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WashPost's Miller Sees 'Feminism's Final Frontier' As 'Religion,' Where Women Are 'Second-Class Citizens'

By Ken Shepherd | March 08, 2012 | 18:58

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The  "war on women" is more than a political fight waged in the civil arena. It's a spiritual conflict with patriarchal pulpits raining down oppression onto the women in the pews, Washington Post religion reporter Lisa Miller complains in an "On Faith" item posted today, "International Women's Day":

The battle of the sexes, waged this election season with fulsome fury in the public space, is being fought in a much more painful, private sphere as well. In churches (and synagogues and mosques) across the land, women are still treated as second-class citizens. And because women of faith are increasingly breadwinners, single moms and heads of households, that diminished status is beginning to rankle.

There are churches in America in which women aren’t allowed to speak out loud unless they get permission from a man first.

There are churches (many of them) in which women aren’t permitted to preach from the pulpit.

There are churches in America where a 13-year-old boy has more authority than his mother.

“At church I had to hide my thoughts, questions and life choices,” says Susan, a woman who works as a therapist in Seattle and, after a lifetime of following Jesus, left Christianity. “I didn’t think I could do anything by myself, because as a Christian woman I’d learned that I needed a man to get places.”

You notice that Miller failed to note what church, exactly "women aren't allowed to speak out loud." Yes, there are denominations which don't permit women to preach, but not speaking out loud, period? Not even to pray publicly? What are these churches? How popular are they compared to the vast majority of churches which permit women to participate in and even lead  various aspects of worship services.

What's more, the U.S. is a free country with no established church. No one is forcing women to attend churches that don't suit their personal beliefs or gender politics. And who is this woman Susan who's "left Christianity" over these disagreements? Aren't there Christian denominations she could join that allow women to preach and exercise spiritual authority over men?

There most certainly are, in fact there's quite a few, including the Episcopal Church USA. In light of that, isn't it likely that Susan left Christianity for a number of factors that have nothing to do with women in the pulpit?

But alas, Susan is just the hook for Miller to plug a book by an evangelical pastor who calls on evangelical Christians to get with the times and permit women to be pastors:

Susan’s story was published in January by a small Christian publishing house in the book “The Resignation of Eve.” In its pages, the author, an evangelical minister named Jim Henderson, argues that unless the male leaders of conservative Christian churches do some serious soul-searching — pronto — the women who have always sustained those churches with their time, sweat and cash will leave. In droves. And they won’t come back. Their children, traditionally brought to church by their mothers, will thus join the growing numbers of Americans who call themselves “un-churched.”

Nevermind that the Bible talks about women submitting to men and sitting silently in church, Henderson declaims. That’s ancient history. “Until those with power (men) decide to give it away to those who lack it (women), I believe we will continue to misrepresent Jesus’ heart and mar the beauty of his Kingdom,” Henderson writes.

Henderson bolsters his argument with data from the Barna Research Group. Between 1991 and 2011, the number of adult women attending church weekly has declined 20 percent. The number of women going to Sunday school has dropped by about a third, as has the number of women who volunteer at church.

And although the Barna data have been disputed by other researchers, Henderson goes further. Even those women who go to church regularly, he says, are really only half there: Their discontent keeps them from engaging fully with the project of being Christian. He calls this malaise among women “a spiritual brain drain.”

I think of these faithful conservative females in this political season, struggling to make ends meet and keep their eyes on God as the men of the right, also known as “the patriarchy,” disrespect and insult them.

At no point in her post did Miller find a female member of a conservative Christian church to defend her church's views or to express her happiness and spiritual contentment therein. It's just assumed by Miller that women in those churches are disrespected, insulted, and seething on the inside at the same.

Isn't it entirely possible that a great many women in those churches are neither insulted nor perplexed by the church's exercise of its interpretation of Scripture? Or does Miller's exclusion of a contrary point of view evidence that Miller herself believes there can't possible be a divergent female perspective on this matter?

Also of interest is that, although Miller perfunctorily included "synagogues and mosques" as communities of patriarchal oppression, at no point in her article did she specifically address the complaints of liberal Muslim women, although she briefly mentioned that of liberal Jewish ones.

No, instead, Miller sought to come full circle by bringing presidential politics into the equation, slamming Catholic presidential hopeful Rick Santorum and Mormon contender Mitt Romney:

It is not only Rush Limbaugh who demeans all women by calling one a “slut” and a “prostitute.” It’s Rick Santorum — that man of faith — who has stopped just short of calling working mothers selfish and who lumps all single moms together as his opposition, as he did in an interview with Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council last year.

“They look to the government for help and therefore they’re going to vote,” Santorum said. “So if you want to reduce the Democratic advantage, what you want to do is build two-parent families.” It is every single policy that puts so-called “small government” ahead of the health, welfare and education of children.

I think of the bloggers on Feminist Mormon Housewives who insist on their devotion to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints church while sensibly rebelling against teachings that make women inferior to men. I think of the women at the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance, who, barred from leadership roles in synagogue, are starting small prayer groups of their own, where they can perform Jewish life-cycle rituals together.

About the Author

Ken Shepherd is Managing Editor of NewsBusters. Click here to follow Ken Shepherd on Twitter.
  • Anti-Religious Bias
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Comments

It is better to dwell in the

Submitted by tcm14 on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 7:18pm.

It is better to dwell in the wilderness, than with a contentious and an angry woman. - Proverbs 21:19

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tcm14

Submitted by BondPlainBond on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 8:30pm.

Niiiiiiiiiiiiice.

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this henderson 'minister'

Submitted by TruthMonger on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 10:45am.

this henderson 'minister' just wants to get laid that's all

Congratulations Jimmy Carter!

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Damn!!!

Submitted by bigdaddy on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 12:44am.

You had to bring up my 2nd ex-wife....LOL.

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Maybe

Submitted by bobsmom on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 7:45pm.

conservative women, just love being wives and mothers, has she asked any? And if so, what's wrong with that? I don't get it. If we're not sitting in the bars after work smoking cigars and slugging martini's and doing our best to act like men, then we're "less than female"? And I'm saying this as a working gal with a great job, who chose not to have children. They don't know what to do with the likes of me. In their mindset I MUST be liberal. In MY mindset, I wish they were ladies. I still think, it's all in how you're raised. But then, they'd still be surprised, because my Mom (who'd be 82 now) was a working professional, who was religious, and loved her family. They can't define us, and therein lies their terror.

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They can't define us, and therein lies their terror.

Submitted by nanabanana on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 8:30pm.

You are so right, bobsmom. Hey, we're "terrorists". :-)

nana b
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What? My wife is a licensed health care professional!

Submitted by drsamherman on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 8:22pm.

She is hardly a second class citizen in our church, our family or our community.

Lisa Miller is like so many typical rich white feminists--they have nothing positive to contribute to minorities but their guilt and nothing of value to say.

I would bet she is one of those types who refuses to believe that conservatives exist because she doesn't know any.

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It's Been Awhile...

Submitted by BondPlainBond on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 8:29pm.

It's been awhile since Lisa Miller has ventured into the realm of an actual human being, hasn't it?

It's all too obvious Miller is completely unfamiliar with the historical role of women in the Roman Catholic Church. Miller is nothing more than an a so-called "writer" of her own personal opinions on religion, which have no basis in reality or fact.

Get out more, Miller. Mingle with the flesh and bloods. You may actually learn something.

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Don't lie, Lisa.

Submitted by Mike Bratton on Thu, 03/08/2012 - 10:44pm.

At the very least, do some substantive research.

According to the Bible, there are no such things as "ex-Christians," as "Susan" claims to be.  If she was a Christian way back when, she is still one today; if she is not one today, she never was one in the first place.  This isn't opinion, this is black print on white paper.

According to the Bible, there are no second-class children of God.  There may be different roles, but having a different role in a church's hierarchy doesn't make you a lower class of individual.  God is not a respecter of gender in that regard.  Period.

According to the Bible, believers are not to drop out of the local church.  Again, this is not something that's up for debate.  Attenders may do as they will, spectators will come and go, but honest, maturing followers of Jesus Christ will do as God's Word instructs.

Lisa, please spend more time reading the Bible, and less time reading agitprop.

--Mike

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....and furthmore - Jesus was

Submitted by TruthMonger on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 10:58am.

....and furthmore - Jesus was born in a '3rd class' hospital, grew up in 23rd class town, was executed in 44th class fashion, and buried in a cave - second class is pretty good - it is a place of honor in God's kingdom, too many Christians - not just women, have had an age-old problem with worldly status and its only exacerbated the great un-churched who measure Christianity in the most ignorant fashions possible. The big key to God's kingdom is learning that humility is better than pride by leaps and bounds

This woman has not yet embraced the beatitudes and that's her problem...

Congratulations Jimmy Carter!

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A suggestion Lisa...

Submitted by bigdaddy on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 1:23am.

...if you really believe this crap there is only one solution for you....embrace Islam and become a Mooslum...

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Who is narrow minded and does not know history??

Submitted by LaVallette on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 4:13am.

Let her name one organization throughout the history of any civilization that has done more to advance the cause of women mpre then the Catholic Church: Saints. Doctors of the Church, Heads of religious orders, Monastires and convents, leaders of all levels of educational institutions, hospitals hospices and other health providers, female educuation and maternal and child care, etc etc etc. All these women would say: It is NOT about Power. It is about Service in the name of Christ.

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You are correct

Submitted by octavioj on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 9:35am.

You are absolutely correct LaVallette,

This kind of article portrays a laziness on the part of the media. I spent fourteen years in a school led by Salesian sisters. And now my brother just sent his older son to the same school, still led by Salesian sisters. The largerst Catholic broadcasting network in America was founded by a nun, not a priest. EWTN has many, many adepts, and their love and cherish to Mother Angelica shows in everything they do. Even liberals have their idol in the Catholic church in the head of the Catholic Hospital Association, sister Carol Keehan, last I checked a woman. This column simply tells me this lady is very ill informed.

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I don't know who this 'Miller' Gal is...

Submitted by ChrisNH on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 6:02am.

...But when I saw her photograph, I immediately thought: 'Radical Left Feminist.' I mean, just LOOK at her! She is the poster-child for the radical Left female.

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The Wash Post should hire someone with faith!

Submitted by iamsaved on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 9:29am.

Lisa Miller's display of spiritual wisdom is telling. It appears she has none. For one, whether it be Lisa Miller or her straw man of an evangelist, I'd like to see either back their premise bibically that women should be in the pulpit. Or even in authority over the man. God assigned roles to each gender just as he made each unique in their emotional, physical and mental makeup. Try as the feminists may, boys will not be like little girls and little girls will not be like little boys if left alone to grow normally. God made each for His purpose. Why? Because He's God and we're not.

There is a short poem that says it all regarding the Bible and the changing culture it has encountered over the ages:

A glory gilds the sacred page,
majestic like the sun.
It sheds a light on every age,
it gives, but borrows none.

iamsaved "The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left," (Ecclesiastes 10:2) MSM Journalism - "a profession consisting of idealogues espousing their beliefs regardless of facts and/or truth."
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Unfaithful

Submitted by aposematic on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 11:33am.

Reading Lisa Millers words tells me she has never even been to church (how did she get that Religion Reporter position anyway...oh, yea...WaPo, of course). In every church I have been a member it is the women that run the show and every minister I've ever known knew it. Lisa Miller must have been talking about Mosques.

aposematic in VA
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Church

Submitted by Gothampc on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 12:19pm.

"Susan, a woman who works as a therapist in Seattle and, after a lifetime of following Jesus, left Christianity. “I didn’t think I could do anything by myself, because as a Christian woman I’d learned that I needed a man to get places.”

She doesn't sound like she has the mental competence to be a therapist.

And Protestants have many non-denominational churches that follow the basic doctrine of Christianity but don't conform to rules and regulations of other Christian churches. Pretty much if you believe in the Protestant belief system, you can find a church that matches what you want.

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Obiously this woman

Submitted by misterbee241 on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 12:26pm.

has never been to a Baptist prayer meeting. Women speak loudly and boldly in prayer in my church. In fact, women are the pillars of every baptist church I've ever been in. And in many cases women step up to do the jobs lazy men wont do. On Wednesday prayer meetings you'll always see more women than men.

As far as women preaching, I cant speak for all Baptist churches, but as a Baptist minister I have ZERO problem with a woman evangelist preaching from the pulpit. I am just not convinced that scripture allows women pastors. But I could be wrong, and if I am, then I trust God to show me the truth.
Selah.

If you're not getting flak, you're not over the target.
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Wrong paradigm

Submitted by GW on Fri, 03/09/2012 - 12:37pm.

Miller's understanding of human interaction appears to me to be framed in terms of conflict and the 'winner' is the one who ends up with the 'power', that is, the position and titles of authority.

I see no evidence of her having an understanding of complementary roles and cooperation between the genders devoid of a 'power struggle'.

Or to state another way, she sees gender interactions through the lense of conflict. We see them in terms of service. She sees people striving for power as she does. We see people as we see ourselves: we are looking to serve.

"Unfortunately, some people use belief-based facts rather than fact-based beliefs." -Par for the Course on Wed, 04/18/2012 - 5:38pm
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