[8] Skott found that the membership was two-thirds male, mostly in their thirties, and the most active lived in and around Stockholm, but that they represented a cross-section of Swedish society.
[8] In the 2000s, the organization was reduced by disagreements; some of the members who left in 2004 founded Nätverket Forn Sed [sv] (literally "The Network Ancient Custom").
[11] It had at that point been surpassed by the Nordic Asa-Community, founded in 2014, making the Community of Forn Sed Sweden the second largest heathen organization in the country.
[16][18][8] The organization held a ceremony at the Kings' Mounds at Gamla Uppsala in 2000 in celebration of the dissolution of the Swedish state church,[7][19][20] the first heathen blót at the site in more than 900 years.
[3][6][16] Goði for Svealand and former Chairman of the Board Henrik Hallgren has represented Ásatrú at the "Spirituality beyond Religions" international conference organized in Jaipur, India, in 2006 by the World Council of Elders of Ancient Traditions and Cultures, presenting a paper entitled "Ecological spirituality and Forn Sed,"[22] and in 2010, 2011, and 2012 presented programs on heathenry in the Vid dagens början series of religious and philosophical reflections on Sveriges Radio,[23][24] provoking criticism from Siewert Öholm that Ásatrú was not worthy of broadcasting.