Women at the World's Crossroads explained

Women at the World's Crossroads
Author:Maude Royden
Country:United States
Language:English
Subject:Women in Christianity
Genre:Non-fiction
Publisher:Woman's Press
Pub Date:1922
Pages:139

Women at the World's Crossroads is a 1922 book by English women's rights activist and preacher Maude Royden.

Summary

The book collects Royden's speeches that were made at the prior National Convention of the Young Women's Christian Association. The chapter "Woman's Service to Theology" focuses on women having the right to be ministers based on there being "no authority to be derived from Christ" and Jesus showing himself to men as well as women.[1] The book's final speech is about Royden's belief that love is the only power of creativity.[1]

Reception

The Shamokin News-Dispatch published a 1923 report from YWCA USA that says the book had "widespread demand".[2] The president of YWCA at the time, Mabel Marshall, held a toast to the book.[3] The publisher Woman's Press said in 1923 that the book's demand was "unprecedented" and that a holiday edition on Japanese paper would be published.[4] Mary O. Cowper said in the journal Social Forces that as Royden "writes or speaks she seems not to be visionary or sentimental, but practical, sensible, convincing, and inspiring".[5]

Notes and References

  1. News: December 31, 1922 . Books, by, for, and about women . New York Herald . Newspapers.com.
  2. News: January 25, 1923 . Y.W.C.A . Shamokin News-Dispatch . Newspapers.com.
  3. News: March 7, 1923 . One hundred at luncheon . The Pittsburg Sun . Newspapers.com.
  4. News: February 13, 1923 . Miss Royden's Popularity . The Capital . Newspapers.com.
  5. Cowper . Mary O. . January 1, 1922 . New books on recreation . Social Forces . 1 . 1 . 489.