Book Details

Ordaining Women : Culture and Conflict in Religious Organizations
Combining historical and sociological perspectives, Mark Chaves deftly shows that formal institutional rules about ordination often diverge from the actual roles of women and are best understood as symbolic gestures in favor of--or in opposition to--gender equality. Ordaining Women concludes that external pressures from the women's movement and ecumenical pressure expressed through interdenominational organizations such as the National Council of Churches influence ordination practices. At the same time, internal factors such as having a source of religious authority that is considered superior to modern principles of equal rights also explain why some denominations ordain women much earlier than others.
Surprisingly, "the Bible forbids it" does not account for policies even among fundamentalists and other biblical inerrantists. Chaves' historical and comparative approach offers a revealing analysis of how the internal denominational debates have changed over time, becoming more frequent, more politicized, and more contentious. The skillful delineation of forces affecting debates and policies about women's ordination makes this book an important contribution to our understanding of religious organizations and of gender equality.
1. Introduction
2. The Symbolic Significance of Women's Ordination.
3. External Pressures
4. The Changing Meaning of Women's Ordination
5. Inerrancy, Sacramentalism, and Women's Ordination
6. Internal Organizational Factors
7. The Changing Nature of Conflicts Over Women's Ordination
8. Conclusion
Notes
References
Index

SHARING THE LIGHT : REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN AND VIRTUE IN EARLY CHINA

COMPETING DEVOTIONS : CAREER AND FAMILY AMONG WOMEN EXECUTIVES

WOMENS EDUCATION IN THE THIRD WORLD : COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES

GENDER AND PARENTHOOD : BIOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENTIFIC PERSPECTIVES
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