Why Religious Tools Don't Work for Women
The spiritual work of men is to dissolve the ego. But that is not the spiritual work of women.
I’ve mentioned my collaboration with Amy McPhee Allebest who runs the YouTube channel and podcast Breaking Down Patriarchy in the past, but it’s time for a more formal introduction.
Recently I brushed off an article I wrote two years ago called “Why Religious Tools Don’t Work for Women,” spiffed it up, YouTube-ified it and sent it off to Amy, who further edited and spiffed and sent it off to editor Ralph who did even more spiffing, and we’re left with a pretty spiffy version.
It’s been fun to watch it take off on YouTube. I thought you all might like to see it.
Here it is:
I’ll say more about mine and Amy’s collaboration at the bottom of the article, but the topic of the day is religion and why religious tools don’t work for women. Here’s the original article I wrote about that:
You know that thing where you hear something once and then you start seeing it everywhere?
A few weeks ago I was watching an Instagram Live with author Elizabeth Gilbert1 and she was talking about divine masculine and divine feminine.
My knee-jerk reaction is to balk at stereotypical masculine/feminine divides because isn’t that how we ended up in this rigid gender role mess in the first place?
But I very much trust Elizabeth Gilbert, so I heard her out, and as she spoke I stopped doing the dishes. I grabbed my notebook to take notes. I found myself saying “ah-ha” and “oh yes” and “mmm that makes sense” out loud to myself in my kitchen.
I’ve decided to share her teachings with you, overly-simplistic stereotypes and all.
Here’s what she taught:
Our goal is to move from the degraded to the divine, but masculine and feminine energies require different roads to get there.
The degraded masculine is putting the wants and needs of the self above the good of the whole. It’s conquering, hoarding wealth, power hungry, greedy, selfish, violent. It’s I’m going to take whatever I want to just because I can. It’s not considering the needs of others. It’s I’m going to take over this country/have sex with this woman/level this forest because I want to. Think: everyone running our country right now.
The divine masculine is putting other people’s needs above our own. It’s I could hoard resources, but I choose to share. I could have power, but I refuse it. I look out for the whole instead of just myself. It’s kindness, forgiveness, selflessness, compassion, empathy, listening, giving. Think: Nelson Mandela, Mr. Rogers, Christ.
The degraded feminine over-gives, over-serves, is overly selfless, is used and abused. It’s I exist to give and serve. In the face of bad behavior, I will stay silent and continue to please. I will not ruffle any feathers or make anyone upset. I look out for the whole at the expense of myself. Everyone else’s needs are prioritized above my own. It’s accommodating others desires even when resentment is silently oozing out your eyeballs. Think: the mother on all TV shows and probably your mother, your grandmother, and your great-grandmother.
The divine feminine is the protector. It’s standing up in the face of injustice. It’s I will not allow oppression and abuse. It’s holy power, taking up space, speaking up, protecting against wrong-doing, ensuring equity not only for others but also for yourself. It’s honoring and protecting your own desires, rest, and goals. This is the group where examples are most scarce. When coming up with women role models we are much more comfortable holding up women who exemplify the divine masculine role and much more likely to judge women who honor their own needs. But let’s go with Ruth Bader Ginsberg or Stacy Abrams. (feel free to add more examples in the comments)
In sum,
In order for the masculine to move from degraded —> divine, it must give up the self.
In order for the feminine to move from degraded—> divine, it must build the self.
Unfortunately for the feminine, essentially all major religion traditions were created for the masculine. Taught by the masculine to the masculine using the words of the masculine.
Historically since religions were speaking exclusively to men, only using divine masculine tools made sense. But for the past few centuries, religions consider themselves universal- covering the needs of both masculine and feminine. Except there has been no change in doctrines or practices to accommodate or speak to the feminine. No space made for the feminine to teach feminine doctrines to females.
For centuries, the feminine has been exclusively given the tools of the divine masculine as if they are the only spiritual tools.
It does not take a great detective to whiff the scent of divine masculine teachings all over religious teachings in both the East and West:
Buddhism: see: the 5 precepts- refrain from taking life, taking what is not given, the misuse of senses, wrong speech and intoxicants.
Confucianism: see: its primary goal to create a moral society by individuals devoting themselves to virtue.
Islam: see: the meaning of the word Islam= “peace and submission”
Christianity: see: turn the other cheek, be the Good Samaritan, forgive 70 x 7
Judaism: see: core teaching of tzedakah= rescuing the weak and the needy.
Don’t get me wrong these teachings and tools of giving and charity are not bad tools. They are good tools. They just leave out the primary needs of the feminine.
The feminine has evolved with empathy tools hardwired into the body. Women tuning into to the cries of others is an evolutionary necessity for our species. It’s built in. So when tuning into the needs of others is further and further and further pushed on us - we just dissolve. We turn the other cheek so far we disappear.
It’s not the toolkit we need.
It’s why religious tools don’t work for the feminine.
They were never meant for us.
……………………
Shortly after listening to Elizabeth Gilbert teach that, I heard fellow post-mormon spiritual director Brittney Hartly (if you are not yet following her on TikTok, RUN don’t walk, she’s amazing) teach something very similar but in terms of the ego and new-age spirituality:
She says women are burnt out from a lifetime of service then look to new age spiritual teachings that tell them what they need is ego death. But women have spent out their lives losing their ego (literally putting their bodies on the altar of sacrifice), they need to BUILD their ego. Men have spent their lives growing their ego and need tools to lose it.
It’s so good. Watch the whole thing.
Then, another woman stitched that TikTok sharing her personal experience with Buddhism:
She wishes she would have understood this lesson decades ago before she dedicated years of her time and money to the teachings of Krishnamarti, Deepak Chopra, Zen Buddhist retreats and Buddhist therapists who each taught her to further dissolve her already dissolved ego.
And now I see it everywhere. I can’t unsee it. It seems so clear to me this difference between the spiritual work of men and the spiritual work of women.
Is it overly simplistic? Yes.
Are there exceptions? Of course.
Can women benefit from Deepak Chopra’s teachings on compassion? For sure.
Can men benefit from Glennon Doyle’s teachings on prioritizing your own inner knowing? You betcha.
But is it an instructive pattern to be aware of (especially when it comes to our own inner work)? Yes. It is.
Does it fit in my own life? Definitely.
And not just in the religious realm.
…………………………
I used to teach marriage courses for the Gottman Institute. With every class I found myself wishing more and more that we could divide our classes up to teach separate curriculums to husbands and wives. We kept teaching compromise, empathy, compassion, friendship. Over and over. Every class. (and yes, the curriculum- The Seven Principles to Make Marriage Work- was written by a man.)
As I taught, I kept reflecting on my own marriage. Reflecting on how compromise, empathy, compassion and kindness were the ONLY tools I was given to make a marriage work. So they were the only ones I used.
But they weren’t the tools I needed. I didn’t more compromise, I needed to learn how to make more space for myself and my desires. I didn’t need more compassion, I needed permission to set boundaries. I didn’t need more kindness, I needed someone to teach me how to say no without feeling guilty.
I had been sharpening my kindness tools since I was a small child, being handed more was like being handed a stick of butter to chop vegetables. I didn’t need any more divine masculine tools. I needed new ones.
So it killed me to only be teaching from the divine masculine toolbox. I could see clearly that husbands needed these tools. In their comments, in their role plays, I saw how they struggled to compromise, struggled to stop talking, stop problem solving and really listen, struggled to give up some autonomy for the good of the partnership. They desperately needed the divine masculine toolkit.
But the women…… they just didn’t. They needed to be taught to make space for their desires, to not accommodate every time. To pay attention to their own resentment. To treat avoiding resentment as something sacred and holy. They needed permission to make room for their desires even when it meant disappointing their spouse. They needed to be given the tools to be ok in the midst of upsetting another.
………………..
Here’s a poem I wrote:
"Be like Jesus" they said. "Ok!" I said. "Be kind. Be humble. Be forgiving. Be generous." "Ok!" I said. And when an avalanche of the needs of others came pouring down covering my ankles, now knees, now stomach, now neck- when all but my eyes were buried in all the things I was giving- my breast milk, my morning walks, a stack of books I wanted to read, an hour of rest, my attention, my problem solving skills, my home cooked chili- I looked up for guidance, desperation in my eyes "Smile," they said. "Be grateful." "Ok" I said. Guilt for not being thankful enough shoveled onto to the pile as I disappeared under the weight of all my giving.
I wish someone had told me my spiritual work was not to bring yet another plate of cookies to someone but to make my own favorite treat instead. And gift it to myself. That it wasn’t my spiritual work to say yes to volunteer at yet another school Halloween party but to say no. Say no to signing my kid up for soccer when it meant losing 4-6 precious hours of my already hectic week. That it was never my spiritual work to say yes to spend my time free time reading yet another parenting book but to say yes to paying for child care so I could write poetry.
What about you? Is this resonating with you? Have you noticed these patterns? Do you see this teaching as helpful?
More about Breaking Down Patriarchy
Matriarchal Blessing community meet Breaking Down Patriarchy. 🤝
If you like my work, you’ll LOVE Amy’s work. I’m positive about this because 1. Amy has been incredibly formative in how I think and 2. I’ve been writing YouTube scripts for and with Amy since last September.
It’s a dream collab and if you want to hear the story of how Amy and I started working together (its a good one!), you can listen to our most recent podcast episode together here.
And if you want to see Amy and I together, I journeyed to the blue room of books to film “Patriarchy in the Bedroom.” You can watch that here:
Every video in Amy’s Patriarchy 101 series is pure gold. It’s a great reference to show your kids or anyone wanting an interesting visual education of patriarchy throughout history. Start here and work your way through the playlist:
And be sure to subscribe to her channel because coming out soon will be a video version of Dear Son, Here’s What You Need to Know about Patriarchy and Dear Daughter. Only better due to aforementioned triple spiffing, editing and visual aides.
Do you enjoy thinking about and discussing all things patriarchy and feminism?? Cool me too. Come discuss with me and the Matriarchal Blessing community by becoming a paying subscriber. For our next we will be discussing Ruth Whippman’s book BoyMom on Sunday, July 27 at 11:00am PT.
Alternatively, you could also just pay me for my work just cause, that is also very cool and very appreciated! Thank you!
I loved this. Especially the fact that it arrived on a Sunday when I have refused to attend yet another church.
This couldn't be more perfectly timed for me. Thank you for writing this!
꧁SYNCHRONICITY!꧂
I left the Mormon church a few years ago. The "men have the priesthood because it stretches them to be better" idea came up in my Voxer group with my still-Mormon-but-very-nuanced-and-progressive chat.
I'm the only one that's fully left it in the group, so I'm careful to not hurt the feelings of my dear friend who is the most devout of the group. I did speak up about how grumpy I feel about this argument now that I have very kind-hearted, compassionate male atheist friends who don't rely on a religious structure to develop feminine traits.
Your article is a wonderful exploration of masculine and feminine traits and the conundrum of patriarchal religions who nudge men to be more compassionate, empathetic at the expense of a structure where women are, if not silenced, second class citizens.
Breaking Down Patriarchy made a big impact on my faith transition and I thank you for the work you are doing. ♡
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I'm a full time comedian. I didn't talk about Mormonism on stage but got so many questions and interest about my Mormon roots I finally made a full hour (called "Best Cult Ever") to bring to Edinburgh Fringe. I never wanted to be a vocal exmo but felt moved to address the pros and cons in a funny approachable way.