Sunday School Teaching: A Women' s Enterprise. A Case Study
from the Canadian Methodist, Presbyterian and United Church
Tradition, 1919-1939
Authors
Lucille Marr
Abstract
The Sunday schools are valuable to our understanding of social history, especially
women's history. As Sunday school teachers, married women had volunteer opportunities
to follow their vocations in a society which discouraged themfrom working outside of the
home. This paper describes women's places in the Canadian Methodist, Presbyterian and
United Church Sunday school networks during the early twentieth century and analyzes
their contributions to the teacher training programme promoted by officiais. It also
demonstrates how the new theology shaping the Sunday schools reinforced women's roles
as nurturers of children while investing them with significant roles in the church.