Examining how women's access to religious authority, education, and spiritual expression shapes identity crises and paths of belief, doubt, or departure.
As a woman in 17th-century colonial Mexico, Sor Juana's spiritual and intellectual authority was perpetually contested. She could not become a priest; her learning was deemed unseemly; her authority to interpret scripture was denied. This gendered silencing directly shaped her religious journey—entering the convent partly to access education unavailable to lay women, yet ultimately suppressed by male ecclesiastical power. For modern seekers, this concept illuminates how religious institutions' treatment of women—their exclusion from leadership, interpretation authority, and full participation—often catalyzes doubt and departure. Many women experience their religious identity crisis not primarily as theological but as structural: realizing their questions, voices, and spiritual insights are systematically devalued. Sor Juana's example shows that gender-based exclusion from religious authority is itself a crucible of transformation, pushing believers toward either reformation or exit.
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