It may sound like an unlikely No. 1 best-seller for any country, but in Norway — one of the most secular nations in an increasingly godless Europe — the runaway popularity of the Bible has caught the country by surprise. The Scriptures, in a new Norwegian language version, even outpaced "Fifty Shades of Grey" to become Norway's best-selling book.
The sudden burst of interest in God's word has also spread to the stage, with a six-hour play called "Bibelen," Norwegian for "the Bible," drawing 16,000 people in a three-month run that recently ended at one of Oslo's most prominent theaters.
Officials of the Lutheran Church of Norway have stopped short of calling it a spiritual awakening, but they see the newfound interest in the Bible as proof that it still resonates in a country where only 1 percent of the 5 million residents regularly attends church.
Saturday, June 15, 2013
BIBLE NEWS: Is Norway seeing a Bible revival?
Europe is known for now fostering a secular (i.e. non-Christian) society, but that doesn't mean God isn't at work. Recently, Norway has seen a surprise surge of sales of the Bible after a new translation was released which modernized the language for the Norwegian audience.
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