Description

Book Synopsis
Few books have explored in depth the lack of men in the churches. Podles’ book The Church Impotent: The Feminization of Christianity was the first book-length attempt to examine this phenomenon. David Murrow’s Why Men Hate Going to Church was a popular presentation of Podles’ material. Marta Trzebiatowska’s and Steve Bruce’s short Why Are Women More Religious than Men? confines itself almost entirely to modern British and American examples.
Losing the Good Portion: Why Men Are Alienated from Christianity explores the causes and consequences of the almost millennium-old disparity between the participation of lay men and lay women in the churches of Western Christianity. Podles considers both the anecdotal and statistical evidence for the lack of men: sermons, church rolls, censuses, and sociological analyses.
Podles sees the intellectual roots of lack of men in the Aristotelian understanding of male and female as active and passive, an understanding which has formed all discussion of masculinity and femininity, from Aquinas through Schleiermacher, Barth, and Hans Urs von Balthasar, all of whom saw femininity as more compatible with Christianity than masculinity. Men, according to anthropologists and psychologists, go through a difficult process to attain masculinity and therefore distance themselves from threats to that masculine identity, including Christianity.
Men suspected the clergy was effeminate and sexually irregular. Historians of violence have examined the decline in violence in Europe and the civilizing role of the clergy, a role which further alienated men and led to violent anticlericalism
Podles examines the presentation of Jesus’ masculinity in Scripture and images of Jesus’ masculinity in art, the role of thumos in spirituality, and the various movements that have helped keep men connected to the churches. He makes suggestions for possible outreach to men.


Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

Chapter One: Masculinity

Chapter Two: The Masculinity of Jesus

Chapter Three: The Feminine Christian

Chapter Four: The Clergy and Social Control

Chapter Five: The Sins of the Clergy

Chapter Six: Political Anticlericalism

Chapter Seven: Masculine Themes in Christianity

Chapter Eight: Targeting Men

Chapter Nine: Men and the Future of the Church

Selected Bibliography

Losing the Good Portion – Why Men Are Alienated

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    A Hardback by Leon J. Podles

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      View other formats and editions of Losing the Good Portion – Why Men Are Alienated by Leon J. Podles

      Publisher: St Augustine's Press
      Publication Date: 15/01/2020
      ISBN13: 9781587315053, 978-1587315053
      ISBN10: 158731505X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Few books have explored in depth the lack of men in the churches. Podles’ book The Church Impotent: The Feminization of Christianity was the first book-length attempt to examine this phenomenon. David Murrow’s Why Men Hate Going to Church was a popular presentation of Podles’ material. Marta Trzebiatowska’s and Steve Bruce’s short Why Are Women More Religious than Men? confines itself almost entirely to modern British and American examples.
      Losing the Good Portion: Why Men Are Alienated from Christianity explores the causes and consequences of the almost millennium-old disparity between the participation of lay men and lay women in the churches of Western Christianity. Podles considers both the anecdotal and statistical evidence for the lack of men: sermons, church rolls, censuses, and sociological analyses.
      Podles sees the intellectual roots of lack of men in the Aristotelian understanding of male and female as active and passive, an understanding which has formed all discussion of masculinity and femininity, from Aquinas through Schleiermacher, Barth, and Hans Urs von Balthasar, all of whom saw femininity as more compatible with Christianity than masculinity. Men, according to anthropologists and psychologists, go through a difficult process to attain masculinity and therefore distance themselves from threats to that masculine identity, including Christianity.
      Men suspected the clergy was effeminate and sexually irregular. Historians of violence have examined the decline in violence in Europe and the civilizing role of the clergy, a role which further alienated men and led to violent anticlericalism
      Podles examines the presentation of Jesus’ masculinity in Scripture and images of Jesus’ masculinity in art, the role of thumos in spirituality, and the various movements that have helped keep men connected to the churches. He makes suggestions for possible outreach to men.


      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Introduction

      Chapter One: Masculinity

      Chapter Two: The Masculinity of Jesus

      Chapter Three: The Feminine Christian

      Chapter Four: The Clergy and Social Control

      Chapter Five: The Sins of the Clergy

      Chapter Six: Political Anticlericalism

      Chapter Seven: Masculine Themes in Christianity

      Chapter Eight: Targeting Men

      Chapter Nine: Men and the Future of the Church

      Selected Bibliography

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