In a decision that sends a chill through every Christian who believes the Bible’s teachings still matter in public life, Finland’s Supreme Court has convicted parliamentarian Päivi Räsänen of “hate speech” for a church pamphlet she published two decades ago, according to the court’s 3-2 ruling handed down Thursday in Helsinki. This stunning reversal of two lower court acquittals raises serious questions about whether religious expression can survive in a Europe increasingly hostile to biblical values. Räsänen, a medical doctor, grandmother of twelve, and former Finnish Minister of the Interior, now carries a criminal conviction under a section of Finnish law titled “war crimes and crimes against humanity,” as detailed in the court’s verdict.
Her supposed crime was publishing a 2004 pamphlet for her church alongside Lutheran Bishop Juhana Pohjola that expressed traditional Christian teachings on marriage and sexual ethics, with the court finding her guilty of “making and keeping available to the public a text that insults a group.” There’s a small silver lining in this dark cloud: the Supreme Court unanimously acquitted Räsänen for a 2019 tweet that included a Bible verse, and her acquittal on a 2019 radio debate charge stands because prosecutors chose not to appeal it. But the pamphlet conviction remains, and it sets a dangerous precedent that should alarm believers everywhere.
“I am shocked and profoundly disappointed that the court has failed to recognize my basic human right to freedom of expression,” Räsänen said following the verdict, as reported by Alliance Defending Freedom International. “I stand by the teachings of my Christian faith, and will continue to defend my and every person’s right to share their convictions.” Alliance Defending Freedom International, which has supported Räsänen’s legal defense, noted the case has dragged on since 2022, with prosecutors refusing to accept multiple acquittals until they found a court willing to convict. This is the face of lawfare against Christians: endless prosecution until the state gets the verdict it wants, and when a grandmother can be dragged through courts for years over a church booklet written when George W. Bush was president, it’s a stark warning to every pastor and believer who might dare to speak publicly about what the Bible actually says.
The Räsänen case isn’t happening in a vacuum. Canada recently passed legislation that critics, including conservative commentators, warn could criminalize quoting Scripture, while British pastors have faced police investigation for street preaching, as documented in various media reports. American Christians watch these developments with the uneasy knowledge that what starts in Helsinki or Ottawa often finds its way to our shores eventually. And the secular left’s hostility toward biblical truth knows no borders.
This is about power, not protection. The Finnish state is not genuinely concerned about the welfare of any group Räsänen’s pamphlet might have referenced; it’s about sending a message that certain religious viewpoints are no longer welcome in polite society, and that those who hold them will be punished. The conviction carries no jail time, but the message is clear enough. Räsänen has vowed to appeal to international human rights courts if necessary, and her courage deserves our attention and our prayers.
But the larger battle is cultural and spiritual. When a nation’s highest court can look at a church pamphlet and see a crime against humanity, that nation has lost its moral compass entirely. The question is not whether Finland will come to its senses, but whether the rest of the West will follow it into this same dark valley.
Providence watches over the bold.