Nils Frykman

Nils Frykman (1842-1911) was a Swedish teacher, evangelist and hymnwriter.[2] He came to the United States in 1888 and was a pastor at Covenant Churches in Illinois and Minnesota for nearly two decades. Known as "the joyous Christian singer", Frykman wrote over three hundred hymns, many of which are still sung by worshipers in Sweden and the United States.[3]

Nils Frykman [1]
Born
Nils Larsson

(1842-10-20)October 20, 1842
DiedMarch 30, 1911(1911-03-30) (aged 68)
Occupationteacher, evangelist, hymnwriter
Spouse(s)Betty Anderdotter Jonsson, m. 1869
ChildrenTen

Sweden

Nils Larsson was born October 20, 1842 on a farm near Sunne, Värmland. In 1866 he enrolled at a teacher's college in Karlstad and took the last name of Frykman, which derived from the valley where he was born: Fryksdalen. After graduating in 1868 Frykman worked as a primary schoolteacher at schools in Värmland and Östergötland.[3]

He married Betty Jonsson in 1869, with whom he had ten children. The couple's association with the Free Church and P. P. Waldenström led to conflicts with the school board until finally in 1883 Frykman gave up his teaching position.[4]

For the next few years he devoted himself to the ministry, spreading the Gospel as an itinerant preacher. During all of this time Frykman was a prolific hymnwriter, publishing his lyrics in the Christian weekly Sanningsvittnet (Witness of the Truth).[4]

America

In 1888 Frykman and his family immigrated to the United States after he had accepted a pastorate at the Tabernacle Church of Chicago. They remained in that city until 1889 when he was called to Salem Mission Covenant Church in Pennock, Minnesota. He served the congregation there until his retirement in 1907.[3]

His final years were spent in Minneapolis, where he held administrative posts with the Covenant Church. In 1908 he oversaw the publication of Sions Basun (Zion's Trumpet).[5] The first official hymnal of the Covenant Church, it had more than one hundred hymns written by Frykman.[4]

Nils Frykman died March 30, 1911 at the age of sixty-eight. His funeral at the Swedish Tabernacle (now First Covenant Church) in Minneapolis was attended by 2,000 mourners. In 1928 a monument was erected near his grave at Lakewood Cemetery in Minneapolis. Etched in stone are the opening lines of the hymn that he considered his best:[3]

I have a future all sublime,
beyond the realms of space and time,
where my Redeemer I shall see,
and sorrow nevermore shall be.

Selected hymns by Nils Frykman

A number of Frykman's hymns are available as digital downloads. The 1990 album Frykman på gammalt vis (Frykman in the old style) can be purchased at iTunes.

References

  1. Frykman family tree genealogy.com. Retrieved: December 9, 2012.
  2. Nils Frykman sv.wikipedia.org. Retrieved: December 9, 2012.
  3. The Joyous Christian Singer pietisten.org. Retrieved: December 9, 2012.
  4. Twice-Born Hymns by J. Irving Erickson, (Chicago: Covenant Press, 1976) pp. 94-95.
  5. Sions Basun (Chicago: Svenska evangeliska missionsförbundet i Amerika, 1909).

Images

Swedish and English lyrics

Discography

Streaming audio

Videos

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