uzi@lemmy.ca 2 years ago
If it goes against the school’s moral teachings, then the sxhool must be free to fire him so the students don’t learn that behaviour is ok, as per the sxhool’s teachings.
uzi@lemmy.ca 2 years ago
If it goes against the school’s moral teachings, then the sxhool must be free to fire him so the students don’t learn that behaviour is ok, as per the sxhool’s teachings.
wintermute_oregon@lemm.ee 2 years ago
This is why I posted it. Legally they have the right to remove teachers who conflict with religious teachings. Yet this seems to go against th popes stance and he is the authority of the church.
uzi@lemmy.ca 2 years ago
It’s an issue between the individual school and the legal system. Whatever the Pope or the Vatican wants to do, there is wholly outside of the matter of the school and the teacher.
If the Vatican takes action against the school, that has no bearing on the sxhool’s right to fire the teacher.
topherclay@lemmy.world 2 years ago
Why are you writing the word “school” that way?
BobaFuttbucker@reddthat.com 2 years ago
They only did once and “x” and “c” are next to each other on qwerty keyboards, prob just a typo.
jimbolauski@lemm.ee 2 years ago
The school is managed by the local church and owned by the diocese. In a lawsuit it’s the diocese that would be sued.
jimbolauski@lemm.ee 2 years ago
The Pope is not as authoritative as every one thinks. Bishops have significant leeway in how they run their diocese and how priests run their churches.