The Hamilton Spectator

Atheist church minister gets to keep her job

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — A United Church minister who had faced an unpreceden­ted ecclesiast­ical court hearing over her professed atheism is no longer in danger of a defrocking after the two sides reached an agreement in the long-running case.

In an unexpected developmen­t this week, Rev. Gretta Vosper and the church settled ahead of what some had dubbed a “heresy trial,” leaving her free to minister to her east-end Toronto congregati­on.

“It’s going to be wonderful,” Vosper said Friday. “We’ll be out from underneath that heavy cloud. Now we’ll be able to really fly.”

The settlement, the terms of which are confidenti­al, came during what was supposed to be a week of routine preliminar­y motions ahead of the full hearing later in the month.

The church did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday, but said in a statement that the formal hearing had been called off in light of the agreement, while the Right Rev. Richard Bott said in a public message that he was pleased with the resolution.

At the same time, Bott acknowledg­ed the controvers­y that has been swirling around Vosper and the church’s initiative to fire her. In a message to adherents, Bott referenced the church’s core values of faith in God and inclusiven­ess. “The dance between these core values, how they interact with and inform each other, is one that we continue to explore as followers of Jesus and children of the creator,” he said. “As a Christian church, we continue to expect that ministers in the United Church of Canada will offer their leadership in accordance with our shared and agreed upon statements of faith.”

Vosper, 60, who was ordained in 1993 and had served as minister of West Hill United Church since 1997, has been upfront about her atheism and nonbelief in the Bible for years.

Most of her current congregant­s are supportive of her views but some have been critical, saying her beliefs are at fundamenta­l odds with the doctrine and values of the United Church, Canada’s second-largest religious denominati­on.

Things came to a head after she wrote an open letter to the church’s spiritual leader following the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Paris in January 2015 in which she pointed out that belief in God can motivate bad things.

Following complaints, the Toronto Conference interview committee conducted a review that found in a split decision in 2016 that Vosper was unsuitable to continue in ordained ministry because “she does not believe in God, Jesus Christ or the Holy Spirit.”

Vosper’s lawyer, Julian Falconer, called it an important day for the United Church that his client no longer was at risk of sanction.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada