I am WOMAN, hear me ROAR; the phrase women have been screaming since the beginning of time! The inequality of women is fundamentally out of sorts and despite improvements over the last 100 years, there’s far more work and acceptance that needs to be obtained before women have true equality in all aspects of their lives. In this paper, I will show how women incur inequalities in just about every aspect of their lives today, even after we have proven that we are more than equal to our counterparts. I will compare and contrast the inequalities of women in the Southern Baptist and Northern Baptist denominations of Christianity and then Liberal and Orthodox Jews. My initial conclusion is that women like other minorities will continually have …show more content…
In class, there’s been a mention as to how Southern Baptist churches women are not allowed to become Bishops and Head Pastors and in some cases they can’t even preach from the pulpit. According to SBCLife, it appears that this in fact has been the position of the Southern Baptist Convention since its inception. Here’s a direct quote from an article, I read on the topic, which I found to be very interested and revealing on the social issues within the Christian Baptist faith. “This has been the position of the Southern Baptist Convention since its earliest days, though a few Southern Baptist churches have disagreed and installed women pastors. In the current discussions of gender roles, there is a need for clear thinking about what the Bible says.” …show more content…
One might say, then your statement of women inequalities are not really on point. To the contrary, these women are needed to prove themselves way more than that of what a man has to do. Therefore, leaving the playing field very much uneven; in some cases, the women are obtaining degrees and doctorates and needing to start their own church to be the leader, because the men of these established organizations still have a problem sharing the limelight and pulpit with women who are in many ways smarter than them. I’ve come to the conclusion that as women we will have to work five times harder, achieve ten times more, and make sure I don’t take any sick days in order to garner the same respect an ordinary man has and receives. In and outside of religious beliefs, women are still burdened by inequalities, and until “OUR” men start standing up for us, advocating on our behalf, and demanding equal everything for their wives, daughters, and sisters; women will always have to struggle to obtain the very basics of what being a similar human being
God made everyone equal because not one person is better than another. “ in the Time of the Butterflies” the Mirabal sisters helped others see how women were invisible to society and treated unequally in the world. ‘From that time down to the present, it is clear that the changes our country has gone through have not been a product of the actions of men alone, but most of the leading female figures who acted alongside them are nearly faceless women.” Minou Mirabal . This quote alone shows that women have always helped men get the world to how it is today, but the women have never been given credit for what they have done for helping men.
Still today, there are other organizations that allow women to serve in lay positions in a local church, and in other organizations they can be found serving as trustees and deacons. The National Baptist Convention restricted women to the usher board, women auxiliary and the women’s convention movement. In National Baptist Convention of America generally did not allow women hold any offices, whether locally or
Southern Baptists believe that the Bible is the word of God and contains no errors. It is the sole rule of their faith. They have male only leadership. Women have a role in the Southern Baptist church. They participate in areas of church service, such as being on faculty.
The “Ain’t I a Woman” report starts by stating that several ministers felt that men were superior to women (p. 1). I hate when I read or hear that men are superior to women because there is no support behind the statement. Men do not possess a gene that makes them more intelligent or stronger than women; therefore, the statement is ridiculous. Many people think that women are incapable of doing things on their own and that men should help them. Sojourner Truth proved them wrong by showing her muscles and stating that she got those muscles from plowing, planting, and gathering without the help from a man (p. 1).
Currently, gender inequality, although less than before, still exists, for example in wage gaps. “The gender gap in paid work is narrowing, but women still do most of the domestic work and child care… all of which is low-waged labor” (Lorber, 2001, 6). Many expectations for male and female roles, especially in religious customs, continue to exist and “legitimate the social arrangements that produce inequality, justifying them as proper” (Lorber, 2021, 6). Women are somewhat encouraged to work more “feminine” jobs which is causing many women to continue working in more low-paying, domestic jobs. However, there are still many, and a growing increase in successful women working high-paying jobs, inspiring more women to do the
In the developing western world, women have always been considered the weak link of the society. For centuries they have been treated as less intelligent and less important than men, and therefore, subordinate to men. Since, as a general rule, men are physically stronger than women are, such domination wasn’t hard to achieve. For hundreds of years, this mindset has impacted humanity’s understanding of equality and has left its mark on the way our society functions to this day. For the western world over the past few hundred years, and sadly to this day still having its impact on the general public, white males have been considered the most righteous, intelligent, moral, and thus, supreme to the rest of society.
Today, most would think that all humans have equal rights. Unfortunately, though, women are still not treated as equal as men. Women do not get paid as much as men do, they are expected to stay home and take care of the children, and they do not have as many job opportunities as men do. All of this is in spite of the fact that women have been fighting for their rights in this country since the 1800s. Two of the most widely known speeches are “Ain’t I a Woman” and “Speech at Seneca Falls Convention.”
Women may serve in any lay office in the local church. In the National Baptist Convention of America women generally hold no offices, locally or nationally. In the National Baptist Convention, Inc. women officers are limited to the usher’s auxiliary and the women’s convention, however, a women does serve as the Executive Director of the Sunday School Publishing Board.
This idea has been diffused over centuries, but people now are trying to impede gender disparity and efface it. To conclude, we find ourselves on a dilemma. On one side we have machism and men thinking they are better than women and vice versa. On the other, we have people who are just looking for gender equality.
Life in the twenty-first century has its perks. There have been some amazing advances in the world, with major breakthroughs in science, medicine, technology, and more. But the part we take for granted most is our ability to be human beings. For the majority of history, women were seen as lesser than men. Men thought that they were emotional, hormone driven creatures with no greater purpose in life than to bear children.
Women face getting treated differently, lower paying positions, the opinions of men, and the idea that because they are women they are not capable of the same kind of work men are capable of. The more people that support the different movements for women’s rights the better chance of this issue becoming more well known. Although some may know the struggle women go through to be compared as equally to men, there is still room for more to learn about this issue. Just because women were brought on earth to make more lives does not mean they are weaker and should have to go through this everyday of their
According to entrepreneur Mo Ibrahim, “Women do kids. Women do cooking. Women doing everything, and yet their position in society is totally unacceptable” (“TOP 16 QUOTES BY MO IBRAHIM”). Throughout history, women have suffered various forms of injustice. These inequities are very prevalent during the Puritan times.
A historical stereotype that has led to the marginalization of women in many civilizations is the representation of women as weak, obedient, and lacking in agency and authority. Many communities still hold the belief that outspoken, strong women pose a threat to men and traditional gender norms. Women who seek leadership roles in business, politics, or other fields constantly face discrimination and criticism, and they are occasionally characterized as wicked or demonic. In order to advance current attempts to attain gender equality and combat damaging preconceptions and prejudices that still exist, it can be helpful to understand
Maya Angelou sums up on how we as woman are tired of being treated as second class citizens and we will rise above all of it in her poem “Still I Rise”. The first few lines of the poem speak volumes about how women are tired of this treatment. “You may write me down in history with your bitter, twisted lies, you may trod me in the very dirt, but still, like dust, I’ll rise”. (Angelou, 1-4) It has been an ongoing battle in the fight for equal rights and women have achieved the right to vote and equal pay for equal
The subjugation of women is clearly evident not only in our distant past but imbedded in today’s modernized societies. Institutions such as marriage and cultural boundaries continue to dictate the expectations of women’s role in society and determine socially acceptable behaviors which measure of their value. But as women continue to quietly suffer and fight against this oppression they have also developed creative ways to cope with it.