Dr John Coulter ✍ Given the quagmire which the Presbyterian Church in Ireland (PCI) now finds itself bogged down in concerning the safe-guarding crisis, perhaps Moderator-Designate Rev Richard Kerr of Templepatrick could take a leaf out newly-crowned Ulster Unionist leader Jon Burrows’ vision on women and young people.
While Rev Kerr will not formally take up his Moderator post until the June General Assembly, among his ‘in-tray’ pondering in the meantime could be how he could attract more women and young people into the denomination.
In recent years, PCI has witnessed a steady decline in folks in the pews and while the denomination has always had fairly strong women’s and young people’s movements, in terms of building for the future, how can PCI successfully attract more of these two groups into the churches.
UUP boss Jon Burrows has openly stated he wants to see more women and young people getting involved with Ulster Unionism. To ram the point home, delegates at last month’s Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) unanimously ratified the appointment of Fermanagh South Tyrone MLA Diana Armstrong as the party’s first deputy leader.
Mainstream Presbyterianism in the form of PCI has a strong following among the UUP grassroots, so some may be wondering why the various Presbyteries which elect a Moderator annually did not follow the Burrows vision and vote for a woman Moderator, which would have been the first female Moderator in the history of the denomination.
The female wing of PCI is Presbyterian Women, commonly known as PW. According to its own statistics, PW has 450 branches throughout the island of Ireland with around 14,000 members. However, there is a perception that PW has an ageing membership and needs to focus more on attracting younger women in their twenties and thirties into its ranks.
Just as the appointment of Mrs Armstrong - the daughter of former UUP leader Harry West - clearly signalled the intention of the new UUP leadership to recruit more women and indeed get more women elected, so too, if Presbyteries had elected female candidate Rev Mairisine Stanfield of Bangor as Moderator-Designate instead of Rev Kerr, could that election have boosted the ranks of PW and the role of women in PCI?
As well as the fallout from the current safe-guarding crisis, there is still a significant body of opinion within PCI that would take a staunch fundamentalist position on the Biblical interpretation of women in the church.
PCI does have some women ministers, elders and deaconesses, but it seems a female Moderator is still a step too far in 2026.
This year also marks the 75th anniversary of the formation by the late Rev Ian Paisley in 1951 of the strongly fundamentalist Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster. In the days leading up to the election of the PCI Moderator, some Free Presbyterians issued statements on social media warning against the election of a female Moderator.
My late father, Rev Dr Robert Coulter MBE, was minister of Clough Presbyterian Church in Co Antrim for 14 years in the Sixties and Seventies. It was not uncommon at church functions for a male to announce: “The ladies will now leave and serve the tea!”
It was taken for granted, especially in some areas of rural Presbyterianism, that women knew they place in churches.
There are still some Protestant denominations and places of worship even today that will insist women must wear hats to church and would not allow a woman to preach a sermon from the pulpit. And some of these fundamentalist places of worship wonder why they have both dwindling congregations made up of middle aged and elderly folk.
Young people are the life blood and future generation of churches. Granted, churches are facing more distractions and competition for attention of the youth of 2026 than when I was a primary school pupil and teenager in the Sixties and Seventies.
Even by the Eighties, I witnessed the drift among my PCI peers towards the ‘happy-clappy’ style of worship which the Pentecostalists could offer. There was livelier worship with praise bands, hand-waving, dancing in the aisles, and a more relaxed dress code. But again, many Pentecostal churches drew the line about women pastors.
In the Catholic Church, the treatment of women is ironically equally Puritan. Nuns cannot say Mass. While nuns may reach the ranks of Mother Superior, how many nuns have become bishops or cardinals?
Just as folk in PCI may ponder when will there be a first female Moderator, could many rank and file Catholics wonder if they will ever live to see a first female pope?
No doubt many fundamentalists will be able to rattle off a series of Biblical texts why women should have a secondary role in churches. Perhaps it is a case they blame the first woman, Eve, for the fall of man in the garden of Eden in the opening book of the Bible, Genesis.
Places of worship and denominations are not being asked to dilute Scripture; merely have a serious conversation about how women can be more successfully integrated into church life.
Is it a perception that women in power and posts in the Christian church can bring a more down to earth maternal attitude to issues, whereas men folk tend to be more authoritarian and want to impose Old Testament style discipline?
Put bluntly, if PCI had more women ministers, and especially a female Moderator, would the safe-guarding saga which has dogged the denomination be addressed more constructively, more compassionately, and a situation created where such failings would never happen again?
If the Burrows vision for the UUP becomes a reality and the May 2027 council and Assembly elections see more women recruited to the party and getting elected, maybe the time has come for PCI to follow that Burrows visionary lead to put more women in charge.
Given the current slide in PCI membership and much talk of so-called ‘reconfiguration’ as the buzz word leading to churches closing or merging for Presbyterianism to survive in a locality, perhaps if the men folk remain in complete charge, within a decade we in PCI will end up with our churches full of elderly, bald old men in dark suits.
Just as the UUP will see a growth in influence of the Ulster Women’s Unionist Council in the coming months, maybe the key to stem the decline in PCI membership lies with a female Moderator and an increased role for the PW. Only time will tell, but time is not something which PCI has on its side.
While Rev Kerr will not formally take up his Moderator post until the June General Assembly, among his ‘in-tray’ pondering in the meantime could be how he could attract more women and young people into the denomination.
In recent years, PCI has witnessed a steady decline in folks in the pews and while the denomination has always had fairly strong women’s and young people’s movements, in terms of building for the future, how can PCI successfully attract more of these two groups into the churches.
UUP boss Jon Burrows has openly stated he wants to see more women and young people getting involved with Ulster Unionism. To ram the point home, delegates at last month’s Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) unanimously ratified the appointment of Fermanagh South Tyrone MLA Diana Armstrong as the party’s first deputy leader.
Mainstream Presbyterianism in the form of PCI has a strong following among the UUP grassroots, so some may be wondering why the various Presbyteries which elect a Moderator annually did not follow the Burrows vision and vote for a woman Moderator, which would have been the first female Moderator in the history of the denomination.
The female wing of PCI is Presbyterian Women, commonly known as PW. According to its own statistics, PW has 450 branches throughout the island of Ireland with around 14,000 members. However, there is a perception that PW has an ageing membership and needs to focus more on attracting younger women in their twenties and thirties into its ranks.
Just as the appointment of Mrs Armstrong - the daughter of former UUP leader Harry West - clearly signalled the intention of the new UUP leadership to recruit more women and indeed get more women elected, so too, if Presbyteries had elected female candidate Rev Mairisine Stanfield of Bangor as Moderator-Designate instead of Rev Kerr, could that election have boosted the ranks of PW and the role of women in PCI?
As well as the fallout from the current safe-guarding crisis, there is still a significant body of opinion within PCI that would take a staunch fundamentalist position on the Biblical interpretation of women in the church.
PCI does have some women ministers, elders and deaconesses, but it seems a female Moderator is still a step too far in 2026.
This year also marks the 75th anniversary of the formation by the late Rev Ian Paisley in 1951 of the strongly fundamentalist Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster. In the days leading up to the election of the PCI Moderator, some Free Presbyterians issued statements on social media warning against the election of a female Moderator.
My late father, Rev Dr Robert Coulter MBE, was minister of Clough Presbyterian Church in Co Antrim for 14 years in the Sixties and Seventies. It was not uncommon at church functions for a male to announce: “The ladies will now leave and serve the tea!”
It was taken for granted, especially in some areas of rural Presbyterianism, that women knew they place in churches.
There are still some Protestant denominations and places of worship even today that will insist women must wear hats to church and would not allow a woman to preach a sermon from the pulpit. And some of these fundamentalist places of worship wonder why they have both dwindling congregations made up of middle aged and elderly folk.
Young people are the life blood and future generation of churches. Granted, churches are facing more distractions and competition for attention of the youth of 2026 than when I was a primary school pupil and teenager in the Sixties and Seventies.
Even by the Eighties, I witnessed the drift among my PCI peers towards the ‘happy-clappy’ style of worship which the Pentecostalists could offer. There was livelier worship with praise bands, hand-waving, dancing in the aisles, and a more relaxed dress code. But again, many Pentecostal churches drew the line about women pastors.
In the Catholic Church, the treatment of women is ironically equally Puritan. Nuns cannot say Mass. While nuns may reach the ranks of Mother Superior, how many nuns have become bishops or cardinals?
Just as folk in PCI may ponder when will there be a first female Moderator, could many rank and file Catholics wonder if they will ever live to see a first female pope?
No doubt many fundamentalists will be able to rattle off a series of Biblical texts why women should have a secondary role in churches. Perhaps it is a case they blame the first woman, Eve, for the fall of man in the garden of Eden in the opening book of the Bible, Genesis.
Places of worship and denominations are not being asked to dilute Scripture; merely have a serious conversation about how women can be more successfully integrated into church life.
Is it a perception that women in power and posts in the Christian church can bring a more down to earth maternal attitude to issues, whereas men folk tend to be more authoritarian and want to impose Old Testament style discipline?
Put bluntly, if PCI had more women ministers, and especially a female Moderator, would the safe-guarding saga which has dogged the denomination be addressed more constructively, more compassionately, and a situation created where such failings would never happen again?
If the Burrows vision for the UUP becomes a reality and the May 2027 council and Assembly elections see more women recruited to the party and getting elected, maybe the time has come for PCI to follow that Burrows visionary lead to put more women in charge.
Given the current slide in PCI membership and much talk of so-called ‘reconfiguration’ as the buzz word leading to churches closing or merging for Presbyterianism to survive in a locality, perhaps if the men folk remain in complete charge, within a decade we in PCI will end up with our churches full of elderly, bald old men in dark suits.
Just as the UUP will see a growth in influence of the Ulster Women’s Unionist Council in the coming months, maybe the key to stem the decline in PCI membership lies with a female Moderator and an increased role for the PW. Only time will tell, but time is not something which PCI has on its side.
| Follow Dr John Coulter on Twitter @JohnAHCoulter John is a Director for Belfast’s Christian radio station, Sunshine 1049 FM. |





















