution in France and England (Baltimore, Md., 1975);Google Scholar Oliver, W. H., Prophets and Millennialists: The Uses of Biblical Prophecy in England from the 1790s to the 1840s (Auckland, New Zealand, 1978);Google Scholar and Harrison, John F. C., The Second Coming: Popular Millenarianism 1780–1850 (New Brunswick, N.J., 1979).Google Scholar

4. Kobler, Franz, The Vision Was There (London, 1956);Google Scholar and Tuchman, Barbara W., Bible and Sword (London, 1983).Google Scholar

5. See Bass, Clarence B., Background to Dispensationalism (Grand Rapids, Mich., 1960);Google Scholar MacPherson, Dave, The Incredible Cover Up: The True Story of the Pre-Trib Rapture (Plainfield, N.J., 1975);Google Scholar and Sandeen, Ernest R., The Roots of Fundamentalism: British and American Millenarianism, 1800–1930 (Grand Rapids, Mich., 1978).Google Scholar

6. Ariel, Yaakov, On Behalf of Israel: American Fundamentalist Attitudes toward Jews, Judaism, and Zionism, 1865–1945 (New York, 1991), pp. 2554.Google Scholar

7. Marsden, George M., Fundamentalism and American Culture: The Shaping of Twentieth-Century Evangelicalism, 1870–1925 (New York, 1980), pp. 7280.Google Scholar

8. See Dayton, Donald W., Theological Roots of Pentecostalism (Grand Rapids, Mich., 1987), pp. 101106.Google Scholar

9. Dieter, Melvin E., “The Smiths—A Biographical Sketch with Selected Items from the Collection,” Asbury Seminarian 38 (1983): 712.Google Scholar

10. Vester, , Our Jerusalem, pp. 45–46.Google Scholar See also Smith, Alfred B., comp., Inspiring Hymns (Grand Rapids, Mich., 1951), no. 271.Google Scholar

11. This is evident among other things from the correspondence between Anna Spafford and Hannah Whitall Smith: “We were surprised…and grieved beyond measure that you should so misunderstand God's work through us.” Anna Spafford to Hannah Whitall Smith and others, 25 January 1883, Hannah Whitall Smith Archive, Asbury Theological Seminary, Wilmore, Kentucky. The pentecostal movement officially came into being in the early twentieth century, although many of its components were practiced even before it became an organized movement; see Dayton, , Theological Roots of Pentecostalism.Google Scholar

12. Chicago Daily News, 5 01 1898;Google Scholar and Vester, , Our Jerusalem, pp. 54–6 i, 156–158.Google Scholar

13. Spafford to Smith, 25 01 1883, Smith Archive. A copy of the MiSheBe'rach blessing composed by the Yemenites for Spafford is on display in a historical exhibition organized by the American Colony Hotel, Jerusalem.Google Scholar

14. Spafford to Smith and others, 25 01 1883, Smith Archive.Google Scholar

15. Kark, Ruth, “William H. Rudy and his Route from Chicago to The American-Swedish Colony in Jerusalem,” Ariel 100 (1994): 3343 (in Hebrew).Google Scholar

16. Larsson, Edith, Dalafolk i Heligt Land (Stockholm, 1957), pp. 18;Google Scholar Ulf Beijbom, Swedes in Chicago: A Demographic and Social Study of the 1846–1880 Immigration (Växjö, Sweden, 1971), pp. 264265;Google Scholar and Elmen, Paul, “The American-Swedish Kibbutz,” Swedish Pioneer Historical Quarterly 32 (1981): 205218.Google Scholar

17. Larsson, Edith, untitled and undated English MS, pp. 8–14, Helga Dudman's archive, Tiberias, Israel (this was based on her memoirs and some of her father's letters, and served as the basis for her book); and “Jerusalem in Prose,” MS V519 (1933), pp. 1–18, Jewish National and University Library, Jerusalem. This is part of the book by Laura Petri, På Heliga vägar (Stockholm, 1931), pp. 120–165.Google Scholar

18. Larsson, , English MS, p. 17.Google Scholar

19. Ibid., p. 18; Fahlén, Olof, Nåsbönderna i Jerusalem, Berättelsen om en marklig utvandring (Lund, Sweden, 1988), p. 23;Google Scholar and Anon., Järna, Nås, Apelbo, ur tre socknars Historia (Malung, Sweden, 1979), 1: 187189.Google Scholar

20. Larsson, , English MS, pp. 20–27.Google Scholar

21. Ibid., pp. 36–37.

22. Ibid., pp. 20–27, 33–34. The Whiting trial, which brought the Spaffordites to Chicago, received wide newspaper coverage and was much discussed in religious circles.

23. [Petri, ], “Jerusalem in Prose,” p. 6.Google Scholar

24. Forslund, K. E., Nås (Stockholm, 1925), 2: 126;Google Scholar Fahlen, , Nåbönderna, pp. 20–30;Google Scholar and Murray, , Till jorsala, p. 243.Google Scholar

25. Larsson, , English MS, pp. 35–36, 50–56; Vester, Our Jerusalem, pp. 174–177, discusses the Swedish group without mentioning Larson.Google Scholar

26. Gavish, Dov, “The American Colony and its Photographers,” in Zev Vilnay's Jubilee Volume, ed. Schiller, Ely (Jerusalem, 1984), pp. 127144; and Aaron Yaffe, “The Creation and Development of the American Colony in Jerusalem at the End of the Ottoman Period,” (seminar paper, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1978). The American Colony complex is today the American Colony Hotel.Google Scholar

27. Fahlén, , Nåbönderna, pp. 175–185, 199–202.Google Scholar

28. Lind, Lars and Wallstrom, Tord, Jerusalem Fararna (Stockholm, 1981);Google Scholar Larsson, , Dalafolk; Larsson, English MS; and Vester, Our Jerusalem.Google Scholar

29. Lagerlof, Selma, Jerusalem, 2 vols. (London, 1913);Google Scholar and Lagerlof, , “Address to the Universal Christian Conference in Stockholm” (Stockholm, 1925), pp. 14.Google Scholar

30. Fogarty, Robert, All Things New: American Communes and Utopian Movements,1860–1914 (Chicago, 1990), p. 19.Google Scholar

31. Vester, , Our Jerusalem, pp. 55–61; Spafford to Smith, 25 01 1883 and 17 January 1900, Smith Archive and Chicago Daily News, 14–15 May 1895.Google Scholar

32. Vester, , Our Jerusalem, pp. 23–24; Lind and Wallström, Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 21–24; [Petri], “Jerusalem in Prose,” p. 4; and Larsson, English MS, pp. 33–34.Google Scholar

33. Spafford to Smith, 25 01 1883, Smith Archive; Chicago Daily News, 14–15 May 1895; and Fahlén, Nåsbönderna, pp. 150–154, 166–174.Google Scholar

34. Chicago Daily News, 14–15 05 1895.Google Scholar

35. Spafford to Smith, 17 01 1900, Smith Archive.Google Scholar

36. [Petri], “Jerusalem in Prose,” p. 12. For imagery of the “Bride” in the context of return and redemption, see Isaiah 61:10; Jeremiah 33:ll;Joel 2:16; John 3:21; and Revelation 18:23, 21:2,9, and 22:17.Google Scholar

37. Chicago Daily News, 14–15 05 1895.Google Scholar

38. U.S. Consul in Jerusalem Edwin S. Wallace to assistant secretary of state, Washington, D. C, 19 04 1897, RG59 T471, United States National Archives (hereafter USNA).Google Scholar

39. Spafford to Smith, 25 01 1883, Smith Archive; Lind and Wallström, Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 50–92;Google Scholar Yellin, David, The Writings of David Yellin (Jerusalem, 1972), 1: 3435 (for 1896);Google Scholar and Aiken, Annie, reported in Chicago Daily News, 14–15 05 1895.Google Scholar

40. See a hymn found in Rudy's, William possession, RG84/Jerusalem No. 27/Rudy, USNA; and Marsden, Fundamentalism, pp. 72–80.Google Scholar

41. Lind, and Wallström, , Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 32–50; and Lester I.Google Scholar Vogel, , To See a Promised Land (University Park, Pa., 1993), pp. 152159. The Colony's Book of the Day of Judgment was not found.Google Scholar

42. Fogarty, , All Things New, p. 84;Google Scholar and Heyl, Vincent John, “A Study in the Social and Religious in Modern Jerusalem,” The Independent, 7 03 1889, pp. 13.Google Scholar

43. See Marsden, , Fundamentalism, p. 77.Google Scholar

44. Clark, Elmer T., The Small Seels in America, rev. ed. (New York, 1949), pp. 1124;Google Scholar and Oved, Yaacov, Two Hundred Years of American Communes (Oxford, 1988), pp. 369377.Google Scholar

45. Vester's account treats the matter as a personal choice not binding on the group as a whole; in Vester, Our Jerusalem, p. 201;Google Scholar and Lind, Anna Grace, “The House on the Wall” (Jerusalem, 1974?), p. 5, American Colony Archive.Google Scholar

46. Chicago Daily News, 14–15 05 1895;Google Scholar Vester, , Our Jerusalem, pp. 19–59;Google Scholar Lind and Wallström, Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 92–113; and Larsson, Dalafolk, pp. 37–39. Annie Aiken, a former member of the Colony, reported that “Mrs. Spafford claimed she was a prophetess and had a wonderful sign that we were to live like Adam and Eve before the fall, those who were married must live as though they were not”; [Petri], “Jerusalem in Prose,” p. 6. The appellation “Mother” was engraved on Anna Spafford's tombstone.Google Scholar

47. Lagerlof, , “Address,” pp. 1–1; and Yellin, Writings, pp. 34–35.Google Scholar

48. Lagerlof, , “Address,” pp. 1–4;Google Scholar see also Vester, , Our Jerusalem, pp. 30–42.Google Scholar

49. Lagerlof, , “Address”; and [Petri], “Jerusalem in Prose,” pp. 3, 8–10.Google Scholar

50. Chicago Daily News, 14–15 05 1895; correspondence concerning the Whiting Affair in the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem, July–October 1893, RG59 T471, USNA.Google Scholar

51. Ford, Alexander H., “Our American Colony,” Appleton's Magazine 8 (1906): 634655;Google Scholar Lind, and Wallstrom, , Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 32–50, 171; and Fahlén, Nåsböndarna, pp. 175–185.Google Scholar

52. Kark, , “William Rudy,” pp. 38–39.Google Scholar

53. Cook County Court Official Papers, third year (17 04 1895), no. 795, Chicago, Illinois.Google Scholar

54. Chicago Daily News, 14–15 05 1895;Google Scholar and Kark, , “William Rudy,” p. 39.Google Scholar

55. Quoted in Lipman, Vivian D., Americans and the Holy Land through British Eyes, 1820–1917: A Documentary History (London, 1989), pp. 153157.Google Scholar

56. Die Warte des Tempels, 14 02 1884, pp. 11–12.Google Scholar

57. On Merrill's attitude towards the Colony, see Ford, , “Our American Colony,” pp. 634–655;Google Scholar Kark, , American Consuls in the Holy Land 1832–1914 (Detroit, Mich., 1994), pp. 323326; and Spafford to Smith, 17 January 1900, Smith Archive.Google Scholar

58. R6 84/Jerusalem No. 27/Rudy, USNA.Google Scholar

59. See, for example, Hymns of the Christian Life (Harrisburg, Pa., 1936), p. 125.Google Scholar

60. Lind, and Wallström, , Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 92–108;Google Scholar and The Cruise of the Eight Hundred to and through Palestine Glimpses of Bible Land (New York, 1904).Google Scholar

61. Lind, Anna Grace, interview with Yaakov Ariel, 28 12 1993, Jerusalem; and Lind and Wallström, Jerusalem Fararna, pp. 171–173.Google Scholar

62. This is apparent from a chapter which Vester added to her book, Our Jerusalem, published (around 1954) by the Middle East Export Press, Lebanon, chap. 32, pp. 359–381.Google Scholar

63. A number of such former members were buried at the Colony's private cemetery on Mount Scopus, still in existence.Google Scholar

64. Lind, , interview with Ariel, 28 12 1993.Google Scholar

65. Kanter, Rosabeth Moss, Commitment and Community (Cambridge, Mass., 1977), pp. 138145.Google Scholar

66. See, for example, Sommer, Elisabeth, “A Different Kind of Freedom? Order and Discipline among the Moravian Brethren in Germany and Salem, North Carolina 1771–1801,” Church History 63 (1994): 221234. The situation among the second generation settlers in Salem, N.C., resembles that of the American-Swedish Colony (although the official framework in Salem remained).CrossRefGoogle Scholar