Ruth Gledhill, Religion Correspondent
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More women than men were ordained to the priesthood in the Church of England for the first time last year.
In addition, 19 dioceses, nearly half the total of 44, experienced an increase in church attendance, according to statistics published yesterday.
The figures run counter to the gospel of a dying religion preached by secularists such as Dr Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. They show instead an established Church that is surprisingly resilient, given the increased ferocity of attacks on all faiths by unbelievers. They also give further credence to the lesson of history that Christianity in particular thrives when persecuted.
According to the Church of England report, 213 women and 210 men were ordained priest last year. Some things have not changed, though, with more men than women going into stipendiary posts and most women continuing to pastor for no pay. And there are still more men than women in the stipendiary Anglican priesthood in England: 7,001 compared with 1,495.
The General Synod voted in 1992 to accept women into the priesthood, and the first were ordained at Easter 1994. The Synod is now locked in contentious debate over whether women should be ordained bishop, an issue that insiders fear could be as divisive as that of homosexual ordination, even though some provinces such as the US and Canada already have women bishops.
Although women increasingly are being elevated to senior ecclesiastical posts, such as cathedral deans, research shows that the stained glass ceiling is still holding in the Church.
Last year University of Manchester researchers said that, despite their increasing numbers, women clergy seemed not to have made an impact on the Church because it was “far from being an equal opportunity employer”. It cited 2005 figures that showed that most men went into stipendiary ministry, whereas most of the women were in voluntary posts.
The figures also showed that average Sunday attendances fell to just under a million for the first time, but average weekly giving increased to £5.08 in 2005. Tax-efficient giving increased to an average of £8.26 per subscriber per week. The number of parishioners subscribing to tax-efficient regular giving through gift aid rose to another record of 523,200.
John Preston, the Church’s national stewardship and resources officer, said: “Achieving £5 a week was quite a milestone and the latest figures show a further increase of 4 per cent in total tax-efficient giving. Church members continue to give generously to charitable causes compared with the population at large.”
Average giving is about 3 per cent of average incomes, but this falls short of the 5 per cent recommended by the General Synod since 1978.
Mr Preston said: “The 5 per cent aim was based on the Christian tradition of tithing or giving away 10 per cent of income and the recommendation was to give half of that to the Church in thanks for God’s gifts and half to other charitable works.”
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I think that the first women were ordained in 1994, not 2004. I seem to remember that the ceremony was in Bristol taken by the Bishop there who had been Bishop of Wolverhampton in the 1970s. Can you confirm from your records?
Godfrey Smith, Norwich, Norfolk
Re: church women molesting all the kiddies
Item from the St Louis Post Dispatch on Nov 12, 2007
A Roman Catholic nun pleaded no contest Monday to indecent behavior with a child for alleged sexual encounters with two male students at St. Patrick's School where she was principal during the 1960s.
Source: http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/nation/story/F788FEF18C077C9F862573920014AA56?OpenDocument
If this happened in the 1960s, I imagine it is happening more often now. The US is having lots of cases of women teachers molesting and even kidnapping their students. It's just that society thought it was a learning experience for young boys to have sex with an older woman and has only recently prosecuted women the same as men.
Julia from Illinois , Belleville, IL USA
This surely shows that men have more sense than to believe in mythology.
Terry Dell, Weybridge, UK
The death of organised relligion in the UK is not going to come instantly but is slowly and surely happening as less and less children are raised from infancy while being indoctrinated to not see the irrationality of a personal god and having their questions about the world answered by science.
Alex, York,
So more women are being ordained then men? Well then one of the church's of the world (the right one of course) is being progressive. They no longer believe that unbaptised babies go to hell, and soon maybe they will realise that god they mistook a god and that he didn't really want them to persecute gays either. It's great when a cult finally stands up and says yes we were wrong though god wasn't, he just couldn't get time with all his listening (though not answering) to tell us so earlier and appease the suffering we coursed.
P.S. Teething = Taxing
P.P.S. maybe the women won't molest all the kiddies and force the church to make another huge pay out
Ben Andrews, Brisbane,
"The figures give further credence to the lesson of history that Christianity in particular thrives when persecuted."
So you admit that Christians are being persecuted?
Bob, London, UK