
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Women’s Bodies Women’s Bodies
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Women, Family, and Ritual Women, Family, and Ritual
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Women and Ritual Leadership in Christian Communities Women and Ritual Leadership in Christian Communities
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Works Cited Works Cited
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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37 Women’s Rituals and Women’s Ritualizing
Get accessJuliette J. Day is Docent and University Lecturer in Church History in the Faculty of Theology, University of Helsinki, Finland, and Senior Research Fellow in Early Christian Liturgy at Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford, UK. Her research focuses on early Christian liturgy, especially that of Jerusalem/Palestine in late antiquity, and on the interpretation of ancient and contemporary liturgical texts. Significant publications include: The Baptismal Liturgy of Jerusalem (2007); Reading the Liturgy (2014), Early Roman Liturgy to 600 (edited with Marcus Vinzent, 2014) and A Guide to the Study of Liturgy and Worship (edited with Benjamin Gordon-Taylor, 2013).
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Published:11 December 2018
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Abstract
Although women participated in the early Christian rituals described elsewhere in this book, it would not be accurate to presume that their participation was in any way identical to that of men, nor even to the elite men whose evidence forms the basis of scholarly discussions. This chapter focuses on women’s ritualizing in relation to their bodies, the domestic sphere, in women-only religious communities, and in relation to the ecclesial hierarchy. It suggests that in some cases the approaches used by contemporary ritual theorists are insufficiently nuanced to allow for gender difference.
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