Tried for a Tweet: What I’ve learned in the Five Years the Finnish State Prosecuted Me for My Faith

Paivi Rasenen, Public Discourse, 8/11/24

I have been a member of the Finnish Parliament for twenty-nine years. During that time, I have witnessed a dramatic change in the value system undergirding our modern society. From the protection of life to the defense of marriage, the changes we are living through are undeniable, with far-reaching implications for us all. And it’s evident that the general atmosphere toward Christianity grows increasingly hostile every day. Only ten years ago, I could not have imagined that I would soon be summoned to my country’s Supreme Court to defend my religious convictions.

“Has somebody occupied Finland?” My six-year-old grandson asked me this in June 2019 when he saw a giant rainbow flag, the biggest we had seen to date, flying over our home city of Riihimäki, Finland. At that same time, the majority church of our country, the Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church, officially published its support of a Helsinki “pride” event, which disappointed and shocked many (including me). 

Before our very eyes, the church was assuming a position contrary to its own confession that God designed marriage for one man and one woman. If the authority of God’s Word is undermined, the question becomes not only about marriage or gender, but also about the path to salvation and eternal life. Every person, including the LGBT community, has the right to hear the whole truth of God’s Word. While I briefly considered leaving my church, I was convinced that it was better to stay aboard and try to wake up those who had fallen asleep, not jump out of a sinking boat.

This was why I wrote a tweet, in which I directed a question to my church leadership. I wanted to exercise my basic right to free speech to publicly ask how they reconciled their activities with biblical teaching. The main content of my post was a photo of verses 24–27 of Romans Chapter 1, where the Apostle Paul teaches that homosexual relations are sinful. A citizen filed a criminal complaint in response to my tweet, and more complaints quickly followed.

These complaints resulted in eighteen months of police investigation and thirteen hours of interrogations. As a former government minister, sitting parliamentarian, and grandmother, I found the situation unreal. Just a few years before, I had been in charge of the police as Minister of Interior, and now I was sitting in the police station being interrogated, with the Bible on the table in front of me. 

The questions were shamelessly about the Bible and its interpretation. I was asked, “What is the message of the book of Romans and its first chapter?” and “What do I mean by the words ‘sin’ and ‘shame’?” A joke spread on social media that Päivi Räsänen was once again meeting for a Bible study at the police station. The police asked if I would agree to delete my writings within two weeks. I said no and reasserted my belief in the Bible’s teachings, no matter the consequences. I will not apologize, I explained, for what the Apostle Paul has stated.

After the investigation, I was charged criminally for my post about the Bible’s teaching on marriage. A second charge was filed about a booklet called “Male and Female He Created Them,” which I had written for my church in 2004. Bishop Juhana Pohjola also was prosecuted as responsible for publishing the booklet. A third charge was filed about my biblical views presented in a 2019 radio interview. It was at this time that ADF International came alongside me and we began to defend my case. 

The possible sentence for the crime of “ethnic agitation,” of which I have been accused, is up to two years imprisonment or a fine. In Finnish law, it falls within the “war crimes and crimes against humanity” section of the criminal code. The “hate speech” law had passed parliament unanimously without any real debate. I was part of parliament at the time, and I can say that no one saw the danger of this ambiguity back then.

But now I see it quite clearly. An ambiguous law broadly banning “hate speech” that can imprison someone for speaking about their faith on social media is bad enough. But the greatest danger is the threat of society-wide censorship and the crushing effect on freedom of speech and religion. A judgment against me would open the floodgates to a broad ban on the public expression of religious views or other beliefs and the threat of modern book burnings.

In the last five years, I have undergone two trials, first at the District Court and then, following the prosecution’s appeal, at the Court of Appeals, both resulting in unanimous acquittals. The prosecution’s insistence on punishing me for a peaceful expression of my religious beliefs has defied reason, leading to yet another appeal, currently pending before the Supreme Court of Finland.

In the trial at the District Court, the prosecutor at first stated that the trial would not be an inquisition concerning the Bible. But then she surprisingly targeted the core doctrine of Christianity: the teachings of the Gospel. She claimed that my views amounted to a doctrine that she summarized as “love the sinner, hate the sin.” This doctrine she regarded as insulting and defaming because, according to her, you cannot distinguish between the person’s identity and his or her actions. In this view, if you condemn the act, you also condemn the human being and regard him or her as inferior.

This statement goes against both the Christian view of man and common sense. The thought that it is not possible to distinguish between a person’s deeds and the core of their identity is contradictory to our lived reality as well as Gospel truth. The analogy I used in court was that I loved all of my children equally, but at times, when raising them, they required discipline for their wrongful actions. 

I also stated in the court that God created all human beings in His own image and we all have equal value, but we are also all sinners. Sin does not diminish our dignity; it is a theological concept that describes the relationship between God and man, and God is the one who defines what sin is. Core to the Christian faith is the belief that God so loved all people that he gave his only son to die on the cross to suffer the punishment that we humans, because of our sin, should have endured. 

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Tried for a Tweet

1 thought on “Tried for a Tweet: What I’ve learned in the Five Years the Finnish State Prosecuted Me for My Faith”

  1. This has always been the danger of having governments: they have too much concentrated power. The American Founding Fathers recognized this and thus created the checks and balances to restrain it, and further restrained by a moral Christian people whom they serve.
    The powers in government always seek to remove such restraints, so when they see a movement like the rainbow flag’s seeking to overthrow the moral Christian restraints upon it, naturally they’ll rally to its cause.
    Governments will always place their own powers above principles. They really don’t care about where their powers come from, even if they’re morally corrupt.
    That’s what I see here, that the restraints imposed on goverments by the morals of the Christians who uphold them are undesirable to them. They only want to have and to hold power, even when the Devil hands it to them.
    When Jesus was in the desert and the Devil offered Him all the kingdoms of the world if He would bow down and worship him, Jesus declined. Not these, they’ll accept Satan’s offer of greater power.

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