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Joan M. Martin
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Born |
New York, US
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Ecclesiastical career | |
Religion | Christianity (Presbyterian) |
Congregations served | Christian Union Church, North Truro, Massachusetts |
Academic background | |
Alma mater |
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Academic work | |
Discipline | Theology |
Sub-discipline | Christian ethics |
School or tradition | Christian feminism |
Institutions | Episcopal Divinity School |
Joan M. Martin is a Protestant feminist theologian. Martin has been politically active with a number of different feminist causes and is notable for her 1978 congressional testimony on behalf of the Equal Rights Amendment.[1]
Martin was a member of the Religious Committee for the ERA. Numerous Catholic nuns also belonged to this organization including Sister Mary Luke Tobin.[2] Many women from this organization worked with the National Coalition of American Nuns and National Assembly of Women Religious.[2] The Religious Committee for the ERA was also known as the National Religious Committee for the ERA and worked alongside People of Faith for ERA.[3]
Martin was part of a group of faith-based feminists, including Sonia Johnson from Mormons for ERA, who testified in Congress in support of the ERA in August 1978.[1] Johnson noted in her book, From Housewife to Heretic, Martin was an impressive speaker who "...had immense dignity and presence, and was splendid under interrogation. Also intimidating, to me."[4]
In Martin's testimony, she stated, "To live out our faith and freedom, we must exercise it as whole persons; otherwise it has no meaning. In the context of the ERA ratification process, failure to pass the amendment hinders women from the exercise of our civil rights."[1]
Joan M. Martin is from New York.[4] She was ordained as a minister in the Presbyterian church.[4]
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