I left that out because it distracts from my point. It’s easy to add reasons why an employee must be fired - if he’s also running a prostitution ring from the school parking lot, then yes, he should be fired. For the sake of my point, let’s assume there is no morality clause in the employment contract, the contract is not soon coming to an end, and the minister is not doing anything illegal.
The issue I have with your expansive interpretation of the ministerial exception in Hosanna-Tabor is whether an employee who plays no significant role in the education of children, much less in their religious education, can truly be called a Catholic minister simply because their employer is a Catholic school. If so, it seems logical that the school could hold them to account for not following natural law, divine law, canon law, etc.
If a Catholic minister performs servile work openly and extensively on Sunday, rather than observing the Lord’s Day as the Church prescribes, that would seem to be at odds with his calling as a Catholic minister; he would be a poor example for the students, and a possible source of scandal. So it seems entirely proper in such a situation for the school to fire the minister.
If on the other hand, it’s OK for some ministers to defy Church teaching and discipline because they happen to be Jewish or atheist or whatever, I have to question whether they are really Catholic ministers.
Here is how the Supreme Court determined that the teacher in the
Hosanna-Tabor case was a Lutheran minister:They didn’t say everyone must meet these standards to be a minister, but you’ve clearly set the bar a lot lower than what was used in that case.Surely you’re not suggesting that the school only has the right to fire a minister when he violates natural law, not divine or canon law?