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Between Two Worlds
Organizational Challenges for Ordained Women in the Anglican Church of Canada
The priest walks up the Nave; guards on either side (Sison, 2014). At the Altar, she turns
and faces her congregation. For members of the Anglican Church of Canada (ACC) this was a
time not so long ago. Women have been ordained ministers since November 1976 and bishops
since February 1994 (General Synod, 2013, Appendix T para. 28). These consecrated women
have much in common with their professional, secular sisters when facing organizational
barriers, perspectives and challenges in the workplace. The purpose of this paper is to look at
organizational challenges facing ordained women in the ACC and illustrate parallels between the
secular and sacred worlds.
The ACC is an institution-based religious denomination and thus has a clear defined
organizational hierarchy. The General Synod is like a corporate Board of Directors, though their
powers are different. The General Synod is comprised of three parts or “Orders”: Order of
Bishops, Order of Clergy and Order of Laity (General Synod, 2013, p. 5). The ordained ministry
is comprised of three levels: Deacon/ess, Priest and Bishop (General Synod, 2013). Bishops can
only be members of the Order of Bishops; Priests and Deacons/Deaconesses can only be in the
Order of Clergy, if elected to it; Order of Laity are members of good standing within their parish
and diocese, and are elected to it.
It is interesting to note that in the Handbook of the General Synod of The Anglican
Church of Canada (Handbook) (General Synod, 2013) that Canon XIII deals with the gender
specific office of “Deaconess” (p. 69-70). The Canon details: Recognition; Qualifications;
Duties; Episcopal Oversight and Authority, and; Transfer and Resignation. Yet nowhere in the
Handbook is there discussion of Deacon (gender specific male), Priest or Bishop. Canon III deals
with “The Primate” (most senior Bishop who represents the ACC nationally and internationally)
(p. 39-45). Canon VIII and IX deal with the “General Synod Pension and Benefit Plans” and
“Lay Retirement Plan” from page 53 to 62 of the Handbook. One is left to wonder why the
lowest order of female ministry alone is detailed.
All organizations, secular or religious, are created by the conscious and unconscious
processes of human beings (Morgan, 1997). Many authors now agree that organizations “are not
gender neutral but profoundly gendered” (Kelan, 2008, p. 429). As well, it is noted that
“gendered cultures, which are embedded in individual organizational cultures, thus appear a key
obstacle to women’s career progress with organizations” (E. M. Wilson, 1998, p. 406). There are
more women in congregations than men and do most of the lay works (committees, women
auxiliary, setting the altar, etc.) but are vastly underrepresented among the leaders of Christian
organizations (Adams, 2007). At Seminary/theological college there is equal representation of
fe/males (Blue, 2008). Yet at the most senior level of the ACC there is nowhere near parity.
Notwithstanding this, we must remember that ordained women are “the challenge to the male
‘death grip’ on the ministry” (Bagilhole, 2003, p. 365; see also Ward, 2008). With the increased
research and study the ACC and Canadians are coming to understand that women’s
ordination/ministry is “more of a restoration of what was lost than an innovation. (Ward, 2008, p.
77)”
The “Order of Bishops” is made up of forty-one bishops, including the Primate. As of 01
April 2014, there were five female ordained bishops, with a female minster appointed as
Diocesan Administrator, which equals 14.6% representation of a female voice within the Order
of Bishops (General Synod, 2014). Many find the ACC to be frustratingly slow in changing
church policies and procedures, when compared to the corporate world, but “because institution-
centred denominations are interconnected and more centralized, they can often implement new
policies faster, further and more firmly than [other denominations]” (Lummis, 2008, p. 161). It
must also be remembered that the “[s]tructure, rules, behaviors, beliefs, and the patterns of
culture that define an organization are not just corporate phenomena. They are personal in the
most profound sense. (Morgan, 1997, p. 245)” Hence, it may take another twenty years for
women bishops to reach parity with men, as most bishops are elected in their forties (Sison,
2014) and can serve until they are seventy (General Synod, 2013).
The classical career path for a minster would be parish priest (moving to successively
larger parishes) to diocesan bishop and then, if so elected, to Primate. However, the classic,
secular, corporate ladder “is replaced by portfolio careers [in] which workers undertake a
succession of projects rather than following a linear progression. (Kelan, 2008, p. 431)” It is
known that women’s careers have been characterized by limited opportunity, low pay, part time
work, family breaks and assumptions about commitment and capability (E. M. Wilson, 1998).
Thus, women work in ‘poorer’ conditions because male executives believe the easier ‘right to
exit,’ for home and family commitments, compensates for the low pay (F. Wilson, 1996). As
well, women’s jobs are deemed “lesser” than men’s (Benschop, Halsema, & Schreurs, 2001) but
are expected to do emotional labour in their jobs in order to keep ‘peace and stability’ within the
work unit (Hochschild, 1983; Kanter, 1977).
Women priests are now following their secular sisters into “portfolio” work; whereby
they quietly take on some of the toughest spiritual jobs such as dealing with Residential School
survivors, abused children and women, hospital and hospice work (Bagilhole, 2003). Added to
that, many women are leaving the pastorate (parish) and moving into chaplaincy (military,
school, hospital) or teaching, as they find parish work to be less professionally and spiritually
rewarding (Blue, 2008). When women do work as parish priests, they are not only expected to
perform the duties of ministry but also fulfill the role of “minister’s wife” (Sison, 2014).
According to Ward (2008), women’s roles are local, flexible, family friendly, voluntary, junior
level or of new creation. But as women become more visible, in the sacred world, there are less
stipendiary jobs available consequently restricting career mobility (Lummis, 2008).
One of the most prominent organizational challenges for women, in any sector, is the pay
gap between men and women (Kelan, 2008). Despite equal opportunity legislation and equal pay
legislation, men still tend to fill the majority of full-time positions, while women fill the vast
majority of part-time positions (Guy & Killingsworth, 2007). A good secular model would be the
‘sports world’; wherein the first teachers of a sport are normally women, who volunteer to teach
a large number of children (normally), who are not sure if they want to play this sport and as
such are probably unruly. Once an athlete has dedicated him/herself to pursuing the sport to an
elite level, the professional coaches are typically men (even in women’s sports) who are paid for
their time (Shaw & Hoeber, 2003).
Within the sacred world, regular pay (stipend) is based on where you work, what position
you hold and what can be afforded by that parish, business or sector. It has been noted that men
tend to head larger and/or older parishes/institutions, which tend to pay well through stipends,
endowments and bequests (Bagilhole, 2003; Blue, 2008; Lummis, 2008; Sison, 2014). As well,
despite many women’s higher level of education, many are on their second career (Sison, 2014;
Ward, 2008), they are far less likely to find stipendiary work at any level (Adams, 2007). The
jobs that many women are filling (small parishes, parishes in destitute areas, hospice care) pay
less than what a male priest can earn at a large parish (Adams, 2007; Blue, 2008; Lummis,
2008).
One of the most fraught “site[s] of struggle and contestation, (Trethewey, 1999, p. 429)”
facing professional women is that of the female body itself. As the “female body has a tendency
to overflow, (Trethewey, 1999, p. 432)” front, back and out there are many unvoiced, but
observed, clothing rules for the professional women. According to the women interviewed by
Trethewey (1999) professional clothing should be: stylish but not trendy; pretty but not feminine;
interesting but not suggestive; ‘tailored’ but not tight. Of note in this list is the use of the
masculine term ‘tailored’, over the more inclusive term of fitted. Further to this, professional
women indulge in “cheerful defiances of custom (p. 593)” including makeup, nail polish,
clothing colours, jewelry and hair length and style (Gherardi, 1994). These defiances are now
deemed commonplace and un-noteworthy, as they assist in establishing a woman’s professional
identity. In the mid-70s, it was not uncommon for secretaries to take courses on professional
demeanor and clothing options (Kanter, 1977).
Within the sacred world, Page (2013) found that “[d]ress function[s] as a key test in
women’s integration into the organization, often operating as a constraining and exclusionary
mechanism (p. 1) …. Therefore, status and prestige are bound up with particular items that hold
not only professional significance but also sacred status. (p. 2)” Sacred clothing (robes, stoles,
and such) are traditionally bright in colour, made from lush fabrics and, in many cases, are richly
embroidered; normally a hallmark of “feminine” clothing. Yet, these feminine clothes have been
worn by men for thousands of years. Therefore, many would think that women’s acceptance of
and wearing of sacred clothing would pose no problem. However, it has been “conclude[d] that
the female, for the most, cannot be adequately represented with male body size data. (Robinette,
Churchill, & Mc Conville, 1979, p. 25)” The areas that did not scale well between, or within
gender, included: hip circumference, chest circumference, shoulder circumference and
hand/head/feet scales (Robinette, et al., 1979, p. 25). Hence, women priests are left with the sub-
conscious feeling that they are unable to fill the robes adequately, thus they are only playing at
being a priest (Page, 2013).
In Blue’s classes (2008), one thing that every guest speaker brought was their robes that
had been modified by the women ministers. For example, most robes do have slits for the wearer
to reach their pockets; but most female, professional clothing (worn under the robes) does not
have pockets, so where do you put the battery pack for the microphone (Blue, 2008)? In her
study, Page (2013) noted many items that are deemed by ‘someone’ as being “at odds not only
with the professional self, but also the sacred self. (p. 6)” Conflicts were noted on the use of:
patterned clerical shirts; traditional black over coloured clerical shirts; the (non)wearing of
earrings; hair length; the use of make up; the use of nail polish, and; the wearing of jewelry on
secular clothing while talking at a meeting (Page, 2013). Many female ministers have felt the
need to ‘play to the audience’ when dressing for secular and sacred purposes (Sison, 2014). In
researching women’s sacred clothing, using the links at Anglicansonline.org, men’s clerical
shirts only come in black while women have the choice of black or pastels, if offered at all. As
well, for formal sacred clothing, those sites that offer tailoring services suggest that all
purchasers go to a tailor for proper measurements “as shown in the diagrams above,” of which
there is normally only one diagram for women.
As we have seen above, ordained women face the same organizational challenges as their
secular sisters: underrepresentation at senior decision making levels; the need to enter into
portfolio work instead of a traditional career; wages gap, and; the female body in a man’s world.
How then should the ACC address these challenges and assist its sisters in Christ to reach their
full professional and spiritual potentials?
The easiest one to ‘fix’ is that of sacred clothing. As a forward thinking organization, the
ACC should contact a woman’s clothing designer to create new, or modify traditional, sacred
clothing to better fit and enhance the female minister in the performance of her spiritual duties.
As for the resistance of some parishioners to the female body in priestly vestments or clothing;
only time and an acceptance of new societal norms will ameliorate this problem.
The other challenges and barriers may be problematic. The idea of forcing/legislating a
quota for female bishops does not seem to be appropriate. Besides, will enough male bishops
retire “soon enough” so that women can be elevated? Forcing female ministers into parish work,
when their calling maybe to the chaplaincy or teaching, is again felt to be inappropriate.
Regarding wages, it could be ‘equalled out’ if all monies collected, bequeathed and endowed
went to the ACC instead of to specific parishes, sectors or foundations. But that would give rise
to division within the ministry. A secular example of this idea is the current state of affairs in the
National Hockey League, where you buy tickets for the “Canadiens” but a portion of that money
goes to prop up the team in Phoenix.
One of the most powerful themes in Carl Jung’s work is “the unity in opposites. (Morgan,
1997, p. 241)” It is known that Christianity moved from Jesus’ egalitarian movement to
Aristotle’s gender ideas, that give an “essentialist notion of gender that leaves the nature of one
gender unassumed and unrepresented before God. (Bates, 2011, p. 11)” The ACC needs to
contemplate upon the idea of an in-dwelling God that “knows women so well that he never
touches them directly, but always in that fleeting stealth of a fantasy that evades all
representation. (Luce Irigaray quoted in Joy, 2006, p. 17-18)” If the ACC reflects prayerfully
upon this idea that it will see that "[t]he voice of women, the female and femininity have been
largely invisible, (Metcalfe & Linstead, 2003, p. 95)” within the Church. Once this revelation has
been made plain, then the ACC can work towards the ‘critical mass’ of women needed at senior
levels of management so that norms will change, as a strategic and Biblical necessity “not a
reluctant concession to demands of [social/secular] justice. (Ward, 2008, p. 83)”
The ACC is a gendered organizational culture that continues to reflect its gender biases
on female ministers who “ha[ve] felt gender bias first hand .… [they] ha[ve] been the target of
sexist slurs, been excluded from male-dominated social situations, and ha[ve] seen men get jobs
instead of more qualified women. (Symons, 2013)” As Edgardh (2009) says, it would have been,
and should have been, magnificent to see the Church lead the way towards equal rights before
the law and God. Because “[i]f women can ‘represent’ God just as well as men, if women can be
priests in the Sanctuary just as men can, then God is not the ‘man’ he was thought to be!
(Diesendorf, 1988, p. 33)” Thus, as we in the Global North (who are torn apart into solitary,
unique individuals, but are more globally connected than ever before) face the challenge of being
different together (Edgardh, 2009), we need to find a mutual support system that could be the
Church. If the Church can find the “unity in opposites” that promotes transcendence and the
Jungian ‘cosmic’ that allows us to link mind-to-mind and mind-to-nature/God (Morgan, 1997)
then the Church can take a “queer” (different and breaking away from the norm) look at itself
and realize that this concept is “an invitation to a deeper theological reflection. (Edgardh, 2009,
p. 43)” A concept that will allow women’s voices to be heard on a level playing field, with the
hoped for result of a more equitable organization and society.
References
Adams, J. (2007). Stained glass makes the ceiling visible: Organizational opposition to women in
congregational leadership. Gender & Society, 21(1), 80-105.
doi:10.1177/0891243206293773
Bagilhole, B. (2003). Prospects for change? Structural, cultural and action dimensions of the
careers of pioneer women priests in the Church of England. Gender, Work & Organization,
10(3), 361-377. doi:10.1111/1468-0432.00200
Bates, C. L. (2011). Gender ontology and women in ministry in the early church. Priscilla
Papers, 25(2), 6-15. Retrieved from http://0-
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Benschop, Y., Halsema, L., & Schreurs, P. (2001). The division of labour and inequalities
between the sexes: An ideological dilemma. Gender, Work & Organization, 8(1), 1.
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&db=a9h&AN=4519182&site=ehost-live
Blue, E. (2008). Should theological education be different for clergywomen? Doing "women's
work" in a mainline protestant seminary. In I. Jones, J. Wootton & K. Thorpe (Eds.), Women
and ordination in the Christian churches: International perspectives (pp. 64-75). London: T
& T Clark.
Diesendorf, E. (1988). Ordination of women: A thorn in the side of the Anglican Church in
Australia. Social Alternatives, 7(3), 31-34.
Edgardh, N. (2009). Difference and desire: A queer reading. Dialog: A Journal of Theology,
48(1), 42-48. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6385.2009.00429.x
General Synod (Ed.). (2013). Handbook of the general synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
(17th ed.). Toronto: Anglican Church of Canada.
General Synod. (2014). Dioceses of the Anglican Church of Canada. Retrieved April 10, 2014,
from http://www.anglican.ca/resources/dioceses/#rl
Gherardi, S. (1994). The gender we think, the gender we do in our everyday organizational lives.
Human Relations, 47(6), 591-610.
Guy, M. E., & Killingsworth, J. A. (2007). Framing gender, framing work: The disparate impact
of traditional HRM practices. In A. Farazmand (Ed.), Strategic public personnel
administration: Building and managing human capital for the 21st century (pp. 399-418).
Westport, CT: Praeger.
Hochschild, A. R. (1983). Gender, status, and feeling. The managed heart: Commercialization of
human feeling (pp. 162-184). New York: Holt.
Joy, M. (2006). Divine love: Luce Irigaray, women, gender and religion. Manchester:
Manchester University Press. Retrieved from http://0-
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Kanter, R. M. (1977). Secretaries. Men and women of the corporation (pp. 69-103). New York:
Basic Books.
Kelan, E. K. (2008). The discursive construction of gender in contemporary management
literature. Journal of Business Ethics, 81(2), 427-445.
Lummis, A. T. (2008). Forever pruning? The path to ordained women's full participation in the
Episcopal Church of the USA. In I. Jones, J. Wootton & K. Thorpe (Eds.), Women and
ordination in the Christian churches: International perspectives (pp. 157-176). London: T
& T Clark.
Metcalfe, B., & Linstead, A. (2003). Gendering teamwork: Re-writing the feminine. Gender,
Work and Organization, 10(1), 94-119.
Morgan, G. (1997). Exploring Plato's cave: Organizations as psychic prisons. Images of
organization (2nd ed., pp. 215-249). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications.
Page, S. (2013). The scrutinized priest: Women in the Church of England negotiating
professional and sacred clothing regimes. Gender, Work and Organization,
doi:10.1111/gwao.12035
Robinette, K., Churchill, T., & Mc Conville, J. (1979). A comparison of male and female body
sizes and proportions. (USAF No. AMRL-TR-79-69). Ohio: Aerospace Medical Research
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Shaw, S., & Hoeber, L. (2003). "A strong man is direct and a direct woman is a bitch": Gendered
discourses and their influence on employment roles in sports organizations. Journal of Sport
Management, 17(4), 347. Retrieved from http://0-
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ceiling/
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Ward, R. (2008). Doing leadership differently? Women and senior leadership in the Church of
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Between Two Worlds

  • 1. Between Two Worlds Organizational Challenges for Ordained Women in the Anglican Church of Canada The priest walks up the Nave; guards on either side (Sison, 2014). At the Altar, she turns and faces her congregation. For members of the Anglican Church of Canada (ACC) this was a time not so long ago. Women have been ordained ministers since November 1976 and bishops since February 1994 (General Synod, 2013, Appendix T para. 28). These consecrated women have much in common with their professional, secular sisters when facing organizational barriers, perspectives and challenges in the workplace. The purpose of this paper is to look at organizational challenges facing ordained women in the ACC and illustrate parallels between the secular and sacred worlds. The ACC is an institution-based religious denomination and thus has a clear defined organizational hierarchy. The General Synod is like a corporate Board of Directors, though their powers are different. The General Synod is comprised of three parts or “Orders”: Order of Bishops, Order of Clergy and Order of Laity (General Synod, 2013, p. 5). The ordained ministry is comprised of three levels: Deacon/ess, Priest and Bishop (General Synod, 2013). Bishops can only be members of the Order of Bishops; Priests and Deacons/Deaconesses can only be in the Order of Clergy, if elected to it; Order of Laity are members of good standing within their parish and diocese, and are elected to it. It is interesting to note that in the Handbook of the General Synod of The Anglican Church of Canada (Handbook) (General Synod, 2013) that Canon XIII deals with the gender specific office of “Deaconess” (p. 69-70). The Canon details: Recognition; Qualifications; Duties; Episcopal Oversight and Authority, and; Transfer and Resignation. Yet nowhere in the
  • 2. Handbook is there discussion of Deacon (gender specific male), Priest or Bishop. Canon III deals with “The Primate” (most senior Bishop who represents the ACC nationally and internationally) (p. 39-45). Canon VIII and IX deal with the “General Synod Pension and Benefit Plans” and “Lay Retirement Plan” from page 53 to 62 of the Handbook. One is left to wonder why the lowest order of female ministry alone is detailed. All organizations, secular or religious, are created by the conscious and unconscious processes of human beings (Morgan, 1997). Many authors now agree that organizations “are not gender neutral but profoundly gendered” (Kelan, 2008, p. 429). As well, it is noted that “gendered cultures, which are embedded in individual organizational cultures, thus appear a key obstacle to women’s career progress with organizations” (E. M. Wilson, 1998, p. 406). There are more women in congregations than men and do most of the lay works (committees, women auxiliary, setting the altar, etc.) but are vastly underrepresented among the leaders of Christian organizations (Adams, 2007). At Seminary/theological college there is equal representation of fe/males (Blue, 2008). Yet at the most senior level of the ACC there is nowhere near parity. Notwithstanding this, we must remember that ordained women are “the challenge to the male ‘death grip’ on the ministry” (Bagilhole, 2003, p. 365; see also Ward, 2008). With the increased research and study the ACC and Canadians are coming to understand that women’s ordination/ministry is “more of a restoration of what was lost than an innovation. (Ward, 2008, p. 77)” The “Order of Bishops” is made up of forty-one bishops, including the Primate. As of 01 April 2014, there were five female ordained bishops, with a female minster appointed as Diocesan Administrator, which equals 14.6% representation of a female voice within the Order of Bishops (General Synod, 2014). Many find the ACC to be frustratingly slow in changing
  • 3. church policies and procedures, when compared to the corporate world, but “because institution- centred denominations are interconnected and more centralized, they can often implement new policies faster, further and more firmly than [other denominations]” (Lummis, 2008, p. 161). It must also be remembered that the “[s]tructure, rules, behaviors, beliefs, and the patterns of culture that define an organization are not just corporate phenomena. They are personal in the most profound sense. (Morgan, 1997, p. 245)” Hence, it may take another twenty years for women bishops to reach parity with men, as most bishops are elected in their forties (Sison, 2014) and can serve until they are seventy (General Synod, 2013). The classical career path for a minster would be parish priest (moving to successively larger parishes) to diocesan bishop and then, if so elected, to Primate. However, the classic, secular, corporate ladder “is replaced by portfolio careers [in] which workers undertake a succession of projects rather than following a linear progression. (Kelan, 2008, p. 431)” It is known that women’s careers have been characterized by limited opportunity, low pay, part time work, family breaks and assumptions about commitment and capability (E. M. Wilson, 1998). Thus, women work in ‘poorer’ conditions because male executives believe the easier ‘right to exit,’ for home and family commitments, compensates for the low pay (F. Wilson, 1996). As well, women’s jobs are deemed “lesser” than men’s (Benschop, Halsema, & Schreurs, 2001) but are expected to do emotional labour in their jobs in order to keep ‘peace and stability’ within the work unit (Hochschild, 1983; Kanter, 1977). Women priests are now following their secular sisters into “portfolio” work; whereby they quietly take on some of the toughest spiritual jobs such as dealing with Residential School survivors, abused children and women, hospital and hospice work (Bagilhole, 2003). Added to that, many women are leaving the pastorate (parish) and moving into chaplaincy (military,
  • 4. school, hospital) or teaching, as they find parish work to be less professionally and spiritually rewarding (Blue, 2008). When women do work as parish priests, they are not only expected to perform the duties of ministry but also fulfill the role of “minister’s wife” (Sison, 2014). According to Ward (2008), women’s roles are local, flexible, family friendly, voluntary, junior level or of new creation. But as women become more visible, in the sacred world, there are less stipendiary jobs available consequently restricting career mobility (Lummis, 2008). One of the most prominent organizational challenges for women, in any sector, is the pay gap between men and women (Kelan, 2008). Despite equal opportunity legislation and equal pay legislation, men still tend to fill the majority of full-time positions, while women fill the vast majority of part-time positions (Guy & Killingsworth, 2007). A good secular model would be the ‘sports world’; wherein the first teachers of a sport are normally women, who volunteer to teach a large number of children (normally), who are not sure if they want to play this sport and as such are probably unruly. Once an athlete has dedicated him/herself to pursuing the sport to an elite level, the professional coaches are typically men (even in women’s sports) who are paid for their time (Shaw & Hoeber, 2003). Within the sacred world, regular pay (stipend) is based on where you work, what position you hold and what can be afforded by that parish, business or sector. It has been noted that men tend to head larger and/or older parishes/institutions, which tend to pay well through stipends, endowments and bequests (Bagilhole, 2003; Blue, 2008; Lummis, 2008; Sison, 2014). As well, despite many women’s higher level of education, many are on their second career (Sison, 2014; Ward, 2008), they are far less likely to find stipendiary work at any level (Adams, 2007). The jobs that many women are filling (small parishes, parishes in destitute areas, hospice care) pay
  • 5. less than what a male priest can earn at a large parish (Adams, 2007; Blue, 2008; Lummis, 2008). One of the most fraught “site[s] of struggle and contestation, (Trethewey, 1999, p. 429)” facing professional women is that of the female body itself. As the “female body has a tendency to overflow, (Trethewey, 1999, p. 432)” front, back and out there are many unvoiced, but observed, clothing rules for the professional women. According to the women interviewed by Trethewey (1999) professional clothing should be: stylish but not trendy; pretty but not feminine; interesting but not suggestive; ‘tailored’ but not tight. Of note in this list is the use of the masculine term ‘tailored’, over the more inclusive term of fitted. Further to this, professional women indulge in “cheerful defiances of custom (p. 593)” including makeup, nail polish, clothing colours, jewelry and hair length and style (Gherardi, 1994). These defiances are now deemed commonplace and un-noteworthy, as they assist in establishing a woman’s professional identity. In the mid-70s, it was not uncommon for secretaries to take courses on professional demeanor and clothing options (Kanter, 1977). Within the sacred world, Page (2013) found that “[d]ress function[s] as a key test in women’s integration into the organization, often operating as a constraining and exclusionary mechanism (p. 1) …. Therefore, status and prestige are bound up with particular items that hold not only professional significance but also sacred status. (p. 2)” Sacred clothing (robes, stoles, and such) are traditionally bright in colour, made from lush fabrics and, in many cases, are richly embroidered; normally a hallmark of “feminine” clothing. Yet, these feminine clothes have been worn by men for thousands of years. Therefore, many would think that women’s acceptance of and wearing of sacred clothing would pose no problem. However, it has been “conclude[d] that the female, for the most, cannot be adequately represented with male body size data. (Robinette,
  • 6. Churchill, & Mc Conville, 1979, p. 25)” The areas that did not scale well between, or within gender, included: hip circumference, chest circumference, shoulder circumference and hand/head/feet scales (Robinette, et al., 1979, p. 25). Hence, women priests are left with the sub- conscious feeling that they are unable to fill the robes adequately, thus they are only playing at being a priest (Page, 2013). In Blue’s classes (2008), one thing that every guest speaker brought was their robes that had been modified by the women ministers. For example, most robes do have slits for the wearer to reach their pockets; but most female, professional clothing (worn under the robes) does not have pockets, so where do you put the battery pack for the microphone (Blue, 2008)? In her study, Page (2013) noted many items that are deemed by ‘someone’ as being “at odds not only with the professional self, but also the sacred self. (p. 6)” Conflicts were noted on the use of: patterned clerical shirts; traditional black over coloured clerical shirts; the (non)wearing of earrings; hair length; the use of make up; the use of nail polish, and; the wearing of jewelry on secular clothing while talking at a meeting (Page, 2013). Many female ministers have felt the need to ‘play to the audience’ when dressing for secular and sacred purposes (Sison, 2014). In researching women’s sacred clothing, using the links at Anglicansonline.org, men’s clerical shirts only come in black while women have the choice of black or pastels, if offered at all. As well, for formal sacred clothing, those sites that offer tailoring services suggest that all purchasers go to a tailor for proper measurements “as shown in the diagrams above,” of which there is normally only one diagram for women. As we have seen above, ordained women face the same organizational challenges as their secular sisters: underrepresentation at senior decision making levels; the need to enter into portfolio work instead of a traditional career; wages gap, and; the female body in a man’s world.
  • 7. How then should the ACC address these challenges and assist its sisters in Christ to reach their full professional and spiritual potentials? The easiest one to ‘fix’ is that of sacred clothing. As a forward thinking organization, the ACC should contact a woman’s clothing designer to create new, or modify traditional, sacred clothing to better fit and enhance the female minister in the performance of her spiritual duties. As for the resistance of some parishioners to the female body in priestly vestments or clothing; only time and an acceptance of new societal norms will ameliorate this problem. The other challenges and barriers may be problematic. The idea of forcing/legislating a quota for female bishops does not seem to be appropriate. Besides, will enough male bishops retire “soon enough” so that women can be elevated? Forcing female ministers into parish work, when their calling maybe to the chaplaincy or teaching, is again felt to be inappropriate. Regarding wages, it could be ‘equalled out’ if all monies collected, bequeathed and endowed went to the ACC instead of to specific parishes, sectors or foundations. But that would give rise to division within the ministry. A secular example of this idea is the current state of affairs in the National Hockey League, where you buy tickets for the “Canadiens” but a portion of that money goes to prop up the team in Phoenix. One of the most powerful themes in Carl Jung’s work is “the unity in opposites. (Morgan, 1997, p. 241)” It is known that Christianity moved from Jesus’ egalitarian movement to Aristotle’s gender ideas, that give an “essentialist notion of gender that leaves the nature of one gender unassumed and unrepresented before God. (Bates, 2011, p. 11)” The ACC needs to contemplate upon the idea of an in-dwelling God that “knows women so well that he never touches them directly, but always in that fleeting stealth of a fantasy that evades all
  • 8. representation. (Luce Irigaray quoted in Joy, 2006, p. 17-18)” If the ACC reflects prayerfully upon this idea that it will see that "[t]he voice of women, the female and femininity have been largely invisible, (Metcalfe & Linstead, 2003, p. 95)” within the Church. Once this revelation has been made plain, then the ACC can work towards the ‘critical mass’ of women needed at senior levels of management so that norms will change, as a strategic and Biblical necessity “not a reluctant concession to demands of [social/secular] justice. (Ward, 2008, p. 83)” The ACC is a gendered organizational culture that continues to reflect its gender biases on female ministers who “ha[ve] felt gender bias first hand .… [they] ha[ve] been the target of sexist slurs, been excluded from male-dominated social situations, and ha[ve] seen men get jobs instead of more qualified women. (Symons, 2013)” As Edgardh (2009) says, it would have been, and should have been, magnificent to see the Church lead the way towards equal rights before the law and God. Because “[i]f women can ‘represent’ God just as well as men, if women can be priests in the Sanctuary just as men can, then God is not the ‘man’ he was thought to be! (Diesendorf, 1988, p. 33)” Thus, as we in the Global North (who are torn apart into solitary, unique individuals, but are more globally connected than ever before) face the challenge of being different together (Edgardh, 2009), we need to find a mutual support system that could be the Church. If the Church can find the “unity in opposites” that promotes transcendence and the Jungian ‘cosmic’ that allows us to link mind-to-mind and mind-to-nature/God (Morgan, 1997) then the Church can take a “queer” (different and breaking away from the norm) look at itself and realize that this concept is “an invitation to a deeper theological reflection. (Edgardh, 2009, p. 43)” A concept that will allow women’s voices to be heard on a level playing field, with the hoped for result of a more equitable organization and society.
  • 9. References Adams, J. (2007). Stained glass makes the ceiling visible: Organizational opposition to women in congregational leadership. Gender & Society, 21(1), 80-105. doi:10.1177/0891243206293773 Bagilhole, B. (2003). Prospects for change? Structural, cultural and action dimensions of the careers of pioneer women priests in the Church of England. Gender, Work & Organization, 10(3), 361-377. doi:10.1111/1468-0432.00200 Bates, C. L. (2011). Gender ontology and women in ministry in the early church. Priscilla Papers, 25(2), 6-15. Retrieved from http://0- search.ebscohost.com.aupac.lib.athabascau.ca/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=61795 421&site=eds-live Benschop, Y., Halsema, L., & Schreurs, P. (2001). The division of labour and inequalities between the sexes: An ideological dilemma. Gender, Work & Organization, 8(1), 1. Retrieved from http://0- search.ebscohost.com.aupac.lib.athabascau.ca/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=url,ip,uid &db=a9h&AN=4519182&site=ehost-live Blue, E. (2008). Should theological education be different for clergywomen? Doing "women's work" in a mainline protestant seminary. In I. Jones, J. Wootton & K. Thorpe (Eds.), Women and ordination in the Christian churches: International perspectives (pp. 64-75). London: T & T Clark.
  • 10. Diesendorf, E. (1988). Ordination of women: A thorn in the side of the Anglican Church in Australia. Social Alternatives, 7(3), 31-34. Edgardh, N. (2009). Difference and desire: A queer reading. Dialog: A Journal of Theology, 48(1), 42-48. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6385.2009.00429.x General Synod (Ed.). (2013). Handbook of the general synod of the Anglican Church of Canada (17th ed.). Toronto: Anglican Church of Canada. General Synod. (2014). Dioceses of the Anglican Church of Canada. Retrieved April 10, 2014, from http://www.anglican.ca/resources/dioceses/#rl Gherardi, S. (1994). The gender we think, the gender we do in our everyday organizational lives. Human Relations, 47(6), 591-610. Guy, M. E., & Killingsworth, J. A. (2007). Framing gender, framing work: The disparate impact of traditional HRM practices. In A. Farazmand (Ed.), Strategic public personnel administration: Building and managing human capital for the 21st century (pp. 399-418). Westport, CT: Praeger. Hochschild, A. R. (1983). Gender, status, and feeling. The managed heart: Commercialization of human feeling (pp. 162-184). New York: Holt. Joy, M. (2006). Divine love: Luce Irigaray, women, gender and religion. Manchester: Manchester University Press. Retrieved from http://0- site.ebrary.com.aupac.lib.athabascau.ca/lib/ athabasca/Doc?id=10623312
  • 11. Kanter, R. M. (1977). Secretaries. Men and women of the corporation (pp. 69-103). New York: Basic Books. Kelan, E. K. (2008). The discursive construction of gender in contemporary management literature. Journal of Business Ethics, 81(2), 427-445. Lummis, A. T. (2008). Forever pruning? The path to ordained women's full participation in the Episcopal Church of the USA. In I. Jones, J. Wootton & K. Thorpe (Eds.), Women and ordination in the Christian churches: International perspectives (pp. 157-176). London: T & T Clark. Metcalfe, B., & Linstead, A. (2003). Gendering teamwork: Re-writing the feminine. Gender, Work and Organization, 10(1), 94-119. Morgan, G. (1997). Exploring Plato's cave: Organizations as psychic prisons. Images of organization (2nd ed., pp. 215-249). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications. Page, S. (2013). The scrutinized priest: Women in the Church of England negotiating professional and sacred clothing regimes. Gender, Work and Organization, doi:10.1111/gwao.12035 Robinette, K., Churchill, T., & Mc Conville, J. (1979). A comparison of male and female body sizes and proportions. (USAF No. AMRL-TR-79-69). Ohio: Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory. Shaw, S., & Hoeber, L. (2003). "A strong man is direct and a direct woman is a bitch": Gendered discourses and their influence on employment roles in sports organizations. Journal of Sport
  • 12. Management, 17(4), 347. Retrieved from http://0- search.ebscohost.com.aupac.lib.athabascau.ca/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=url,ip,uid &db=bth&AN=11135275&site=ehost-live Sison, M. N. (2014, January 31). Young women priests face issues of age and gender. Anglican Journal, Retrieved from http://www.anglicanjournal.com/articles/young-women-priests- face-issues-of-age-and-gender Symons, A. (2013, March 27). Ordained Anglican women face "stained glass ceiling". Anglican Journal, Retrieved from http://cep.anglican.ca/ordained-anglican-women-face-stained-glass- ceiling/ Trethewey, A. (1999). Disciplined bodies: Women's embodied identities at work. Organization Studies, 20(3), 423-450. Ward, R. (2008). Doing leadership differently? Women and senior leadership in the Church of England. In I. Jones, J. Wootton & K. Thorpe (Eds.), Women and ordination in the Christian churches: International perspectives (pp. 76-86). London: T & T Clark. Retrieved from http://site.ebrary.com/lib/athabasca/Doc?id=10427477; Wilson, E. M. (1998). Gendered career paths. Personnel Review, 27(5), 396-411. Wilson, F. (1996). Organizational theory: Blind and deaf to gender? Organization Studies, 17(5), 825-842.