It's not uncommon for specifically religious-based schools to teach the religion as part of the curriculum, thus making their teachers also ministers; since being a minister is supposed to be about teaching the faith.
In the case I linked earlier, a teacher had become injured and the church administration decided that she could no longer fulfill her obligations as a ministerial teacher (that school had both ministerial and lay teachers, which were clearly defined) and the SCotUS decided in favor of the school being able to claim a Ministerial Exception. This case is likely to go the same way, unless there's some question about whether the church administration made clear that their teachers were also part of the ministry. If it can be proven that she was merely a lay teacher, she may have a case; otherwise, precedent supports the church.
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In the case I linked earlier, a teacher had become injured and the church administration decided that she could no longer fulfill her obligations as a ministerial teacher (that school had both ministerial and lay teachers, which were clearly defined) and the SCotUS decided in favor of the school being able to claim a Ministerial Exception. This case is likely to go the same way, unless there's some question about whether the church administration made clear that their teachers were also part of the ministry. If it can be proven that she was merely a lay teacher, she may have a case; otherwise, precedent supports the church.
^-.-^
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