Religion, Service, and Humility in Perspective: Women’s Involvement and Challenges in the 21st Century Nigerian Religious Landscape

This paper critically examines the gendered dynamics of “service” and “humility” within Nigerian Christianity and African Traditional Religion (ATR), exploring their impact on women’s participation and leadership in the 21st century. Aiming to demonstrate how patriarchal interpretations of these virtues constrain women’s agency, the study is justified by the imperative for gender justice essential to the holistic flourishing of religious communities and society. The core problem is that despite women’s vital historical and contemporary contributions  as evangelists, ATR priestesses, caregivers, and backbone of religious service  dominant interpretations of service and humility, mediated through patriarchy, limit women’s leadership and theological voice. This creates a “humility paradox” where exemplary practice reinforces marginalization. While previous studies note women’s roles and patriarchal constraints, a significant gap exists in comprehensively analyzing the specific mechanisms of this paradox across both major traditions and recovering women’s agency within it. The theoretical framework employs Mercy Oduyoye’s African feminist theology, critiquing dual patriarchies and advocating women’s agency (“Talitha cum!”), and Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza’s hermeneutics of suspicion (interrogating patriarchal texts/traditions) and remembrance (recovering women’s contributions), enabling a critical deconstruction and liberative reimagining. Methodologically, it utilizes historical analysis and theological critique. The scope focuses on 21st-century Nigerian Christianity (major denominations) and ATR, justified as the dominant traditions sharing patriarchal frameworks yet offering distinct contexts for analysis. The significance lies in demonstrating that authentic religious and societal flourishing necessitates women’s full participation. Key findings reveal the pervasive “humility paradox,” the circumscription of women’s agency despite extensive service, and the need for theological reinterpretation. The study recommends, redefining service and humility through feminist theology as empowering virtues; actively supporting women’s leadership; reforming religious education; and recovering women’s historical contributions. The conclusion asserts that Nigeria’s religious vitality depends on dismantling patriarchal barriers and transforming service and humility into tools for inclusive community building, not female subservience.