Beyond the Pulpit: Lay Perspectives on Black Laywomen Performing Religious Authority Restricted; Files Only

Buggs, Courtney (Summer 2019)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/fj236319j?locale=zh
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Abstract

The purpose of this research is to analyze the ways in which 21stcentury laypersons perceive the performance of religious authority by African American women.  In the context of black church culture, religious authority is located within the realm of the cleric, a realm that has historically been rendered inaccessible, or minimally accessible, to black women.  This study highlights how laypersons have dislocated religious authority from the pulpit, and thus, recognize a range of activities as performance of religious authority.  By decentralizing religious authority, laypersons disrupt institutional understandings of authority that function as gatekeepers.  

Few studies show how laywomen understand themselves to exert religious authority without clergy status, particularly black laywomen.  This study presents spiritual narratives of lay women and men who resist institutional understandings of religious authority and therefore, experience the richness of black women’s leadership despite cultural, traditional, and scriptural hindrances.  It attends to the lived realities of laypersons and how they interpret the actions of black laywomen through the lens’ of local church history; personal history; and cultural history.  The affirming perceptions of the study participants reflect an embraced border crossing for black laywomen, a crossing that more accurately portrays their contributions within black religious spaces.

Grounded in womanist theory and methodology, this qualitative study uses semi-structured interviews to examine:  what perceptions about black women performing religious authority prevail in the 21stcentury laity; whether or not laywomen subvert traditional structures of authority in the black church; and ifstereotypical images of black women impact how listeners perceive black clergywomen or laywomen.  Five dominant themes emerged in this study:  1) laypersons understand religious authority as the authority of all believers; 2) laypersons increasingly affirm black women performing religious authority, both as clergywomen and laywomen; 3) culture, tradition, and scriptural interpretations contribute to hindering black women, particularly in the performance of preaching; 4) laypersons perceive black women performing religious authority as ‘normal’ within the black community and the performance is evident in a myriad of practices, and 5) Media depictions of black women negatively impact how black laywomen are perceived in the performance of authority.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

Background

Research Questions

Purpose and Significance of Research

Organization of the Research

CHAPTER ONE.  BODIES AND BLACK FEMININE EMBODIMENT

Philosophy and the Body

Theology and the Body

Mythologizing Women’s Bodies:  Cult of True Womanhood

Materializing Women’s Bodies:  Black Womanhood

CHAPTER TWO.  RELIGIOUS AUTHORITY AND BLACK WOMEN’S POSITIONALITY

Black Women and Religious Authority

Black Feminine Positionality

A Subject in Jeopardy

Reimaging Black Womanhood Theologically:  Womanist Theology

CHAPTER THREE.  SYMPHONIES OF RESISTANCE

Recognition of Difference

Silence & Storytelling

Anger

Dissemblance

Strategic Religious Authority

Knowledge Validation

Erotic as Life Force

Summary – Chapters One, Two, and Three

CHAPTER FOUR.  METHODOLOGY

Purpose of the Study

Research Design

Research Questions

Theoretical Perspective

Methodology

Role of the Researcher

Target Population

Procedures

Notification of Study

Participant Selection

Data Collection

Data Management

Data Analysis

Coding Strategy

Emergent Theme Determination

Ethical Considerations

Limits to the Research Design

CHAPTER FIVE.  DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS

Introduction

Site Description

Participant Sample

Emergent Themes

Authority of All Believers

Black Laywomen’s Leadership is a ‘10’

Hindrances to Black Laywomen Persist

Black Laywomen’s Religious Authority is Normal

Media Depictions of Black Women are Detrimental

Subtheme

Attractiveness as a Listening Factor

CHAPTER 6.  CONCLUSIONS

Purpose of This Research

The Power of Perceptions

Lay Leadership in the United Methodist Church

Chapter Summaries

Research Implications

Implications for Womanist Scholarship

Implications for Homiletical Scholarship

Future Research

BIBLIOGRAPHY

APPENDICES

Appendix A:  Approval to Conduct Research at Site

Appendix B: Notification of Intent to Conduct Research

Appendix C: Participant Consent Form

Appendix D: Demographic Survey

Appendix E:  Focus Group Questions

Appendix F:  Interview Questions

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