Stein Reinertsen was one of five nominated candidates to become bishop after Olav Skjevesland announced his retirement in 2012.[5] After a round of input from various church bodies, Reinertsen remained as a candidate together with Anne-May Grasaas and Ludvig Bjerkreim.[6] In the second round, he obtained the most votes among local parishes and priests. Eight bishops preferred Anne-May Grasaas, while four preferred Reinertsen. The Church's National Council, having the final say, voted ten for Reinertsen and five for Grasaas.[4]
His appointment was announced in December 2012. It was the first time after the reformation that a bishop in the Church of Norway was appointed by a body of the church and not by the Norwegian government.[4] This was a result of changes to the Constitution of Norway in 2012.[7]
Stein Reinertsen is considered a conservative theologian,[9] but refuses the label of theological conservative.[7]
Early in his career, he was opposed to ordination of women to priesthood, but he changed his view as a result of further studies of bible texts and conversations with former bishop Odd Bondevik.[10] After he was elected bishop, Aftenposten featured a story about Reinertsen being opposed to marrying people who are divorced.[9] This stance was criticised by politicians and others, with the leader of the Vest-AgderLabour Party Linda Verdal leaving the church in protest. In subsequent interviews, Reinertsen underlined that subordinate priests in the diocese were free to follow their own conscience on the issue and he would not discourage them from marrying divorced persons.[11]
In 2013, Reinertsen was among a minority of four bishops who opposed a proposal to allow gay marriages in the Church of Norway, as well as opposing a compromise of allowing church blessing of gay couples who have married secularly. The church's national council has the final say on the issue.[12]
He has been engaged in multicultural work to include immigrants in the Church of Norway, and took courses in the topic in 2008 and 2009.[1][3]
Personal life
Reinertsen is married and has three grown children.[4] As bishop, he lives in an apartment in the centre of Kristiansand which is owned by the Church of Norway.[13]
^ abTrondsen, Rebecca; Eliassen, Håkon; Damsgaard, Eirik (27 January 2013). "Reinertsen vigslet til ny biskop". NRK (in Norwegian). Retrieved 1 January 2013.