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Pope Francis is worried about population decline The U S will need more pro-family and pro-immigrant policies to continue to grow

The surprising truth about which men do the most chores

The surprising truth about which men do the most chores Lois M. Collins © Photo illustration by Rachel Gartz The findings surprised the researchers: Religious men tackle household tasks like cooking and grocery shopping at even higher rates than nonreligious, progressive men. And both do more cooking and cleaning than the men who fall in between them on the faith scale. That’s according to a study by University of Utah researchers Claudia Geist, an associate professor of sociology, and doctoral candidate Bethany Gull that was recently published in the international journal Social Compass. Among those not surprised are Rabbi Shlomo Slatkin of Baltimore and Rich Schaus, who directs the Gospel Rescue Mission in Muskogee, Oklahoma. They are men of faith who say they do a lot of housework.

Strange but true: religious husbands do more housework » MercatorNet

In a recent study, Bethany Gull and Claudia Geist identify two paths leading to men’s increased housework participation one non-religious and egalitarian, the other religious and family-centered. Their results surprised them, as they had expected conservative religious men to have lower housework participation due to their traditional gender ideologies.  We were not surprised by their findings. We suggest there are two basic reasons people assume religious men refrain from household chores: the first is a caricature of religious men as misogynistic, narcissistic, and controlling; the second is that many people understand that egalitarianism places high expectations on husbands and fathers, without recognizing that faith does likewise.

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