Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, April 06, 2007
Former MI State Trooper Says He Cannot Be A Chaplain
The Associated Press today reports that a retired Michigan state trooper has filed an unusual civil rights claim arguing that he is being pressured to serve as a chaplain even though he is not ordained. The police officer was injured in an auto accident while on the job. Initially the state granted him workers' compensation payments, but later terminated them because he refused to accept a position as a Department of Corrections chaplain. Former trooper Bruce Paris, a Pentecostalist, holds a master's degree in biblical studies, but says that his conscience will not permit him to work as a member of the clergy without being called. A bishop of the Church of God In Christ says that it would violate church doctrine for Paris to take the chaplain position.