Unless the employees at your store were designated as ministers and expected to teach or preach, then it's apples to oranges and irrelevant.
The firing really has nothing to due with the teacher's pregnancy other than the fact that her being pregnant is proof that she is engaging in extra-marital sex, which is the actual reason for the firing.
It's just so much more headline worthy to focus on, "OMG, School Fired a Pregnant Woman for Being Pregnant!"
The only question at hand at this point is whether she can be considered a part of the ministry legally or if she is merely a contract employee. The school obviously considers her the former, and I suspect she was fine with that designation until her values failed to coincide with theirs.
In a similar case (Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC), the Supreme Court held that because the teacher in question was specifically denoted as a minister (as opposed to 'lay' teachers who were not held to the same religious requirements), the church and school were not guilty of discrimination as their action in firing her was protected by the First Amendment.
^-.-^
The firing really has nothing to due with the teacher's pregnancy other than the fact that her being pregnant is proof that she is engaging in extra-marital sex, which is the actual reason for the firing.
It's just so much more headline worthy to focus on, "OMG, School Fired a Pregnant Woman for Being Pregnant!"
The only question at hand at this point is whether she can be considered a part of the ministry legally or if she is merely a contract employee. The school obviously considers her the former, and I suspect she was fine with that designation until her values failed to coincide with theirs.
In a similar case (Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC), the Supreme Court held that because the teacher in question was specifically denoted as a minister (as opposed to 'lay' teachers who were not held to the same religious requirements), the church and school were not guilty of discrimination as their action in firing her was protected by the First Amendment.
^-.-^
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