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Gender And Pentecostal Revivalism Making A Female Ministry In The Early Twentieth Century Leah Payne

  • SKU: BELL-5857054
Gender And Pentecostal Revivalism Making A Female Ministry In The Early Twentieth Century Leah Payne
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Gender And Pentecostal Revivalism Making A Female Ministry In The Early Twentieth Century Leah Payne instant download after payment.

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.72 MB
Pages: 236
Author: Leah Payne
ISBN: 9781137494672, 1137494670
Language: English
Year: 2015

Product desciption

Gender And Pentecostal Revivalism Making A Female Ministry In The Early Twentieth Century Leah Payne by Leah Payne 9781137494672, 1137494670 instant download after payment.

This innovative volume provides an interdisciplinary, theoretically innovative answer to an enduring question for Pentecostal/charismatic Christianities: how do women lead churches? This study fills this lacuna by examining the leadership and legacy of two architects of the Pentecostal movement - Maria Woodworth-Etter and Aimee Semple McPherson.

Gender and Pentecostal Revivalism provides an interdisciplinary, theoretically engaged answer to an enduring question for charismatic Christianities: how do women lead churches? By examining the ministries of two famous (and infamous) Pentecostal revivalists, Maria Woodworth-Etter and Aimee Semple McPherson, this study shows that a woman's success in the ministry was not simply about access to ordination. It was about establishing legitimacy as a woman and authority as a pastor - no small task in the early twentieth century. Woodworth-Etter and McPherson succeeded by drawing from popular feminine ideals and Pentecostal biblical models of womanhood to unite their two seemingly contradictory identities of woman and minister during the ritualized act of revivalist preaching. In the process, the women created biblical theologies that are alive and well in Pentecostal-charismatic circles today. Their negotiations of gender, race, class, and religious leadership continue to inspire generations of imitators, and their stories illuminate how female ministers were made in early twentieth-century America. 

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