Abstract
Johan Samuel Pajula, a Forerunner of the Finnish Theological Research and a Victim of the 1918 Civil War — At the University of Helsinki, Johan Samuel Pajula (1856–1918) was the first to publish a doctoral thesis on Finnish Church History and the first Finnish theologian to write and publish his doctoral thesis in Finnish in 1891. Pajula, then a vicar of the Lutheran parish of Iitti, was murdered by the Reds during the Finnish Civil War in 1918. Despite his ground-breaking books and articles, Pajula was not able to gain a tenure position at the Faculty of Theology. By the 1890s, the leading Finnish theologians, having Swedish as their mother tongue and originating from the upper strata of Finnish society, had become supporters of Beckian Biblicism, a fundamentalist interpretation originating from the theology of Johann Tobias Beck. Pajula, a Finnish speaker and son of a saddle-maker, was not a Beckian.