Feminization of the Clergy in America

Feminization of the Clergy in America
Author: Paula D. Nesbitt
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023
Genre: Ordination of women
ISBN: 0197739156

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Recent years have seen the entry of large numbers of women into the ordained clergy of Protestant churches. Nesbitt analyses the extent to which this has affected the occupation.

Feminization of the Clergy in America

Feminization of the Clergy in America
Author: Paula D. Nesbitt
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1997-04-24
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780195355451

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Feminization is said to occur when women enter any given occupation in substantial numbers, and ostensibly leads to such dynamics as sex-segregation, reduced opportunities for men, and depressed wages and diminished prestige for the occupation as a whole. Spanning more than 70 years, Paula Nesbitt's study of feminization concentrates on the Episcopal Church and the Unitarian Universalist Association, utilizing both statistical results and interviews to compare occupational patterns prior and subsequent to the large influx of women clergy. Among her findings, the author discovers that a decline in men's opportunities is evident before the 1970s, preceding the great influx of women over the last two decades. She also finds that increases in the number of women ordained reduced occupational prospects for other women, but enhanced those for men, thus contradicting the popular myth that women in the workplace are responsible for occupational decline.

The Church Impotent

The Church Impotent
Author: Leon J. Podles
Publsiher: Spence Publishing Company
Total Pages: 320
Release: 1999
Genre: Masculinity
ISBN: PSU:000044301460

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The current preoccupation with the role of women in the church obscures the more serious problem of the perennial absence of men. This provocative book argues that Western churches have become women's clubs, that the emasculation of Christianity is dangerous for the church and society, and that a masculine presence can and must be restored.After documenting the highly feminized state of Western Christianity, Dr. Podles identifies the masculine traits that once characterized the Christian life but are now commonly considered incompatible with it. He contends that though masculinity has been marginalized within Christianity, it cannot be expunged from human society. If detached from Christianity, it reappears as a substitute religion, with unwholesome and even horrific consequences. The church, too, is diminished by its emasculation. Dr. Podles concludes by considering how Christianity's virility might be restored.In the otherwise stale and overworked field of gender studies, The Church Impotent is the only book to confront the lopsidedly feminine cast of modern Christianity with a profound analysis of its historical and sociological roots.

Looking Forward Looking Backward

Looking Forward  Looking Backward
Author: Fredrica Harris Thompsett
Publsiher: Church Publishing, Inc.
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2014-04-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780819229236

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A wide-ranging exploration of the past, present, and future effects of women’s ordination on the church. This book gauges the impact and implications of women’s ordination on today and tomorrow. What has women’s ordination meant for the church? For preaching? For pastoral care? For the episcopate? For lay women and for women across the Anglican Communion? The editor draws upon a rich variety of writers and thinkers for this book.

Feminism and Christian Tradition

Feminism and Christian Tradition
Author: Mary-Paula Walsh
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 472
Release: 1999-05-30
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780313371318

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This annotated bibliography, a volume in the Greenwood series, Bibliographies and Indexes in Religious Studies, provides access to the numerous writings, from the 1960s through the 1990s, on feminism and Christian tradition. Major feminist theologians and sociologists are represented. As a guide to further research, this cross-disciplinary approach presents themes and issues in both a historical and a topical framework. An extensive overview of feminism in relation to the women's movement, women's studies, sociology and American religion introduces the literature and provides a historical context for the nearly one thousand entries that follow. Cross-referenced throughout, the literature is presented in six thematic categories that include introductory and background materials, feminism and the development of feminist theology, topical literatures in feminist theology, feminism and womanist theology, religious leadership of women, and responses and recent developments. Separate author, subject, and title indexes complete the volume.

Gender and Pentecostal Revivalism

Gender and Pentecostal Revivalism
Author: Leah Payne
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 223
Release: 2015-02-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781137494672

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This innovative volume provides an interdisciplinary, theoretically innovative answer to an enduring question for Pentecostal/charismatic Christianities: how do women lead churches? This study fills this lacuna by examining the leadership and legacy of two architects of the Pentecostal movement - Maria Woodworth-Etter and Aimee Semple McPherson.

The Feminization of American Culture

The Feminization of American Culture
Author: Ann Douglas
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 403
Release: 1996
Genre: American literature
ISBN: 0333654218

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The Feminization of American Culture is a significant study of the domination of late nineteenth-century American culture by a feminine ethic and spirit. As religion lost its hold on the public mind, clergymen and educated women, powerless in the male-dominated industrial society, banded together to have a profound effect on the only areas still open to their influence - the arts and literature. Ann Douglas explores their impact on the best-selling novels and magazines of the day to show how women exploited their feminine image and idealized the very qualities that kept them powerless: timidity, piety, narcissism, and a disdain for competition. The result was a far-reaching social preoccupation with banal melodrama which failed to address the real issues of the day. This is a major, polemical rethinking of the American past which seeks to explain values prevalent in today's popular culture by tracing them back to their roots in Victorian times.

Clergy Women

Clergy Women
Author: Barbara Brown Zikmund,Adair T. Lummis,Patricia M. Y. Chang
Publsiher: Westminster John Knox Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1998-01-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0664256732

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Perhaps the most significant event in twentieth-century American Protestant churches has been the entry of tens of thousands of women into the church's ordained ministry. How are these women's experiences as ministers different from those of their male counterparts? What are their callings and careers like? What are their prospects for employment, income, and satisfaction? Based on a wealth of statistical data as well as in-depth personal interviews, this book offers the most authoritative information ever about the real experiences of clergy women (and men), along with anecdotes that show what the life of American clergy today is really like.