Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, November 04, 2007
Finland Charges Sex Discrimination In Dispute Over Female Clergy
In the past few days, both Christianity Today and WorldNet Daily have reported on the prosecution in Finland of a clergyman for gender discrimination after he refused to work together at a worship service with a female pastor. Ari Norro is a preacher affiliated with the Lutheran Evangelical Association in Finland (LEAF). LEAF is part of the country's state church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland. However LEAF believes the Bible prohibits women from serving as pastors. Last March, when Norro showed up as a guest preacher at a church in southern Finland, he discovered that Petra Pohjanraito was also scheduled to help distribute communion at the service. Norro said he was leaving because he could not co-officiate with a female pastor, but instead Ms. Pohjanraito decided to leave so Norro could speak. Subsequently the head of the Hyvinkää Church Council asked police to investigate, and a prosecution for gender discrimination followed. Norro's trial is scheduled to begin Nov. 16. Norro argues that his prosecution on account of religious beliefs is inconsistent with protections in Finland's constitution.