ABSTRACT

Until recently, religious institutions have been organized to suit the traditional American family, where the wife stayed at home, caring for children. Today, churches and synagogues are beginning to adapt to the reality of the American family: dual-career marriages, high levels of divorce, interfaith marriages, partnerships that may not be marriages. Religious organizations must serve families that don't fall into the Ozzie and Harriet mold.

The first group of papers in this edited volume documents changing trends in the connection between religion, work, and the family. In the second part of the book, we see how changing families and flexible congregations are experimenting with new forms of religious life.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Old Patterns, New Trends, Fragile Experiments

part I|134 pages

Assessing the Trends

chapter 2|38 pages

Lost in the Fifties

The Changing Family and the Nostalgic Church

chapter 3|19 pages

Boomers and the Culture of Choice

Changing Patterns of Work, Family, and Religion

chapter 4|41 pages

Work, Family, and Faith

Recent Trends 1

chapter 5|14 pages

Responses to Changing Lifestyles

“Feminists” and “Traditionalists” in Mainstream Religion 1

chapter 6|18 pages

Entering the Labor Force

Ideals and Realities among Evangelical Women

part II|175 pages

Exploring New Patterns

chapter 7|20 pages

Religion and Family Ethics

A New Strategy for the Church

chapter 8|22 pages

The Storm and the Light

Church, Family, Work, and Social Crisis in the African-American Experience

chapter 10|17 pages

Defense Workers

A Challenge to Family and Faith

chapter 11|23 pages

Small Faith Communities in the Roman Catholic Church

New Approaches to Religion, Work, and Family

chapter 12|21 pages

Religious Innovation in the Mainline Church

House Churches, Home Cells, and Small Groups

chapter 13|22 pages

Constructing Women's Rituals

Roman Catholic Women and “Limina” 1

chapter 14|25 pages

Couples at Work

A Study of Patterns of Work, Family, and Faith