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. 2010 Jun;49(2):233-44.
doi: 10.1007/s10943-009-9260-z. Epub 2009 Jul 10.

The priest's husband

Affiliations

The priest's husband

Nancy Van Dyke Platt et al. J Relig Health. 2010 Jun.

Erratum in

  • J Relig Health. 2010 Jun;49(2):245

Abstract

Clergy self-concepts provide an important resource for research into the psychosocial pressures that often breed domestic tension and marital discord in ministerial families. More than 30 years ago the Journal of Religion and Health published (15:3, 1976) Platt and Moss's initial study of clergy families, research focused on the self-perceptions of the wives of Episcopal priests. That investigation explored some of the intrapsychic ingredients and interpersonal concerns of these women. Platt and Moss [corrected] now concentrate [corrected] on clergy spouses from a different vantage point--the [corrected] historically recent phenomenon of the Episcopal priest's husband. This article grows out of the first formal study of such a growing parochial reality. Husbands of priests present novel issues because there has never been anyone like them before. They are men who will inevitably find themselves confronted by congregational expectations that can modify their self-concepts and retailer their marriages, "for better or for worse".

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References

    1. J Relig Health. 1976 Jul;15(3):191-209 - PubMed

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