The Limited Empowerment of Women in Black Spiritual Churches: An Alternative Vehicle to Religious Leadership

In their efforts to compensate for the barriers emanating from the racist and class structure of American society, black men tended to monopolize positions of religious leadership in most African American religious groups. Some black women turned to Spiritualism as an alternative vehicle to religiou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sociology of religion 1993-04, Vol.54 (1), p.65-82
1. Verfasser: Baer, Hans A.
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creator Baer, Hans A.
description In their efforts to compensate for the barriers emanating from the racist and class structure of American society, black men tended to monopolize positions of religious leadership in most African American religious groups. Some black women turned to Spiritualism as an alternative vehicle to religious leadership. Indeed, women played an important role in the establishment of the earliest black Spiritual churches. As the Spiritual movement became institutionalized, the battle of the sexes ensued, and men came to appropriate the highest positions of leadership in certain Spiritual groups. Nevertheless, even in these groups, women tend to occupy more significant positions than they do in Black mainstream churches and even many Black Holiness-Pentecostal sects. Whereas the Spiritual movement empowers women at a personal level, it has not empowered women at a structural level
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subjects African American religious groups
African Americans
Bishops
Black American people
Black communities
Black people
Black women
Church congregations
Church Membership
Churches
Empowerment
Gender roles
Leadership
Men
Pastors
Personal empowerment
Religion
Religious aspects
Religious Movements
Sexes
Social aspects
Social Status
Sociology
Spiritual belief systems
Spiritualism
Women
Women and religion
Women, Black
Womens Roles
title The Limited Empowerment of Women in Black Spiritual Churches: An Alternative Vehicle to Religious Leadership
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