反思Complementarianism

Rosie Clare Shorter
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引用次数: 1

摘要

互补主义,即基督教的教导注重男子的领导和妇女的服从,作为一种理想的关系和性别行为模式,已被确定为既没有什么实际价值的界限标志,又在亲密伴侣暴力事件中是一个促成因素。这种矛盾引出了一个问题;互补主义是没有什么实际效果,还是有重大的——暴力的——社会后果?本文借鉴斯科特对作为话语的世俗主义的分析,将互补主义视为一种宗教-政治话语。通过对出版的教会材料和通过对教区居民和教会工作人员的采访收集的故事的分析,我探讨了互补主义是如何在悉尼圣公会教区构建和实施的。我认为互补主义不是一种独特的基督教神学,而是一种话语或故事,在社区中讲述,它构建了正统,既创造又限制了性别和宗教身份。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking Complementarianism
Complementarianism, that is, Christian teaching focusing on men’s leadership and women’s submission as an ideal pattern of relationships and gendered behaviour, has been identified both as a boundary marker with little lived currency and as a contributing factor in instances of intimate partner violence. This contradiction raises a question; does complementarianism have little felt effect or does it have significant—and violent—social consequences? In this article, drawing on Scott’s analysis of Secularism as discourse I consider complementarianism as a religio-political discourse. Through analysis of published church material and stories gathered through interviews with parishioners and church staff, I explore how complementarianism is constructed and implemented in the Sydney Anglican Diocese. I argue that complementarianism is not a distinctively Christian theology, but a discourse, or story, told in community which constructs orthodoxy and both creates and limits gendered and religious identity.
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CiteScore
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