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From its inception in the nineteenth century, the Wesleyan/Holiness
religious tradition has offered an alternative construction of
gender and supported the equality of the sexes. In Holy Boldness,
Susie C. Stanley provides a comprehensive analysis of spiritual
autobiographies by thirty-four American Wesleyan/Holiness women
preachers, published between the mid-nineteenth and mid-twentieth
centuries. While a few of these women, primarily African Americans,
have been added to the canon of American women’s autobiography,
Stanley argues for the expansion of the canon to incorporate the
majority of the women in her study. She reveals how these empowered
women carried out public ministries on behalf of evangelism and
social justice. The defining doctrine of the Wesleyan/Holiness
tradition is the belief in sanctification, or experiencing a state
of holiness. Stanley's analysis illuminates how the concept of the
sanctified self inspired women to break out of the narrow confines
of the traditional “women's sphere” and engage in public
ministries, from preaching at camp meetings and revivals to
ministering in prisons and tenements. Moreover, as a result of the
Wesleyan/Holiness emphasis on experience as a valid source of
theology, many women preachers turned to autobiography as a way to
share their spiritual quest and religiously motivated activities
with others. In such writings, these preachers focused on the
events that shaped their spiritual growth and their calling to
ministry, often giving only the barest details of their personal
lives. Thus, Holy Boldness is not a collective biography of these
women but rather an exploration of how sanctification influenced
their evangelistic and social ministries. Using the tools of
feminist theory and autobiographical analysis in addition to
historical and theological interpretation, Stanley traces a
trajectory of Christian women’s autobiographies and introduces
many previously unknown spiritual autobiographies that will expand
our understanding of Christian spirituality in nineteenth- and
twentieth-century America. The Author: Susie C. Stanley is
professor of historical theology at Messiah College. She is the
author of Feminist Pillar of Fire: The Life of Alma White.
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