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The Magic of Statistics: Sociology, Psychology and Women in the Church

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Extract

During the recently celebrated women’s liberation year, the cry—and indeed a just cry—was for equal rights with men in those social and economic areas where male dominance reigns. For the same work, the same wages, no matter the sex; in marriage, equality of status and the same rights, for both husband and wife; in general social benefits, no difference between men and women. The Church for countless centuries, despite the relative franchise it gave to women in its very early days based on a universalistic ethic, has been an impregnable bastion of male power. No wonder the call for female liberation has penetrated into the traditional churches, especially the Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches. The result so far is not very encouraging. Admittedly women are allowed to do more than in former years and are often strongly represented in local Church councils, but to become a priest, and therefore eventually a bishop remains a strictly tabooed function for women. In the Free churches, the interdict has been removed in modem times but few women have in fact been ordained and even fewer have reached positions of prominence as Church leaders.

But if women’s cards are poor in bidding for equality in function and leadership, they have a very good hand in their general support of the church. Their attendance and devotion are out of all proportion to the position they occupy in the hierarchical structure. At Mass on Sundays, on weekdays, coming out of a Baptist or Anglican Church, who predominates? Always the answer is females. This phenomenon which appears so widespread invites curiosity and enquiry. The parish priest wonders about it and seeks schemes to restore the balance, for example by providing, as was the custom, men’s clubs and boys’ clubs, and getting men to do masculine things in and around the parish.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1977 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 The Social Psychology of Religion. By Michael Argyle and Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi. Routledge and Kegan Paul, London and Boston, 1975. 246 pp. £5.95 hard. £2.95 paper.

2 The Race of Religion in the Social Structures of Two English Industrial Towns (Rawmarsh, Yorkshire, and Seunthorpe, Lincolnshire). By W.S.F. Pickering. Unpublished PhD. thesis, London University, 1957, p xiv. 30.

3 For example. Strabo, the Greek writer, observed: ‘For all agree m regarding the women as the chief founders of religion, and it is the women who provoke the men to more attentive worship of the gods, to festivals, and to supplications, and it is a rare thing, for a man who lives by himself to be found addicted to these thinas.’ Lib. vii. 297.