Johan Dalman

The Right Reverend
Johan Dalman
Bishop of Strängnäs
Church Church of Sweden
Diocese Strängnäs
Appointed 2015
Predecessor Hans-Erik Nordin
Orders
Ordination 1990
Consecration 6 September 2015
by Antje Jackelén
Personal details
Born (1960-07-06) July 6, 1960
Gothenburg, Sweden
Nationality Swedish
Parents Knut Dalman
and Maj Tegström
Spouse Margareta Nisser
Children 3

Johan Fredrik Dalman (born 6 July 1960 in Gothenburg) is a Swedish bishop.

Biography

Johan Dalman is the son of director Knut Dalman and Maj Tegström. He is married to art historian Margareta Nisser Dalman, who is senior curator at the Royal Collections.[1] The couple have three children.[2]

Dalman was ordained a priest in 1990 for the Archdiocese of Uppsala. He became assistant pastor in Enköping, secretary for theology and ecumenism at the Church Office in Uppsala and publisher of Verbum publishers. He received his doctorate in 1989 with the thesis titled Guds tilltal i det sköna: Anthony Ashley Cooper, den tredje earlens av Shaftesbury teologiska estetik (The voice of God in the beauty of Anthony Ashley Cooper, third Earl of Shaftesbury theological aesthetics). That led to ongoing research studies at Harris Manchester College, Oxford, 1990/91. In 2008 he became dean of Strängnäs Cathedral. Dalman is particularly interested in Anglican devotion, in particular of the progressive High Church direction affirming Catholicism.

In 2010 he was nominated for as a candidate for the Diocese of Linköping, but withdrew after he received 79 of 532 votes. In the autumn of 2013 Dalman was nominated as one of five candidates for Archbishop of Uppsala where he received 4% of the votes in the nomination election. In 2015, Dalman, together with Cristina Grenholm, was nominated for Bishop of the Diocese of Strängnäs. He received 62% of the vote and was elected as Bishop on March 4, 2015 with 68.5% of the vote. He was ordained a bishop on September 6, 2015 in Uppsala Cathedral.[3] On November 29 the same year he was appointed as chaplain to the King. [4]


References

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