consiglieri wrote:Mormon men often marvel at how it is Relief Society seems to manage to do more than the priesthood quorums, at least on the local level.
But the Mormon system sets this up by giving men the sole obligation to do the presiding while simultaneously saying men are the ones who should be out earning a living to support their family so the woman can stay at home and raise the family.
Being a white, heterosexual, nominally christian, middle class male (let's throw sexy in there for good measure), I've only ever experienced inequality vicariously, never directly. Let that be your caveat to take nothing I say as factual or informed, only opinion-laden.
Just Me and MsJack have both pointed out that the priesthood is a vehicle for forming more intimate relationships with human beings and with God. The ordinances of the priesthood along with the various rites are designed to create familial and supernatural bonds. It's egregious that women are prohibited from administering those rites and receiving spiritual gifts that can only be gained by acting with God's power and authority. As it stands right now, a woman can never know how it feels to forge a link directly between her loved ones and her God; never command the elements by His supernatural power; never protect her home with His aid; never heal her ailing child by His anointing.
I've hopped into this conversation here because Consig's comment above touches on something that I don't completely agree with (though his points have been spot on throughout the thread). While my experience agrees with the observation that Consig makes - women tend to get things done, with greater effectiveness than men - I don't believe the reason is a function of available time. Rather, my experience says that, on the whole, women are more serious about church responsibilities than men. Perhaps it has something to do with gender differences, I really can't say. But for some reason, I've seen women, whether fully employed as professionals or as mothers (or as both) make monumental things happen in the church with more frequency as their priesthood-enabled counterparts.
Whatever the reason is, women seem to be able to make things happen without priesthood authority, while men seem to be stunted in this respect, even with priesthood authority. I'm making broad generalisations, yes, but this has been my experience and it seems to line up with Consigs experience, and the experience of others.
However great a work women perform in the church, it irks me to no end, as it irks JustMe and other women who have chimed in, that the reward is pedestal praise, and not additional authority. Even after much success, women are denied authority and must still subjugate themselves to the priesthood direction of men. And I've never been able to figure out why this is, why the withholding is necessary until now. Here's the thought that entered my mind:
LDS women work too hard in the absence of reward.
You can disagree with me, I accept I may be wrong. But it seems to me to be some simple economics - Why give the priesthood to women if they don't demand it in exchange for their efforts? There is a silence amongst women, almost a foregone conclusion that either God doesn't want them to hold the priesthood, ever, or that the priesthood will be bestowed in due time. Yet, imagine the revolution that could happen if women began a 'work to rule' campaign? Refused to serve on committees, refused to cook another church meal, only served the most destitute, boycotted ward and stake events en masse? What if the church really had to feel the absence of feminine contribution? Perhaps that would send a message, a message that women demand equal congress with men, equal authority, equal position before God, and equal entry to the priesthood.
H.
"Others cannot endure their own littleness unless they can translate it into meaningfulness on the largest possible level."
~ Ernest Becker
"Whether you think of it as heavenly or as earthly, if you love life immortality is no consolation for death."
~ Simone de Beauvoir