Jennifer
A. Marshall:
Back in
1997, more than half a million men came to the National Mall for
the Promise Keepers gathering. Their stated purpose was to
rededicate themselves to God in order to better fulfill their
roles as husbands, fathers, workers, and community
members.
This
gathering alarmed feminists at groups like the National
Organization for Women. Patricia Ireland, who was the president of
that group at that time, accused Promise Keepers of being promoters
of "a feel-good forum of male supremacy intent on keeping women in
the back seat." Some feminist activists even gathered outside of
Union Station to heckle the men arriving at the rally. They
taunted, jeered, and even threatened to disrobe
themselves.
Which of
these, I ask, is the greater disruption to civility: thousands of
men gathering on the Mall with Bibles to pray or angry women
flashing passers-by? Of course, the feminists had every right to
protest, but the question is, did they have reason to
protest? Many other women, myself included, said that they did not,
and we gathered also outside of Union Station to encourage the
men gathering for Promise Keepers and to show our support for it.
It was our opinion that a man praying on the Mall is nothing to be
afraid of.
Dr.
Bradford Wilcox, a sociologist at the University of Virginia, has
now provided us with the social science reasons why modern
women have nothing to fear in movements like Promise Keepers. In
his book Soft Patriarchs, New Men: How Christianity Shapes
Fathers and Husbands, he compares two groups of Protestants,
mainline Protestants and conservative Protestants, with
unaffiliated men. All of the men he studies are married with
children. It turns out that the active religious men are actually
coming closer to the popular ideal of the new man, that 1990s man
who's more sensitive and connected to his wife and
children.
Dr.
Wilcox holds a Ph.D. from Princeton University. Prior to
joining the University of Virginia, he held research fellowships at
Princeton, Yale, and the Brookings Institution. Dr. Wilcox's
research focuses on the influence of religious belief and practice
on marriage, cohabitation, parenting, and fatherhood. He has
published articles in several peer reviewed journals, and his
research has also been featured in the popular press.
His book
Soft Patriarchs is excellent in social science quality, and
also for its application to our current debates in the popular
mainstream. I want to thank him for writing it and for being with
us here today. Please join me in welcoming Dr. Wilcox.
Jennifer
A. Marshall is Director of Domestic Policy
Studies and directs the Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Religion
and Civil Society at The Heritage Foundation.
W.
Bradford Wilcox: I'd like
to begin, appropriately enough, with a quote from Tony Evans,
a black Evangelical pastor from Dallas. In 1994, he gave versions
of this speech to Promise Keepers events around the country, so
it's apropos given Jennifer's comments:
The
primary cause of this national crisis, that is the decline of the
family, is the feminization of the American male. The first thing
you need to do is sit down with your wife and say something like
this: "Honey, I've made a terrible mistake. I've given you my role.
I gave up leading this family, and I forced you to take my place.
Now I must reclaim that role. Don't misunderstand what I am saying
here. I'm not suggesting that you ask to be given your role back.
I'm urging you to take it back."
If you
simply ask for it, your wife is likely to say: "Look, the last ten
years I've had to raise these kids, look after the house and pay
the bills. I've had to do my job and yours. You think I'm just
going to turn everything back over to you?"
Your
wife's concerns might be justified. Unfortunately, however, there
can be no compromise here. Treat the lady gently and lovingly, but
lead. To you ladies who may be reading this, give it back. For the
sake of your family and the survival of our culture, let your man
be a man if he's willing.
Statements
like this, which combine an assertion of patriarchal authority and
heightened attention to the family on the part of men, have
garnered enormous interest, concern, and controversy in the
last decade or so. And this concern and controversy were only
heightened when, in 1998, the Southern Baptist Convention released
a statement on the family that declared the family is "The
foundational institution of human society" and that a woman should
"submit herself graciously" to her husband's leadership and that a
husband should "provide for, protect and lead his
family."
Basically,
there are two questions that these types of comments present to
those of us in the public square and academic world who are
interested in the role of religion in American life. The first
question-and this is the question that many feminists and
academics have posed-is whether religion, particularly Evangelical
Protestantism in the U.S., is a force for gender reaction in the
family. The second question is, does religion domesticate men
in ways that make them attentive to the ideals and aspirations of
their wife and children?
All of
you know that we've seen more egalitarian attitudes and labor force
participation in the U.S. in the last 40 years. Just to give you a
brief picture of attitudes in the U.S., in 1977, about 76 percent
of Americans supported a gendered division of labor, where the
ideal was that the husband was the breadwinner and the wife was the
homemaker. In 1993, this number had fallen to just 37
percent.
This is
just one indication of how much more egalitarian our society has
become with respect to gender; but, as many scholars and feminists
have noted, we do not yet see men equally invested in family life.
For instance, they don't perform an equal share of household and
parental labor. On average, men do about 33 percent of the
household labor in their families. They also are not equally
attentive to the emotional dynamics of their marriages in most
American families.
Some
scholars and feminists have talked about a stalled revolution in
the family when it comes to gender equality, and some feminists and
journalists have speculated that religion, especially
Evangelicalism, is a key factor in stalling the gender
revolution at home. A few quotes illustrate this
perspective.
-
Sociologists
Julia McClellan and Myra Marx Ferree argue that "Evangelicalism is
an influential force" pushing men toward authoritarian and
stereotypical forms of masculinity and attempting to renew
patriarchal relations.
-
In 1998,
in the wake of the Southern Baptist convention, journalists Steve
and Cokie Roberts claimed that the conservative Protestant
gender ideology "can clearly lead to abuse both physical and
emotional."
-
John
Gottmann, who is one of the leading psychologists of the
family at the University of Washington, has argued that the
religious right is pushing "fathers toward authoritarian parenting
in child-rearing."
So
there's this perspective that religion, particularly
Evangelicalism, is a force for reaction in American families.
One of the questions that I think about today is whether this
concern is justified.
But I
also want to think about a different question that tends
particularly to concern family advocates who are more concerned
about the breakdown of the American family than they are about what
feminists would view as a patriarchal approach to family life.
They point out that the decline in the family is linked in part to
men's failure to take an active role in families. If you look
around the world, you can see that men are more and more distant
from the family in many cases. From New York to Nairobi, from San
Francisco to Stockholm, more and more men are living apart
from the children that they helped to bring into this
world.
Theologian
Don Browning at the University of Chicago has talked about a "male
problematic." The basic idea here is that men have weaker ties to
the families, for both biological and cultural reasons, than
do women, so the challenge that every society faces is how to bring
men into a closer relationship both with the mother of their
kids and with their kids.
Don
Browning also argues that the modern world, with its individualism,
its changing gender roles, and its service economy, is associated
with declining family functions and family-oriented values,
and that only accentuates the male problematic. The concern is
whether or not a religion is playing a role in mitigating this male
problematic. One indication of this problematic is that we've seen
the number of kids living in fatherless homes more than double,
from 11 percent in 1960 to 27 percent in 2000.
Some
scholars think that religion really can't do much to reduce the
male problematic in the modern world. For instance:
-
Scott
Coltrane, a scholar at the University of California Riverside, says
that religious efforts "to promote idealized, father-headed
families will have little influence on marriage rates or fathering
practices."
-
Larry
Bumpass, a scholar at the University of Wisconsin, says that
current family trends "do not make a return of conservative values
seem at all likely."
-
David
Popenoe and others have expressed skepticism that religion can
strengthen the family.
Bear in
mind that these scholars span the ideology spectrum. Scott
Coltrane and Larry Bumpass would be largely accepting of current
family trends, while David Popenoe is more concerned about these
trends. Scholars like this will, among other things, point to
figures we've seen a lot in the press lately, in The New York
Times, in the Atlantic Monthly, which report that
born-again Christians divorce at rates that are slightly higher
than the population at large; and they'll say this is just one
example of the way in which religion really can't do much to
mitigate the effects of modernity on the family.
So, once
again, we have two questions: "Is religion a force for gender
reaction?" and "Does religion domesticate men in ways that
make them attentive to the ideals and aspirations of their
families?"
My study
focuses on 67 percent of married fathers in the United States. I
look at Evangelical Protestant family men, mainline Protestant
family men, and unaffiliated family men. As Jennifer pointed out,
these are all married men with kids: 15 percent of family men are
active Evangelical Protestants, 15 percent of family men are
nominal Evangelical Protestants, 10 percent of family men are
active mainline Protestants, 15 percent of family men are nominal
mainline Protestants, and 12 percent of family men are
religiously unaffiliated.
Note
that when I talk about "active," I'm talking about attending
religious services three times a month or more. As we'll see,
especially for the Evangelicals, there's a big difference between
active and nominal Evangelical Protestants in their approach to
family life-a very big difference.
The data
that I'm working with for this particular book come from three
surveys, all of which have large samples of American adults. I'm
primarily drawing most of my research from the National Survey of
Families and Households, which was actually conducted in part by
Larry Bumpass and is a survey that represents American adults
across the entire country (taken from 3,366 respondents). I also
used data from the General Social Survey (24,099 respondents) and
the Survey of Adults and Youth (2,309 respondents).
For
today, I'm going to talk about four different sets of outcomes for
married men with kids: their ideological view of the world, their
approach to fatherhood, their approach to household labor, and
their approach to marriage.
I used
Logistic, Ordinary Least Squares, and Tobit models for exploring
the associations between religion and the family, and all the
effects I'm going to talk about today are adjusting for differences
in income, education, race, ethnicity, region, and family
structure. This means that some of the married men with kids that
I'm talking about are going to be stepdads, and that makes a
difference, as probably many of you are aware, in their involvement
and their style of interaction with kids.
I focus
in the book on two different ideological concepts. The first is
familism. This is the idea that the family is a paramount
institution in our society, and individuals have responsibilities
to the family and to their family members. It's based upon
questions, tapping things like attitudes toward marriage,
divorce, and the care of elderly parents. Fathers who report
higher-level familism are fathers who are more likely to oppose
divorce, more likely to view marriage as the ideal site for
childbearing, and more likely to report an affirming idea that they
should take care of their elderly and infirm parents.
To give
you a sense of how these things break out, what we see is that
familism is higher among attending mainline Evangelical
fathers and, particularly, attending Evangelical Protestant family
men. For instance, we can see that 57 percent of active
Evangelical Protestant family men oppose divorce for unhappy
couples who have kids. This compares to 42 percent of active
mainline Protestant family men and just 30 percent of men who are
not affiliated.
I also
look at gender traditionalism. This is based upon questions
that tap things like whether or not they think it's best for men to
focus on breadwinning and women to focus on homemaking. Once
again, we see that gender traditionalism is higher among attending
men across the board, particularly for attending Evangelical
Protestant family men. For instance, 58 percent of active
Evangelicals embrace this gendered approach of household labor
compared to 44 percent of active mainline Protestant family men and
37 percent of unaffiliated family men.
I also
should make the point here that religion, both attendance and the
Evangelical affiliation, is one of the strongest predictors of both
of these ideological measures. Factors such as education, region,
etc. are not as strong as the effect of religion. In this domain,
religion is a pretty powerful force. With this particular outcome,
you could make an argument that religion is a force both for the
domestication of men and for gender reaction or for gender
inequality.
What
about fatherhood? We see, once again, a pretty similar pattern
where attending fathers and attending Evangelical Protestant dads,
in particular, are more involved; they're more affectionate, and
they're stricter with their kids. We can see, for instance, in
youth-related activities that active Evangelical dads spend
about 3.5 hours more per week compared to unaffiliated dads and
that active mainline Protestant dads spend about two hours
more per week in such activities.
With
affection, described as hugging and praising kids very often,
we see that it's attendance that's the driving force rather than
tradition, where both active mainline (43 percent) and Evangelical
(44 percent) dads are very affectionate with their kids and more so
than unaffiliated dads (32 percent).
With
regard to spanking, we see a similar pattern, where active
Evangelical dads have the highest rates of spanking followed
by active mainline Protestants and then finally by unaffiliated
dads. When I measure monitoring of children, we see once again this
kind of distinct active Evangelical effect: 95 percent of active
Evangelical dads know where their adolescents are in the afternoon
and evenings, as do 89 percent of active mainline dads and 86
percent of unaffiliated dads.
My
argument is, in general, when it comes to fatherhood, that religion
promotes what I would call a neotraditional approach to parenting
that comes close in many ways to approximating the new-father idea
insofar as it's associated with more engagement and affection; but,
of course, on this issue it takes a more traditional line. I should
say, too, that my argument would be that most of my findings lend
greater support to the idea that religion is domesticating men
when it comes to fatherhood.
When we
turn to housework, we see a little more evidence for what might be
called "inequality" or "gender reaction," but it's a fairly
nuanced set of findings. Active Evangelical dads do about 72
minutes less compared to unaffiliated family men, and active
mainline Protestant men do about six minutes more than unaffiliated
family men, although this effect is not statistically significant.
So there is, in terms of the actual division of household
labor, more inequality among active Evangelical
households.
But if
you look at wives' reports of appreciation for housework, you see
that wives of active Evangelical Protestants report higher
levels of appreciation for their housework, and they're
followed closely by wives of active mainline Protestant men,
whereas wives of unaffiliated men report comparative low
levels of appreciation. So it's important to note that, if you look
at which of these things is more predictive of women's marital
happiness and their sense that things are basically fairly
distributed in their home, it's a complicated picture in terms
of what we think about how religion is shaping women's experience
of household labor.
Finally,
I want to touch on three sets of findings, two of which are in the
book and one of which I've done recently, to speak to this issue of
divorce. Wives of active Evangelical Protestant family men report
the highest levels of happiness with the affection and the
understanding that they receive from husbands, and they are
followed fairly closely by wives of active mainline Protestant
family men. Wives of unaffiliated family men report the lower
levels of happiness.
Of
course, these are based on wife reports, and there could be some
differences in their expectations of what kinds of affection
and understanding they expect from their husbands, so part of these
effects could be differences in expectations between those who are
actively engaged in religion and those who are not. But it's still
the case that women who are married to these religious men are
basically happier with their marriages.
We then
turn to a more concrete marker of the quality of marriage, and that
is domestic violence. Both the husband and the wife were asked to
report incidences of violence in their home in the previous year
before the survey was conducted, and these measures are based upon
both the wife's report of the husband's violence and the husband's
report of his own violence in the marriage.
What I
find is that the wives of active Evangelical Protestant family men
report the lowest levels of violence (2.8 percent), followed by the
wives of unaffiliated men (3.2 percent) and the wives of active
mainline men (5.4 percent). In this case, there's at least some
evidence that the active Evangelical Protestant men are the
least violent in their marriages compared to other men in the book,
but we see that the highest levels of violence (7.2 percent)
are reported in the nominal Evangelical Protestant homes.
We're talking about a nominal Southern Baptist who attends church
maybe once or twice a year; this is the kind of guy who's going to
be more violent with his wife compared to other men in the
U.S.
We see a
similar pattern when you turn to divorce, where both active
Evangelical and mainline Protestant men are 35 percent less
likely to divorce compared to unaffiliated family men, but the
nominal Evangelical Protestant family men are 20 percent more
likely to divorce. I think a lot of the effects we've been reading
about in the Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times,
and elsewhere about born-again Christians having, for instance, a
higher divorce rate is related to these nominal Evangelicals who
claim the "born-again" experience or claim an "Evangelical
affliction" but do not regularly attend church and bring up the
rates for this particular subculture.
The
bottom line is that religion appears to domesticate men when it
comes to marriage, and I don't see any evidence of a gender
reaction for the marriage relationship itself.
What
about the generic effect that religion has on family life? The
first point to note is that religious institutions can rely
upon family-oriented rituals and discourse that endow
fatherhood and marriage with a sacred character. One thinks, for
instance, of the ritual of baptism where, at a certain point in the
baptismal rite, fathers are given specific advice and counsel and a
blessing that endows their role as fathers with a transcendent
sense of significance.
We can
also think about family time. Churches and other congregations
provide men with opportunities to spend time with their
families. One example is the father-daughter dances that are held
often by congregations. It's just one opportunity for dads to
spend time with their kids and with their wives.
The
third thing we can talk about is social networks. These
networks lend support to people when they're trying to figure out
how to parent their kids or how to deal with difficulty in
marriage. They also supply social control; that is, they encourage
people to abide by more pro-family norms. For instance, if some
guys are seeing another guy in their parish or congregation having
lunch with a woman who's not his wife on a regular basis, they
might ask him about that and try to determine whether or not he's
really living up to his marital vows.
The
fourth thing is that there is a sacred canopy that these men
encounter in their lives. There's a sense that God is a part of
their lives and gives emotional security to them, and this is
important because one of the key factors leading to marital
problems and problems with parenting is stress. Things like
unemployment, especially for men, or a death in the family can lead
to poor parenting or poor marriage behaviors for men. If men can
offer these problems up to God, God can provide them with a sense
of security and direction in terms of how to deal with these things
in a productive way.
The last
thing I want to talk about is, why are Evangelicals distinctive? In
almost every outcome I looked at in the book, Evangelicals are the
most distinctive group, especially the active Evangelicals.
What is it about this particular tradition that explains this
distinctiveness?
One
point that's pretty clear is that they have strong religious
motivations for their family orientation. There's a sense in
this particular subculture that what these dads do with their kids,
for instance, has a lot to do with their children's salvation.
There's this sense in which they want their kids to be faithful and
to be saved, and that motivates them to invest more in their
kids. These dads and these husbands want to embody what they view
as God's mercy and justice in their interactions with their spouse
and with their kids. So there's a kind of a unique religious
perspective that they bring to bear.
Another
point is that these men have the highest levels of familism of any
group in the U.S. with the possible exception of the Latter Day
Saints, or Mormons. Although their gender traditionalism is
what gets most of the attention in the media and in the academy,
it's this familism, this interest in the family, this
commitment to the family that helps to explain why these men are
more engaged, particularly when it comes to the emotional
domains of parenting and marriage. So this familism is more
powerful in explaining their motivations than their gender
traditionalism.
The
third thing that we can focus on is that there is a pastoral focus
in these churches on men's role in the family. I have a colleague,
Penny Edgell in Minnesota, who's done some work on New York State
congregations and she looks at mainline Catholic and Evangelical
churches. What she found in looking at these churches is that the
Evangelical ones were the ones most likely to challenge men to
take their marriage and parental responsibilities seriously.
So, there's a recognition in a lot of these churches that men need
to do more around the home. They need to attend more to what's
happening in their homes.
Finally-and
this is more speculative-I have this sense there's a fraternal
ethos that you're more likely to encounter in Evangelical
Protestant churches; that is, that there's a male-friendly ethos,
with active men's ministries and strong male pastoral
leadership, that allows many men to link their masculinity to their
faith and family life. There's a sense that they don't have to
check their masculinity at the church door, and that helps
these churches encourage men to put their families
first.
To sum
up, is religion, particularly Evangelicalism, a force for
gender reaction? I think that one can make a case, when it comes to
household labor and ideology, that there is some evidence that
Evangelicals, in particular, foster a more traditional
approach to household labor and to gender ideology. But, as
we've seen, I don't think there's much evidence to support that
notion when it comes to marriage and parenting.
Second,
does religion domesticate men? Does it turn men toward the ideals
and aspirations of their wife and kids? My answer is, yes, it does.
In my book, I focus on Protestants. I think there's evidence
that Evangelical Protestants are particularly attuned to their
families. Most surveys don't really pick out traditional Catholics
or Orthodox Jews, but I have a dataset that does that, and I'm
seeing similar patterns for traditional Catholics and Orthodox
Jews. They approach parenting and marriage somewhat
differently than Evangelical Protestants, but you see
similarly high investments in these other communities.
The
bottom line is that religious orthodoxy appears to be one answer to
the male problematic: this process whereby men are more likely to
be distant from their families and to be preoccupied with work
and leisure at the expense of their families. I would argue that
these religious groups are succeeding because they endow
fatherhood with transcendent significance; because they
provide a range of social support and social controls that
strengthen family ties; and because they consider their families to
be threatened by the secular world that they view as both debased
and debasing. I don't think we can overestimate the way in which
the sense of cultural alienation motivates men to fight for their
faith and family by focusing on their families.
The
paradox is that, as we continue to see cultural battles fought over
family-related issues, it may motivate these religiously orthodox
men to continue to devote themselves to their families in ways that
often approximate this new-man ideal. These cultural battles
may be motivating religiously orthodox men to become, in some ways,
more progressive in their approach to marriage and
parenting.