Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord - 01.06.1940, Page 214

Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord - 01.06.1940, Page 214
208 LE NORD of the Norwegian colony living there. Only exceptionally, how- ever, are there organised congregations. The church is available for baptism, confirmation, marriage (where permitted), and burials, and the chaplain is ready to help the sick and destitute so far as there are means at his disposal. But first and last the great task of the Seamen’s Mission is the evangelical teaching of the Gospel. The numerous social undertakings have of course their special value. They express Christianity at work on the different fronts. This practical service of the Gospel contributes to open the hearts to what the Norwegian Seamen’s Mission especially wants to bring: the glad tidings of salvation and peace, of future and hope in Jesus Christ, our Lord. What is now the attitude of the Norwegian seamen to the Church and Christianity? The answer is that as a rule there is a better attendance at the services in the Seamen’s Churches than at home. And for good reasons. Seamen do not live on the sunny side of life. Life to them means privation, longing, intense and vivid yearning for understanding and love. The struggle against storms and hard weather often fills the days with such suspense and uncertainty that it is not easy to find rest in anything unstable and in motion. An elderly skipper who came home safe and sound from a voyage where he had been in peril of death gave a classic expression to the thoughts that were in his mind while he was fighting for his life in the waves: “I prayed to God,” he said. And added: “For I can tell you that the planks that separate a seafaring man from eternity are too thin to create freethinkers.” There are great possibilities when the Gospel is taught with spiritual fervour and force to such men. And even if we do not always see great results of the work at once, the Word of God has a wonderful power of survival. There are no doubt many who could do as the old “salt” who was about to set out on his last journey. Before he died, he sent a greeting and thanks to an old chaplain for a sermon he had heard in London some forty years earlier. Now it pointed the sure course through the troubled waters of death. As mentioned above the services of the Norwegian Seamen’s Mission are conducted in accordance with the ritual and laws of the Established Church of Norway. Norwegian is spoken at all meetings. The Mission’s activities are thereby confined to those who understand Norwegian: Norwegians, Norwegian Americans, Swedes, Danes, and Swedish-speaking Finns. This laid the
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Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord

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