>Can a teenager girl wear a chastity ring in school? A young Christian teenager lost her case because a court denied her request to wear her virginity ring on her finger. The judge who decided the case said the ring in question was “not intrinsically a Christian symbol like a cross” so her right to “manifest” her religion in public was not infringed.
The following story appeared in TimesOnline:
A teenager who took her school to court claiming breach of human rights because she was forbidden from wearing a chastity ring has lost her case been ordered to pay £12,000 in legal costs.
Lydia Playfoot, 16, claimed the ban at the Millais School in Horsham, West Sussex, was an “unlawful interference” with her right to express her Christian faith.
But deputy High Court judge Michael Supperstone said today that the ring was not an integral part of the Christian faith and upheld the school’s right to enforce its uniform policy.
Lawyers for Ms Playfoot told an earlier hearing that her chastity ring was a “religious artefact” and should therefore be exempt from the school’s general ban on jewellery -in the same way that Sikh pupils were allowed to wear bracelets known as Kara bangles
But the judge ruled that “whatever the ring is intended to symbolise, it is a piece of jewellery.”
He added that Ms Playfoot’s human rights had not been breached because she “voluntarily accepted the uniform policy of the school” and there were “other means open to her to practise her belief.”
The judge also ordered Ms Playfoot’s father, Philip, to pay £12,000 towards the school’s legal costs. She was denied permission to appeal against the ruling.
Ms Playfoot said she was “very disappointed” by the decision and predicted that it would lead to other Christians being prevented from “publicly expressing and practising their faith”.
A spokesman for the Church of England said it was a “great pity” that Ms Playfoot’s “commendable commitment to upholding Christian teaching on chastity should have provoked controversy and the need for litigation.”
“In this case, wearing a ring, though it is not intrinsically a Christian symbol like a cross, is clearly a symbol of the desire to uphold and practise an aspect of the Christian faith.”
The National Secular Society, which has criticised the case as a “manipulative attempt to impose a particular religious viewpoint on the school”, welcomed the result.
Ms Playfoot is one of a group of Christians at the Millais School who wore the ring engraved with a Biblical verse as a sign of their belief in abstinence from sex until marriage.
In court her lawyers claimed that the school, which allows Muslim and Sikh students to wear headscarfs and religious bracelets, breached her human rights by preventing her from wearing the ring.
It is that last statement that is disturbing:
In court her lawyers claimed that the school, which allows Muslim and Sikh students to wear headscarfs and religious bracelets, breached her human rights by preventing her from wearing the ring.
There is a double standard in society today. Many societies, including our society here in the USA, go out of their way to please and appease religious groups by allowing them to express their religion. These religious groups are allowed to wear, as the report said, headscarfs, religious bracelets, veils, garments, and other items that clearly express religious faith. However, the same privileges are denied to others just because they are Christians. To me, this is a double standard that must be addressed.
The whole issue is very complicated. We live in a pluralistic society, a society with Christians and atheists, Moslems and Hindus, Buddhists and Sikhs. Should we please all or none? It seems that the courts have decided to favor the few against the many. What do you think?
Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary
Tags: Chastity Ring, Christian Symbols, Religion, Virginity

















>I think there’s a bit more to it. I’ve noted a slightly fuller version of the story, and a somewhat different response on my blog.
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>I’ve read Doug Chaplin’s blog and while I disagree a bit with him, you are both right in suggesting that there is a double standard. This story is rather frustrating to me! Interesting post. I will put a link to it on my blog.www.michaelhalcomb.blogspot.com
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>I would have to agree with the court’s decision. If the school has pre-existing rules against jewlery, then a “chastity” ring would most certainly have to count. This is similar to the issue raised in Montreal, Quebec about the right of a student to wear a “ritual dagger” (Sikh religious object) into school. In our pluralistic society, we have to obey the rules and try to separate Church from state. Having said that, I don’t really think that high schools should ban jewlery, just excessive and conspicuous display.
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>I find it most troubling that a secular judge feels he can define and prescribe what symbols are “integral parts of the Christian faith.” The ruling appears to be based on this theological assessment. The story says the ring was inscribed with a Bible verse; isn’t the Bible fairly integral to the Christian faith?
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>Dear Friend,Thank you for your comment. I apologize for the delay in answering your comment. The ritual dagger is not jewelry. A ring is and so is a watch. If the court sees fit to ban “chastity rings,” it should also ban “wedding rings.” Both rings have almost the same significance.Claude Mariottini
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>Charles,Thank you for your comment. I apologize for the delay in answering your comment. We are facing a problem in this country because of the fact that more and more the legal system refuses to accommodate the views of Christians when, at the same time, they go out of their way to accommodate the views of other religious groups. This is a double standard that I consider to be unacceptable.Claude Mariottini
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