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‘Mormon Land’: Does calling out the LDS Church’s patriarchy make you an apostate?

Members at the grassroots level can do more to include women, author says, but widespread changes will require action from the top.

In 2014, Neylan McBaine wrote a groundbreaking book, “Women at Church: Magnifying LDS Women’s Local Impact.” Even given the patriarchal structure of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, McBaine argued that there was much more the global faith could do to see, hear and include women.

“At that time, there were many who felt discussing these facts was unfaithful or dangerous,” McBaine told an audience of 4,000 at last week’s Restore conference. “We swim so entirely in the waters of patriarchy that many of us do not see the extent to which our organizational structure, the language we use, our understanding of God, our quoting of spiritual authorities, our visual representations in our meetings, and the stories of our scriptures center the experiences and viewpoints of men.”

(Rick Bowmer | AP) Neylan McBaine, shown in 2021, is the author of “Women at Church: Magnifying LDS Women’s Local Impact.”

Now McBaine hopes Latter-day Saints will call out “patriarchy” and acknowledge how different its goals and rules are from other systems that exist in the U.S.

On this week’s show, she discuss where women in the church are now and how it has — or has not — changed in the decade since she published her book.

Listen to the podcast:



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