T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
454.1 | some historical basis | WMOIS::REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed May 13 1992 16:57 | 17 |
| -- Mike
I recall, when I sat in on my son's English history class a few years
ago, that women were the vast majority of followers of John Wesley.
The reason for this was that they found attending his services a
legitimate break from their work, giving them an unprecidented chance
to socialize (the men had the pubs, women had no legitimate place
to gather) and a God sanctioned reason to deny their husbands
any more children (Wesley preached that one could committ to God
and be free of the physical ties to an earthly marriage) which was
a blessing in a time when many women died in childbirth.
I think that the tradition that began then, of women being the
bulk of the membership and men running the churches is one that
has persisted from the early days of the protestant reformation.
Bonnie
|
454.2 | some population distribution basis | CHGV04::ORZECH | Alvin Orzechowski @ACI | Wed May 13 1992 18:18 | 11 |
| -- Mike
It seems to me that there are (usually) more women than men in the
general population anyway, not to mention that women nowadays tend to
live longer. So in any mixed group not limited by age, chances are
there will always be more women than men. Do you want your question
answered with or without taking this into consideration?
Think "Peace",
Alvin
|
454.3 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | the head and the heart elope | Wed May 13 1992 18:31 | 16 |
|
There is a lot to consider in the question. Simplifying it is the
woman who has the children and was expected to teach them about life
and work. Often in the past she was not educated well if at all but
was expected to know the religious heritage. She was also a keeper
of oral history for the famialy. Was she more religious, I don't know.
Though her burdens were hard and life could be short, faith would be
a support. It would show in her craft. Maybe it also gave her
something to ponder while sewing, or other work.
My own feelings are that her body made here aware of the rhythm of the
earth. Her religion grows out of that.
Allison
|
454.4 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Wed May 13 1992 21:21 | 20 |
| I wrote a research paper for a class at UCCS a few semesters back that
was relevant to this topic (quoted below).
Women do typically outnumber men in our worshiping congregations. And
apparently it has been this way for quite some time.
The presence of women in the majority, historically sustained
in silence, was rationalized according to religious tradition. "The
Hidden Ones," Cotton Mather called them. The women of New England,
the Boston minister said, were the "People, who make no Noise at all
in the World; People hardly known to be in the World; Persons of the
Female Sex, and under all the Covert imaginable." Yet these "Hidden
Ones," Mather realized years before he coined the phrase, could prove
to be the church's salvation; "as there were three Marys to one John,
standing under the Cross of our dying Lord," he observed, "so still
there are more godly Women in the World, than there are godly
Men;...."
Peace,
Richard
|
454.5 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Dance the note away. | Wed May 13 1992 21:59 | 10 |
| Alvin, I hadn't considered the fact that women outnumber men,
especially in the older age brackets, but that might be part of the
explanation.
Richard, your note highlights the real tragedy that women have been
traditionally treated as second class citizens in most Christian
denominations, despite the possibility that their devotion to the faith
is numerically stronger.
-- Mike
|
454.6 | define religious for me ok | CVG::THOMPSON | DECWORLD 92 Earthquake Team | Thu May 14 1992 09:58 | 32 |
| If by religious you mean they attend church more often I would
agree that women are more religious. If you mean that they spend
more time doing the work around a church I agree. But if by
religious you mean something internal, a relationship with God
through prayer and study I see no evidence that women are more
religious.
It has been easier for women in our society to women to participate
in religious events, services and the like for many years. As more
women enter the work place that becomes less true. But the habits
of a life time and the examples of previous generations has created
a lot of inertia. I believe that the appearance of women being more
religious is cultural not actual.
A corollary. I was talking to a politician years ago. He was explaining
why in areas that we mixed Catholic and Protestant that Catholics
generally had more representation in politics. He was explaining that
to be elected you had to be a good <x>. Not the same religion as the
most people just "a good <x>" where <x> was some mainline religion. He
went on to explain that for a one to be considered to be a good
Catholic one had to attend church once a week or close to it. Saturday
or Sunday was fine. But in most Protestant churches to be considered
a good religious person one had to attend Sunday morning, Sunday night,
at least one mid week evening service and try and make most major other
events. Thus if you had a full time job you didn't have near as much
free time for politics nor as much flexibility in scheduling. Unless
you wanted people to assume you were not religious.
I believe that all too often we equate being in church with being
religious. That's not a reasonable way to do it.
Alfred
|