
My co-author Mark W. Lee and I have had an article accepted for publication in Oxford’s Journal of Church and State (JCS). The author accepted manuscript is available for free through the King’s College London research archive (linked below). It’s due to be published by JCS in Summer 2027.
Abstract: This article offers a theological commentary on religious freedom in Finland through an Augustinian reading of two developments in its contemporary church–state settlement: the Act on the Freedom of Religion (453/2003) and Prosecutor General v. Räsänen (KKO: R2024/57), the so-called Bible-Tweet Case. Together these developments illuminate how a constitutional order understands religion both as a historically embedded institutional reality and as a contested object of civil authority. Responding to the relative absence of sustained theology of law in Finnish church–state scholarship, the article articulates a form of Augustinian pragmatism distilled from Augustine’s mature reflections, especially The City of God and his anti-Donatist letters. This approach foregrounds ordered loves, earthly peace, constrained civil authority, and historical realism as principles for constitutional judgment. Read in this light, the Freedom of Religion Act appears as a constructive instance of such pragmatism, preserving the historically formative role of the Evangelical Lutheran and Orthodox Churches while widening legal recognition and safeguarding freedom of conscience under plural conditions. By contrast, the Bible-Tweet prosecution reveals the strain placed on religious freedom when criminal law is drawn toward adjudicating theological speech. An Augustinian account of limited civil jurisdiction cautions against extending penal authority into the governance of belief while affirming the state’s responsibility to secure civic peace and protect vulnerable groups. The result is not a fixed constitutional template but a disciplined mode of theological reasoning for pluralistic societies.


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