Women and the Church: Cooperation vs. Hierarchy
I
 think most Christian women have had difficulty reconciling what seems 
to be the church's position on the role of women with our 21st century 
notions of female equality and empowerment. This article relates 
specifically to the position of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
 Saints on women, but its principles can be applied to all Christians. (I have chosen sections of it to share here: the original post can be read by clicking 
here)
To Do the Business of the Church: A Cooperative Paradigm for 
Examining Gendered Participation Within Church Organizational Structure 
by Neylan McBaine
Part I: The Crisis
I will be talking today about how women fit into the 
functional structure of LDS church governance; but, unlike many of the 
others speaking today, I do not have advanced degrees in my subject nor 
consider myself an academic. My credentials as someone qualified to talk
 about this subject come from: first, a lifetime of personal experience 
as a woman in the Church and now the mother of three daughters; second, 
my role as founder, in 2010, of a non-profit organization, The Mormon 
Women Project, which publishes stories of faithful Latter-day Saint 
women from around the world; and third, a twelve-year career in 
marketing and brand strategy including my current role as associate 
creative director Church-owned Bonneville Communications, the agency 
partnered with the Church on Mormon.org and the “I’m A Mormon” campaign.
Today, I will be applying that professional lens to 
examine the way our women are involved in church ecclesiastical 
functions, and also how we talk about that female ecclesiastical 
involvement to an external, media-informed audience. As a marketer, I 
know how important it is for what we say we do in regards to our women, 
what we actually do, and what the Lord says we should do to be in 
triangulated harmony with each other. Today, I will explore how we can 
improve on our current practice of that triangulation.
As I started my research and was still seeking a solid 
thesis for my paper, there seemed to be a barrage of articles and blog 
posts that addressed the gendered division of labor in the Church. At 
first I was delighted by the breadth and volume of these articles on 
gendered church work, coming from a wide range of sources and 
philosophies, from ByCommonConsent to A Well-Behaved Mormon Woman to Feminist Mormon Housewives to Times and Seasons.
 As part of my research, I sent out my own survey, as well, asking 
friends for their own insight into what the gendered division of labor 
means for them personally.
What happened was that the more I read, the more I took 
notes, the more I prayed and studied, the more I realized that my thesis
 needed to reflect the deeply emotional and sensitive nature of these 
discussions. Every expression of opinion packs in it feelings rooted in 
personal experience, in relationships with male leaders and family 
members, and in one’s personal relationship with God. This was a reality
 which I’ve understood to be true for many years but which this initial 
research offered me unfiltered.
I came to rest on a prominent, consistent theme: There 
is a tremendous amount of pain among our women regarding how they can or
 cannot contribute to the governance of our ecclesiastical organization 
and we need to pay attention to that pain. Listen to these statements, 
recently gathered across a variety of forums: “My 12-year-old son gets 
the priesthood and all of a sudden he’s got more power and authority 
than me!”
1
 Or another: “I truly wish you could feel the pain I feel as a woman in 
the Church. I know my potential and worth, and to have it limited to the
 role of ‘presidee’ in all areas discredits me as a daughter of God.”
2
 Or this one: “I feel like if I had been a ‘good’ Mormon, I wouldn’t 
have gotten my Master’s degree. I wouldn’t be working now, and I 
wouldn’t WANT to work so much. I’d want to be a mother and have kids and
 stay home.”
3
 Lastly: “I have a PhD and am a full-time professor at a university. I 
am also married and have three children. The only place in my life where
 I am treated like a lesser human being is at church.”
4 I could go on and on.
How is this possible? Why is this happening when you 
walk into Deseret Book and see shelves of books just for women? What is 
going wrong when we hear women praised and adored from the pulpit? We 
have wonderful men in this church who are good husbands, sons, and 
bishops. If we take off the table the possibility of structural changes 
and work from an assumption that gendered segregation is divinely 
mandated, the burden is on us as members to figure out what it is we are
 doing with our current tools that is not living up to our potential. 
The pain is real.
 ...
While some too flippantly dismiss or judge the pain, 
there are others for whom the pain seems to define their spiritual lives
 and, like my former Relief Society president, they measure every 
element of their church experience through the lens of that pain. “Women
 are the support staff to the real work of men. Period,” is one woman’s 
statement, as she describes how she understands the division of labor. 
“It’s a patriarchal tradition” is another response I noted in my own 
personal survey. “There is no such thing as ‘good’ patriarchy,” 
concludes yet another. Most of our women, however, are somewhere in the 
middle: not sweeping the issue under the carpet or judging those who 
struggle, but also not dismissing our ecclesiastical organization as 
entirely flawed or even abusive to women.
How can we help more in our community find peace in a 
middle ground, where the pain is acknowledged and we provide doctrinally
 sound tools and behavioral guidelines for addressing that pain? The 
first step must be to extract exactly what it is about our current 
rhetoric and practices that is at the source of this crisis among our 
women.
Part III: Identifying the Sources of Pain
As we start that exercise, allow yourself for a moment 
to step into the shoes of someone who struggles with finding her place. 
Consider, for instance, the narratives that define the rights of passage
 of our youth and the source of this bitterness may become illuminated.
So many of our narratives about our youth involve those 
moments when a dad ordains his son to the Aaronic priesthood, and then 
the first Sunday the son gets to pass the sacrament, or bless the 
sacrament, or go home teaching or collect fast offerings or become an 
Eagle Scout or get a mission call…. These are times of spiritual 
outpourings and parental pride, the joy of eternal progression made 
tangible through the bodily actions taken on by that worthy son. It’s 
not often a mother describes a similarly gripping scene when her 
daughter graduates from Mia Maids to Laurels.
Imagine the disappointment (my six-year old granddaughter discovers that) passing the sacrament is a job only for boys. 
Crestfallen, and with that childish sense of entitlement, my daughter 
asked, “But what do I get when I turn twelve?” 
…It made me very sad. My question is not what my 
daughter “gets” when she turns twelve, but what will be asked of her? 
What messages will she get about her role in the church?
On the one hand we want to impress upon young men what
 a privilege and honor it is to [act in these sacred responsibilities], 
while on the other hand we insist to our young women (and women of all 
ages) that it’s really no big deal. Seriously, ladies, you don’t want 
[to have to do this stuff]. You shouldn’t want [to have to]. Nothing but
 trouble, that priesthood! And yet, very important. Without it our 
church would be nothing. Worse than nothing, a fraud. But at the same 
time, you aren’t missing out on anything. Trust us!
9
...
 
The sadness expressed in these narratives and in many 
others that I’ve heard over the years does not necessarily come from the
 fact that our daughters won’t get to do the same things as our sons. It
 is rarely driven by the “pride” the bishopric member I quoted earlier 
describes as power grubbing or seeking beyond the mark. Rather, the pain
 simply comes from the disconnect between our identities as women in our
 day-to-day lives in the external world and our identities as women in 
the institutional church. We are not a hermetic religion, and so we 
function in a world where individuality and opportunity are celebrated 
as the hallmarks of civilized societies. Valuing the individual’s right 
to aspire to any circumstance or opportunity is practically the mantra 
of the 21st century. And yet, as women functioning within the 
ecclesiastical church structure, we are asked to put aside our 
understanding of how contemporary societies and workplaces ideally 
should function and instead grasp hold of a very different model. We 
require that our women suspend their understanding of social equality as
 it is currently represented in our modern society. This is consistent 
with our belief that we should be “in the world” but not “of” it, but we
 members should not flippantly dismiss how difficult this can be in 
actual practice for a woman whose role in worldly society has changed so
 swiftly and dramatically over the past hundred years.
Desiring to be used, engaged, recognized and appreciated
 for our public contributions is not, for most women, about the glory of
 public praise or being in the spotlight. It’s not about wanting to 
eradicate the divine differences between women and men. It is simply 
about a basic human need in every person – man or woman – to be told, 
“You are needed. You matter. You have a purpose. Your opinions matter. 
Not just at home behind closed doors, not just with our children, as 
essential as those influences are, but also in the broadest context of 
the Lord’s kingdom.” I was speaking last week with a woman who runs an 
NGO in Uganda, offering reading and computer literacy classes to men and
 women who are coming out of the bush after ten plus years of being 
child soldiers or sex slaves in Joseph Kony’s guerilla regime. She told 
me that most of her students desperately want to create Facebook 
accounts. When I expressed surprise, she quoted one of her students as 
saying, “I want people to know that I am. That I have an identity
 of my own. That I have a personality and can make choices. That I 
survived the bush, that I am strong.” In the face of life’s greatest 
suffering, one need that arises above many others is the need to be 
recognized as a unique and valued contributor
Part IV: The Cooperative Paradigm
Having established the magnitude of this crisis and 
having struck at some of the roots of the pain, I’d like to turn now to 
what we can do to alleviate this pain. There is a premier rule in public
 relations that you cannot tell a story that is not true and still have 
it resonate or feel authentic to the audience you are trying to 
convince. PR strategy must reflect how an organization is actually 
behaving or it can never ring true, and that is true with external 
audiences as well as internal audiences. The internal audience must be 
behaving in the way that they say they are behaving, or else they will 
ultimately be exposed or criticized. Right now in regards to our women, 
there are gaps between what we say we are doing, what the Lord has told 
us we ideally should be doing and what we actually are doing. If we 
bring these three points of triangulation into harmony, we will have 
greater integrity, stronger convictions and happier women...
Let’s look at one common narrative we share when 
confronted about our system of gender segregation in this contemporary 
world. Last year, the 
Washington Post asked Michael Otterson and 
representatives from 19 other religious congregations to comment in 500 
words on the following prompt: “Former president Jimmy Carter has said, 
‘The discrimination against women on a global basis is very often 
attributable to the declaration by religious leaders in Christianity, 
Islam and other religions that women are inferior in the eyes of God.’ 
Many traditions teach that while both men and women are equal in value, 
God has ordained specific roles for men and women. Those distinct duties
 often keep women out of leadership positions in their religious 
communities. What is religion’s role in gender discrimination?”
11
The title of the response from Otterson was “What Mormon
 Equality Looks Like,” implying that there is a system of equality in 
our leadership that simply needs to be revealed to an external audience.
 Otterson wrote:
"I put this question to three women in my church and 
asked them for their own insights on how they see their role and life in
 the Church….
"Here are their points about life as a Mormon woman.
"Women in the Mormon faith regularly preach from the 
pulpit to the congregation and lead prayers during Sunday services. As a
 result, today’s Latter-day Saint women tend to be well educated and 
confident. Most have experience in speaking in public, directing or 
presiding over organizations, teaching and leading by example. Brigham 
Young University turns out more female than male graduates."
The negative response to Otterson’s piece among the 
Church commentary in the bloggernacle was intense and personally painful
 to Otterson, who is usually so in tune with the membership. One thing 
that was misunderstood was that he did not write the title of the piece,
 which so cavalierly used the big “E” word: Equality. The laudable fact 
that he reached externally to women to guide his response was 
overshadowed by one significant disconnect and the disconnect was this: 
the fact that our women preach from the pulpit and say prayers in 
Sacrament meeting does not make them “equal” to our men, according to 
any publically accepted definition of that word.
Why do we do this? Why, when confronted with an 
intentionally inflammatory accusation like “gender discrimination,” do 
we instinctively default to defensive claims that our women are actually
 just the same as our men because they speak in church, go to school, 
and get to feel the Spirit the same way? We so often instinctually fall 
back on earthly paradigms to describe our structure. In an effort to 
bridge our own experience with the experience of our external audience, 
we rely on comparisons to hierarchical power structures of fallen world 
institutions: governments, corporations, and universities in which men 
and women ideally work side by side to advance to opportunities 
available to both genders. We talk in terms of opportunity, advancement,
 visibility, of hierarchical power, which are hallmarks of advanced 
worldly institutions, in America at least. We highlight statistical 
equalities like how many women graduate from college. If you’d like 
further proof of this tendency, go read through some of the answers 
members have given on Mormon.org to the question, “Why don’t women hold 
the Priesthood?” and note how many times those answers cite the fact 
that our women speak in Sacrament meeting or run the Primary.
But I call this the Apples-To-Snapples comparison: 
leading an auxiliary organization that has influence over a subset of 
the population is not the same as leading the entire 
organization. According to the world’s definition of equality, women’s 
leadership opportunities in the Church organization are a watered down 
version of the real thing, with lots of sugar added.
Continuing to rely on the Apples-to-Snapples comparison 
is not good enough because, in the outside world, when you say men and 
women have equal leadership opportunities, you mean — at least ideally —
 that men and women have the same cleared path to advance to the same 
positions of influence and authority. When the outside world looks at 
our structure and sees men ecclesiastically responsible for even the 
highest ranked women in our organization, the media perceives our claims
 as being false advertising and we lose our credibility to tell our own 
story. It then becomes someone else’s job to “uncover” the truth for us,
 leading down a path of exposes and betrayals.
Is there gender discrimination in the Church? If 
discrimination means separation according to gender, yes. If it means 
delineation of opportunities based solely on gender, yes. Many argue 
that different opportunities based on gender is unfair, adverse, and/or 
abusive by definition. The Church does not satisfy secular 
gender-related egalitarian ideals, period; and our institutional 
behavior fits that definition of gender discrimination in several 
inescapable ways. We shrink away from accurately representing how we 
work, thinking it condemns us as a church. And in the eyes of the world 
it might. But the Church does not, and should not, operate according to 
secular concepts of power, status, etc.; and if we attempt to justify 
ourselves in this paradigm we will not only fail, but betray our own 
ideals.
We need a narrative that doesn’t rely on justifications.
 It shouldn’t rely on comparisons to fallen world paradigms. It needs to
 stand on its own, while acknowledging that it may have little precedent
 and little comparison to worldly paradigms that describe gender-related
 egalitarian ideals.
What is this new narrative? I’d like to take the time to
 explore a possible option now that is specifically tailored to a 
marketing or public relations context and also has integrity for an 
internal audience.
In preparing his response to the Washington Post‘s
 prompt, Otterson asked three women to share their opinions with him. I 
was one of the three women that the public affairs team approached to 
ask for input, but out of respect to the fact that he didn’t incorporate
 any of my specific ideas, he left my name out. I’ve had the opportunity
 to speak with Otterson this since then, and he and the public affairs 
team have been exceptionally receptive and sensitive to my ideas. I have
 been thrilled with the seriousness Public Affairs has shown to the 
concerns and pain of our women. However, at the time he was writing this
 response for the Washington Post, 500 words in an online panel 
discussion was not the appropriate place in which to spell out a new 
paradigm for explaining our gendered structure. I understood these 
limitations of space and context myself as a marketing professional. I’m
 grateful to him for the unqualified support and interest he’s shown me 
since then.
To explore what this alternative rhetoric might be, 
allow me to share with you some of the thoughts I sent to the public 
affairs team when they first approached me about how I would respond to 
the Washington Post‘s prompt:
"I do not suggest presenting a blanket claim that women
 have leadership roles within the organization. While we can certainly 
point to the Relief Society, Young Women, and Primary, the ratio of 
global female leaders to male leaders is so small that pointing it out 
only serves to highlight the discrepancy. Also, bringing attention to 
the fact that our women only lead other women and children is 
playing into the logic of the prompt because it can then be inferred 
that women are not considered of high enough value to be more than 
special interest figureheads. I also think that taking the “look… women 
really do lead!” angle sounds inherently patronizing coming from a male 
author.
"The prompt suggests women do not hold leadership 
positions, therefore women are inferior. I suggest we argue it is true 
that Mormon women do not hold an equal number of global leadership 
positions as men, but that is not because they are of lesser value. It 
is because we believe we are working in an eternal paradigm in which 
roles and responsibilities are divided up cooperatively rather than 
hierarchically. Mormonism is a lay church so the members are the 
ministers, and this is a completely different organizational structure 
than traditional Christian priesthood or ministry, which is defined as 
an exclusive or trained clergy. Thus, when we talk about our ministerial
 structure to the outside world, we are starting from very different 
foundational understandings of what ecclesiastical ministry means.
"The prompt’s logic doesn’t adequately leave room for 
our organization’s cooperative structure of service, where no one person
 is paid for his or her ministry or deemed of greater value than another
 and where each brings unique resources to his or her responsibilities.
- Working towards a Zionistic cooperation within an earthly paradigm 
means that we often default to the human ordering with which we are most
 familiar: that of hierarchy and the currency of power. In an 
organization such as a church where no one is getting rich off of 
personal dedication to the cause, hierarchical power is sometimes 
weighed as the greatest currency because it is the human way of 
measuring success on the way to a goal. However, in a cooperative 
structure where people are rotating positions every few years and no one
 is materialistically rewarded over another person, that hierarchy is a 
flimsy currency on which to base one’s value.
- In the cooperative structure that is the LDS Church’s lay ministry, 
there is a division of roles for the benefit of the organizational 
order. This division of labor is, we believe, a reflection of divine 
mandates given to Joseph Smith. The division of labor — not just among 
men and women but among varying age groups, geographical groups and also
 among individuals — is a central theme of the Doctrine & Covenants.
 For example, in March of 1835, Joseph recorded a revelation from the 
Lord that specified the organizational structure of the church 
governance: Section 107. Close reading of this revelation shows how 
abundantly the Lord uses phrases such as, “of necessity” and “it must 
needs be” and “to do the business of the church” in describing how 
important an ordered approach was to church administration. Similar 
language is used in the Book of Mormon when congregations of believers 
are organized in ancient civilizations.12
- Nowhere does the Lord intimate that various callings and 
responsibilities are intended to give one person power over another. In 
fact, the words “lead” and “leader” appear nowhere in this section, and 
similarly, the word “leader” appears no where in the Book of Mormon. 
Even that book’s most admirable leaders, like Captain Moroni, are 
described as “servant[s]” and “righteous follower[s] of Christ.” This 
emphasis on organizational stability, on the specific roles and 
responsibilities of various parties to act as facilitators within the 
larger community, is, we believe, of divine origin and eternal value.
Lastly, the world calculates in terms of top-down 
power; God’s calculations are exactly opposite. In the divine kingdom 
the servant holds the highest status, and in the Church every position 
is a service position. Given the obvious parallels between the Church’s 
administrative channels and a business organization, it’s easy to 
mistakenly assess the Church as a ladder-climbing corporation with God 
in a corner office at the top; but in this line of thinking we only 
reveal our shoddy human understanding of power.
In concluding my thoughts to the Public Affairs team, I 
finished by saying, “When we claim, as we regularly do, that the Church 
as an organization gives women and men equal leadership opportunities 
(which is simply not true) we’re using the same paradigm of power that 
President Carter is implying and the prompt assumes, which is an 
inadequate paradigm for evaluating power dynamics in an ecclesiastical 
institution such as ours. The paradigm is the problem, and must be 
addressed if we’re to offer anything beyond hollow excuses for women’s 
status in the Church. To argue, as Carter did, that women have inferior 
status and inadequate power because they lack hierarchical leadership 
opportunities is to superimpose a human construct onto a divine one. I –
 and many women I know — would love to see us moving away from this 
rhetoric.”
This idea of a cooperative paradigm is much harder to 
explain in our modern-day, fast-paced, soundbite-oriented news outlets 
than simply falling back on the Apples-to-Snapples comparison. My own 
explanation above was considerably more than Otterson’s allotted 500 
words, and there are theologians and scholars who have produced 
thoughtful commentary of their own, such as Don Sorenson and Valerie 
Hudson’s Women in Eternity, Women in Zion, and Beverly Campbell’s Eve and the Choice Made In Eden.
 But whatever rhetoric we move to, it is essential that we rely on a 
doctrinally-rich explanation that challenges and even confounds fallen 
world paradigms rather than plays unfavorably right into them.
One of beauties of the cooperative paradigm over the 
hierarchical paradigm is that the cooperative paradigm more accurately 
incorporates both ecclesiastical and sacerdotal definitions of 
priesthood, which seems to be understood generally throughout the church
 as being much more gendered than a close reading of scripture suggests.
 For example, let us return to the organizational language of the 
Doctrine and Covenants. Section 84 states: “And again, the offices of 
elder and bishop are necessary appendages belonging unto the high 
priesthood. And again, the offices of teacher and deacon are necessary 
appendages belonging to the lesser priesthood.” (84: 29-30; see also 
107: 5) Pay attention to that word “appendages.” An appendage is “a 
thing that is added or attached to something larger or more important.” 
Are not the offices of elder or bishop or teacher or deacon appendages 
to the priesthood, and not the priesthood itself? Are these so different
 from the female organizations, which we routinely call “auxiliaries”?
Pulitzer Prizing-winning Harvard professor Laurel 
Thatcher Ulrich has written about the vocabulary we use to describe our 
various congregants. She notes that our casual interchange of the words 
“men” and “priesthood” contributes to our misunderstanding that the men 
only have the power to do God’s work. Have you ever heard a member of 
the bishopric thank “the Priesthood” for passing the sacrament, instead 
of the “Young Men” or even the “men of the Priesthood”? The bishopric in
 my ward does an admirable job of thanking “the men of the Priesthood” 
rather than the “Priesthood” itself, but it’s likely that each of us, 
despite our best intentions, carelessly conflates the power to act in 
God’s name with the vehicle designed to administrate its use. Prof. 
Ulrich describes the conflation this way, “Because we use the word 
priesthood
 to refer to both the vehicle and the power, we get into some curious 
situations, almost like mistaking a utility pole for electricity or a 
sacrament cup for water.”
13
 Elder Dallin H. Oaks has spoken on the importance of this clarity of 
language as well: 
“We must never forget that the priesthood is not owned
 by or embodied by those who hold it.”14
In the survey I sent out to my own network of women, I 
asked what explanation the respondents would give for why only boys get 
to pass the sacrament. The number one answer I received was, “Because 
they have the priesthood.” Equating the priesthood with a gendered 
privilege, like passing the sacrament, reinforces over and over again 
the understanding that men “get” something the women don’t and the women
 are therefore lacking and lesser. Some in my survey included as part of
 their answer that if men “get” the Priesthood, then women get 
motherhood, which is an explanation that brings great peace to many. 
However, it also makes some women extremely uncomfortable. 
Examining the
 difficulties in the motherhood-to-priesthood comparison would be the 
subject of an entire other paper, but the arguments broadly fall into a 
few points: First of all, saying motherhood is the complementary gift to
 priesthood again solidifies the gendered assignment of the power to act
 under God’s direction as something only men can do. The complement to 
motherhood, the argument goes, is actually fatherhood. Secondly, a man’s
 ability to act in the name of the priesthood is something that is 
earned through worthiness and by personal triumph of character. The only
 way a man can exercise the power of God effectively is by being 
sufficiently righteous to represent God. By contrast, personal 
worthiness is not a prerequisite for a woman’s ability to bear children.
 There are many righteous, worthy women who are not mothers and some of 
them will never be mothers in this life. Becoming a mother is beyond the
 control of many women, despite their personal worthiness or triumph 
over character.
15
 In a church where more than half of our women are single, we need to 
tread carefully when claiming a parallel between motherhood and 
priesthood.
Returning to the cooperative paradigm, it might feel 
counterintuitive to some to be backing off bold claims of equality in an
 age when we are striving to be relevant to and more widely respected by
 the outside world. However, I feel that this alternate 
paradigm—explained and reiterated thoroughly over time and in the right 
contexts inside and outside of the Church—actually offers us a much 
wider platform on which to explore doctrine, bring others along in that 
exploration, and to value each other cooperatively rather than 
hierarchically. Most importantly, this alternate paradigm gives us the 
conviction we need to make sure that the currency of power does not 
dictate our behavior as servant leaders. For my purposes as a marketer, 
the cooperative paradigm provides an answer of integrity that opens the 
door for meaningful external dialogs, as well as internal dialogues, to 
which I now turn.
Part V: The Internal Shift
Next week on the Mormon Women Project, I will be posting
 an exclusive, historical interview with Maxine Hanks, one of the 
“September Six” who was excommunicated from the Church in September 
1993. Last year, Maxine was personally invited by church leadership to 
be rebaptized as a member of the Church, an invitation she heartily 
accepted after a 20-year journey into feminist theology, including 
periods as a scholar of Gnosticism and a nondenominational chaplain. In 
her interview, Hanks reflects on why, after studies and experiences that
 took her as far away from Mormonism as theologically possible, she 
choose to again bear witness of the truthfulness of Mormonism.
Hanks says, “I don’t think gender tensions in Mormonism are due to inequality in the religion, but due to invisibility
 of that equality. The equality is embedded, inherent in Mormon 
theology, history, texts, structures. Gender equality is built into the 
blueprints of Mormonism, but obscured in the elaborations…. The inherent
 gender equality in Mormonism just needs to be seen by extracting it 
from other distracting elements and contexts.”
What kinds of initiatives could we take as church 
members to excavate this gender equality that we currently not doing? 
Harvard professor Clayton Christiansen, known for his work on disruptive
 innovation, often speaks to LDS Harvard students about how many of the 
standard Church programs—seminary, Family Home Evening, for 
example—started from the initiative of a small group of church members 
who saw a need and innovated ways to address that need that didn’t 
compromise doctrine or divinely mandated ecclesiastical practices in any
 way. How can we apply this same innovative spirit to the arena of 
women’s responsibilities at church? How can we put into practice our 
desires to see this cooperative community become more of our practiced 
reality? In essence, while we are reigning in our external claims, we 
need simultaneously to be broadening the practice of egalitarian ideals 
in our behavior so that with these opposite pulls we can have both 
internal and external meet harmoniously in the middle. I ask each man 
and woman in the audience today: What are you doing to excavate the 
power of the women in your ward and make their contributions more 
visible?
(back to Kindra, M.S.W.)
The second half of this article delineates a number of possibilities for making the power and influence of women more visible in families, wards, and stakes. These include considering who is invited to meetings, what order talks are assigned, using quotations by women, what type of activities are planned for young men and women, how auxiliary presidents are addressed, recognizing mothers after a baby's blessing, and having women help in planning and decision making when possible.
While it is difficult to navigate the fine line of changing actions without changing paradigms, I think the potential impact it will have on people's perceptions of the women around them will be powerful. Women have wisdom, and experience, and influence, and they should be recognized for this. We as women, on the other hand, have the responsibility to understand our own history in the church and recognize our influence and power for the impact it has had without filtering it through a worldly paradigm that puts everyone higher or lower than someone else.