Growing Women Leaders
Nurturing women's leadership in the Church
Rosie Ward
£8.99 Add to basket Buy nowI thoroughly commend this book as a wise and thought-provoking contribution to an area which is a continuing concern to many women and men.
Christina Baxter, Principal of St John's, Nottingham
Content
Women's place in leadership is a hot topic around the world. How can we make sure that women who are called to leadership, in whatever context, receive the same nurturing and support that men do? And how do we ensure that efforts are made to tailor leadership and ministry training to their strengths, as well as the strengths of men?Growing Women Leaders by Rosie Ward is a book which affirms and equips emerging women leaders in their calling to leadership. With insights from both secular and Christian sources, it includes stories of women leaders in Scripture, in history and in modern society. The foreword is written by Mike Hill, Bishop of Bristol.
Growing Women Leaders is ideal for women exploring a call to leadership, primarily in a church context, as well as women leaders seeking further insights and training to grow in their leadership roles. It is also suitable for male Christian leaders, seeking to nurture and develop women in leadership.
View items in similar categoriesEndorsements
I thoroughly commend this book as a wise and thought-provoking contribution to an area which is a continuing concern to many women and men.
Christina Baxter, Principal of St John's, Nottingham
This will be the first book I recommend when approaching this subject. I know of no one I would trust more as a scriptural, sensible and sensitive guide to this vital issue for the 21st-century Church.
Simon Ponsonby, Pastor of Theology, St Aldates, Oxford
An impressive summary of biblical and historical information and an insightful analysis of the issue surrounding women and leadership. Every church leader - and aspiring leader - should read this book.
Christina Rees, Archbishops Council
Reviews
From The Melbourne Anglican - February 2010
Every now and then you come across a book that really stands apart. Far too much has been written, especially in America, on the man-woman relationship, most of it tedious and repetitious. Rosie Ward is a mainstream English evangelical Anglican priest, obviously with considerable abilities to communicate and think clearly. Behind the book lies the ongoing opposition to women in leadership by socially conservative, conservative evangelicals, based on appeal to the Bible, an appeal which leads to the exclusion from leadership of the 60% of church members, the women who are often the most committed and ministry focused.....
Every Christian woman leader, and especially ordained women leaders, should buy and read this book. I know of no equal.
Reviewed by The Revd Dr Kevin Giles
Reviewed by Magnet - Winter 2009
Rosie Ward asks many questions as to the nature of leadership and whe4ther men and women lead differently. Looking at recent research into leadership in the church or other organisations, thinking about the examples of male and female leadership in the Bible, reflecting on the leadership that Jesus symbolised and thinking about what ingrained expectations are evident in the led, she argues for equality of opportunity.
Are we more comfortable with autocratic or collaborative types of leadership? What makes women generally reticent about accepting leadership roles when they feel they have God's call and the skills to match? Rosie Ward feels that the different male and female response to leadership challenges has a lot to do with confidence and courage and she discussed how this has come about and how it can be altered.
All these questions are tackled in this well-researched book, with discussion questions available for individuals and groups.
Reviewed by Sheila Simpson
From The Good Bookstall - July 2009
I am thrilled to be able to recommend this book, not only does it meet an urgent need, but it is well done and very user friendly. The book addresses the issues about women's leadership rather than ordination from an evangelical perspective; personally I would like to put it into the hands of every university Christian Union in the country. Ward takes a tour through the biblical and historical story of women's leadership. Some issues and stories will be familiar to many but this book does not labour any one point and there is plenty of new material to ponder on. Crucially all the issues are dealt with in one book which is easy to read. She also looks at methods of approaching and enabling women in leadership but it is for me the first section on justifying women as leaders where Ward speaks with a clear and compelling voice.
Reviewed by Naomi Nixon.
Reviewed by The Sign - June 2009
Despite a title and a cover that suggest women leaders are some sort of crop, this is a wise and brave book. Wise in its approach to scriptural and traditional reasons why women's leadership has been discouraged; brave in its willingness to talk about the differences between men and women when they are placed in positions of authority.
The book is written from an Evangelical background, but opposition to women has come from across the board. The author tackles the verses over which some Christians still stumble, in particular 1 Timothy 2 11-15. What many don't realise is that this passage is very difficult to translate with confidence, and for 'I do not permit a women to teach or have authority over a man; she must be silent' (NIV) Rosie Ward suggests 'I am not saying that a women should teach in a domineering manner, but she should have a quiet demeanour.'
The book recounts the stories of biblical women and Christian saints, become tackling the question of whether women should lead differently. The women she spoke to thought that gender differences could be put down to personality; at the same time, they suggested that women were less charismatic and lacked confidence, that they were more democratic, less motivated by power and status, better at multi-tasking, more collaborative, better at reading people, more concerned about pastoral issue, and quick to draw alongside people.
Ward gives the impression that she concurs. She is particularly concerned about the lack of self-confidence among women in positions of leadership, believing it to be debilitating and undermining. The trouble is that its roots can lie in childhood, and this is one omission of the book: Ward concentrates on the position of women in the Church, and could have paid more attention to the social, cultural, and political forces in society at large to which the Church is prey.
This is a rich work, none the less, and Ward argues her basic premise well, that: 'men and women are equally saved, equally Spirit-filled, and equally sent, and women should not have to lie according to rules made up by men, nor should they abdicate their responsibility for recognising and stating their own needs.
Reviewed by Ministry Today - Spring 2009
Growing Women Leaders: Nurturing Women's Leadership in the Church by Rosie Ward, CPAS' leadership development adviser, who herself has spent eleven years in parish ministry, is a first-class introduction, with insights from the Bible, history, and present-day sociology. This is essential reading for every woman considering ministry, as indeed for women in ministry.
Reviewed by The Church Times - March 2009
Ward's book on how the Churches inhibit women's leadership should be warmly welcomed. Distilled in eight chapters are the fruits of wide experiences and reflection. With a keen attention to hermeneutical principles and contemporary scholarship, she asks how New Testament and historical examples of female leadership might inform the debate today.
Notably, Ward challenges hierarchical interpretations of the Trinity which keep women subordinate. She celebrates pioneering women leaders such as Pandita Ramabai and Mary Harris, searching for characteristically female leadership approaches. Finally she illustrates and challenges 'the stained-glass ceiling' in the Church for women now, urging a mutual female and male approach to their resolution.
Ward's proposals include: that men and women both should repent of the sin of keeping women in submission; and that women should combine spiritual growth with assertively expecting to be given greater responsibility. Although Ward's chief focus is on the individual leader, without a stated understanding of the Church as a whole, she does ask how to be in charge within reciprocal community, and she lifts the lid on wider issues about servant leadership.
Reviewed by Robin Greenwood
Book details
- ISBN: 9781841015750
- Published: 19 September 2008
- Status:
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 232


