Intermediate

Relationships and Families: Family and Gender

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·AQA GCSE Religious Studies·AQA 8062·12 min
3.2.1.1 Theme A: Relationships and families — Families and gender equality

The Nature of Families

A family is the basic unit of society — a group of people connected by blood, marriage, adoption, or shared life. The definition and structure of families has changed significantly in recent decades, and religious traditions have responded in different ways.

Family typeDescription
Nuclear familyTwo parents (traditionally one male, one female) and their children living together
Extended familyNuclear family plus grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins living together or in close proximity
Single-parent familyOne parent raising children alone
Same-sex parent familyTwo parents of the same gender raising children
Blended/reconstituted familyPartners who bring children from previous relationships into a new shared family

Roles of parents and children:

  • Parents are responsible for providing physical care, emotional support, moral guidance, and education (including in the family's faith).
  • Children are expected to respect their parents — a requirement found across all major religious traditions (e.g. the fifth commandment in Christianity and Judaism: "Honour your father and your mother").
  • Many religious traditions also teach that children have obligations to support ageing parents.

Nuclear vs extended family: Many religious traditions — especially Islam, Hinduism, and Sikhism — place high value on the extended family as the natural unit of support and care. The nuclear family is a more recent Western norm. Religious communities often function as an extension of the family, providing support networks similar to an extended family.

The Purpose of Families

Religious traditions offer overlapping but distinct accounts of why families exist and what they are for:

Procreation: Most religions teach that one key purpose of family is to bring children into the world and raise them. Genesis 1:28 commands humanity to "be fruitful and multiply." Islam similarly regards children as a blessing (ni'ma) from God, and the family as the proper context for raising the next generation.

Stability and protection of children: Families provide a stable environment for children to grow up in. Children need consistent love, discipline, and safety. Many religious thinkers argue that the stable two-parent family is the best structure for achieving this, though they differ on whether same-sex parents can provide equally good outcomes.

Educating children in a faith: All major religious traditions regard the family as the primary location of religious education. In Islam, parents are responsible for teaching children to pray, recite the Qur'an, and observe Islamic duties. In Judaism, the home is central to religious observance — Shabbat, Pesach, and daily prayers are primarily home-based practices. In Christianity, parents are expected to raise children in the faith through prayer, worship attendance, and example.

PurposeChristian teachingIslamic teaching
Procreation"Be fruitful and multiply" (Genesis 1:28)Children are a blessing; marriage is for having children
StabilityThe family as a "little church" (ecclesia domestica in Catholic thought)The family as the basic unit of ummah (community)
Faith educationBaptism; Sunday school; family prayerTeaching Qur'an; observing the five pillars; Islamic schooling

Contemporary Family Issues: Same-Sex Parents and Polygamy

Same-sex parents: Increasing numbers of children are raised by same-sex couples, through adoption, IVF, or surrogacy.

PerspectiveView on same-sex parents
Traditional Catholic and conservative ProtestantChildren need a mother and father; same-sex parenting does not reflect the natural order of creation; concern for the child's welfare
Liberal/Progressive ChristianityWhat matters is love, stability, and commitment — same-sex parents can provide these equally well; emphasis on inclusion and non-discrimination
IslamMarriage is between a man and woman; same-sex relationships are not recognised; same-sex parenting is not endorsed
Humanist/Non-religiousSame-sex parents are equally capable of raising children; discrimination based on sexual orientation is unjust

Polygamy (having more than one spouse) takes two main forms: polygyny (one husband, multiple wives) and polyandry (one wife, multiple husbands). It is illegal in the UK and most Western countries.

PerspectiveView on polygamy
ChristianityMarriage is between one man and one woman (monogamy); polygamy is not accepted
IslamA man may have up to four wives, subject to the condition that each is treated equally (Qur'an 4:3); in practice, monogamy is the norm in most Muslim-majority countries today; many Muslim scholars argue that equal treatment is impossible and therefore polygyny is effectively ruled out
Humanist/Non-religiousConsenting adults may enter polyamorous arrangements; legal recognition is a separate issue

Roles of Men and Women in Religious Contexts

Religious traditions differ significantly in the roles they assign to men and women, particularly in worship and leadership.

Traditional Christian views: In the Catholic Church and many conservative Protestant denominations, the ordained priesthood (or pastoral leadership) is restricted to men. The Catholic Church teaches that the male priesthood reflects the maleness of Jesus Christ as the Son of God (a theological argument, not merely a cultural one). Women play vital roles in the Church — as teachers, deacons (in some traditions), and religious sisters — but not as priests.

Progressive Christian views: Many Protestant denominations — including the Church of England (since 1992 for priests, 2014 for bishops), the Methodist Church, and the United Reformed Church — ordain women to all levels of ministry. The argument is that Paul's statement "There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28) points towards full equality.

Islamic views: In most Sunni traditions, women may not lead mixed-gender congregational prayers (Friday Jummah) as imam. Women have a highly valued role as mothers, educators, and participants in worship. Some contemporary Muslim scholars argue that early Islamic practice was more egalitarian than later tradition. The division of roles is often framed as complementary rather than hierarchical.

Sikh views: Sikhism formally teaches complete equality of women and men. Women may lead prayer, read from the Guru Granth Sahib, and hold all roles in the gurdwara. In practice, cultural gender norms sometimes diverge from this theological equality.

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Gender Equality, Prejudice, and Discrimination

Gender equality means that men and women should have equal rights, opportunities, and respect. Gender prejudice is negative attitudes or stereotypes based on gender. Gender discrimination is treating someone unfairly because of their gender.

Examples of gender discrimination:

  • Women being paid less than men for the same work (gender pay gap)
  • Women being excluded from religious leadership roles on the basis of gender alone
  • Women being subject to dress codes or behaviour standards not applied to men

Religious responses to gender equality:

Affirming equality:

  • Sikhism: Guru Nanak explicitly challenged gender discrimination; women participate equally in all aspects of worship
  • Galatians 3:28 (Christianity): all are equal in Christ
  • The Qur'an (4:32) teaches that men and women will receive equal spiritual reward for their deeds

Maintaining distinctions:

  • Catholic natural law theology: men and women are equal in dignity but have different roles (complementarity); these distinctions are seen as God-given, not discriminatory
  • Many traditional Islamic scholars: the different roles of men and women in family and worship reflect divine wisdom, not inferiority

Ethical responses:

  • Equality argument: Treating people differently on the basis of gender cannot be justified — all humans share equal dignity.
  • Complementarity argument: Men and women are different in ways that make different roles natural and beneficial; equality of dignity does not require identical treatment.
PositionBasisExample
Full equality of rolesAll humans equal in dignity; no role restricted by genderChurch of England women bishops
Complementary rolesEqual dignity, different functions; both valuedCatholic male priesthood
Cultural practice diverging from doctrineFormal equality in teaching not always enactedWomen in some gurdwaras facing cultural restrictions

Exam Technique: Evaluating Family and Gender Questions

For 4-mark questions ("Describe two religious beliefs about the purpose of the family"):

  • Give two distinct beliefs (e.g. procreation; faith education)
  • For each: state the belief, explain it briefly, and ideally name a tradition or quote a teaching
  • Do not pad with examples — two well-explained beliefs score more than four poorly explained ones

For 6-mark questions ("Explain two contrasting religious teachings about the roles of men and women"):

  • Name two teachings with different positions
  • Explain each teaching with reference to religion (name the tradition, quote scripture or doctrine)
  • Show why they contrast: same topic, different conclusions

For 12-mark questions ("'Men and women should always have equal roles in religion.' Evaluate this statement"):

  • Traditional Christian view (Catholic — complementarity, male priesthood) with theological reasoning
  • Progressive Christian view (Galatians 3:28; Church of England women bishops)
  • Another religion — Sikhism (formal equality) or Islam (complementary roles)
  • Justified personal conclusion: engage with the strongest argument on the opposing side before concluding

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Treating all religious views as identical

Students often write "all religions believe in equality" or "all religions oppose equality." Both are wrong. There is significant diversity within and between traditions. The Catholic Church maintains male-only priesthood; the Church of England does not. Sikhism formally teaches full equality; some cultural practices diverge. Be sure to specify the tradition when making any claim about religious views.

2. Confusing polygamy and polyamory

Polygamy is legal marriage to multiple spouses. Polyamory is multiple romantic relationships outside legal marriage. The spec requires polygamy. Do not mix them up.

3. Describing the Islamic position on polygamy as "men can have four wives without conditions"

The Qur'anic permission (4:3) is conditional on equal treatment of all wives. Many contemporary scholars note that this condition is practically impossible to meet, effectively making monogamy the norm. Omitting the condition gives a distorted picture of Islamic teaching.

4. Ignoring non-religious perspectives

On questions about same-sex parents or gender equality, the humanist/non-religious view (equality, consent, non-discrimination) is a valid and expected perspective in a 12-mark answer. Leaving it out reduces the range of contrasting views and limits marks.

5. Confusing gender equality in dignity with equality of roles

Traditions like Catholicism hold that men and women are equal in dignity and worth before God, but may have different roles. This is a nuanced position — do not reduce it to "Catholics think women are inferior." The complementarity argument must be represented accurately.

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Relationships and Families: Sex, Marriage and Divorce

AQA GCSE Religious Studies · AQA 8062

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