Jørgen Jensen Sadolin (c. 1490 – 29 December 1559 in Odense) was a Danish reformer and first protestant bishop of the Diocese of Funen.
He was the son of Jens Christensen, a curate and subsequently a canon of Viborg Cathedral, and likely born c. 1499 out of wedlock, as his Catholic opponents frequently took care to remind him.
[1] First records of Sadolin come are dated to 1 December 1525, when Frederick I permitted him to settle at Viborg to teach young persons of the poorer classes "whatever might be profitable."
Towards the Catholics he adopted a firm, but moderate and reasonable, tone, and his indulgence towards the monks in St Knud's cloister drew down upon him a fierce attack from the Puritan clergyman of Odense, who absurdly accused him of being a crypto-Catholic.
He gave the funeral oration over Christian III in St John's Church at Odense in February 1559, though now very infirm and blind, and died at the end of the same year.