This second edition of Boyd and Brackenridge's acclaimed history
of Presbyterian women in America traces women's affiliation with
Presbyterianism for more than two centuries--from 1789 to the
present. In the first century after the establishment of the
General Assembly, churchmen expected females to be silent,
subordinate, and submissive in the church; ordination was
forbidden. However, women in the 19th century organized into local
groups devoted to mission and Christian education projects. This
fascinating historical account traces the evolvement of these
groups into the women's boards of the late 19th and early 20th
centuries that influenced women's current equal role in the
pulpits, sessions, and courts of the church. Boyd and Brackenridge
raise important issues concerning diversity, sustenance of
community, and ordination--issues that will affect women's position
in the church in the 21st century.
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