Mission Covenant Church of Sweden


The Mission Covenant Church of Sweden, founded in 1878, was a Swedish evangelical free church. It was the second-largest Christian denomination in Sweden, after the national church, the Church of Sweden. In 2011–2012, the Mission Covenant Church of Sweden completed a long-planned merger with the Baptist Union of Sweden and the United Methodist Church of Sweden. The new denomination was called Joint Future Church, until the new name Equmeniakyrkan was adopted by the general assembly in May 2013.
Prior to 2003, the Mission Covenant Church was called Svenska Missionsförbundet. The Swedish Salvation Army is a non-territorial district of the Mission Covenant Church.
The Mission Covenant Church of Sweden is a breakaway from the Lutheran Church of Sweden. As a movement it had roots in Pietism and the spiritual awakenings of the 19th century. The denomination is a member of the Swedish Free Church Council, the , and the World Communion of Reformed Churches. When Swedish Covenanters emigrated to the United States and Canada in the last half of the 19th century, they formed the Evangelical Covenant Church. The denominations are independent of each other but have maintained fraternal ties. The forming of the Swedish Mission Covenant was one of the first steps in forming "Free Church" denominations in Sweden.
The church sent numerous missionaries to many countries around the world, such as China in the 19th and early 20th centuries, in particular Xinjiang, Japan, India, Russia and Caucasus, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Ecuador, Alaska, Spain and, in numbers of missionaries the largest field, Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Republic of Congo. In many other countries there were missionary projects.
The church had 61,000 members in 700 congregations in 2009.

Notable members