This piece from Wayfare cuts through decades of religious socialization to expose a quiet, pervasive crisis: the systematic dismantling of a woman's trust in her own spiritual intuition. It is not merely a memoir of regret; it is a theological intervention that reframes the conflict between personal revelation and institutional authority as a matter of epistemic justice. For readers navigating the tension between faith and autonomy, the article's central thesis—that women are often conditioned to outsource their moral and spiritual knowing to male leadership—is both startlingly specific and universally resonant within the context of hierarchical religious structures.
The Architecture of Self-Betrayal
Wayfare anchors its argument in a personal narrative that many readers will find uncomfortably familiar. The piece details a pivotal moment when the author, at twenty years old, sought validation from a stake president regarding her decision to serve a mission. Despite her own certainty, the leader's response—"You're right, the Lord wants you to serve a mission"—was interpreted not as affirmation, but as a necessary external legitimation of her internal state. The article argues that this interaction "engendered a sense within me that I ought not to take myself or my personal revelations seriously" without male approval.
This dynamic is presented not as an isolated incident but as a precursor to a deeper spiritual fracture. The author recounts a later conflict where a mission president dismissed her clear spiritual promptings to return home early, labeling her revelation as coming from "the adversary." Even when the president's own wife intervened to encourage the author to trust her own feelings, the institutional pressure proved too great. The result, as Wayfare notes, was a "spiritual self-betrayal" where the author "broke the divine trust in me, my own self-trust, and enervated my trust in the divine." This framing is powerful because it shifts the blame from the individual's lack of faith to the structural pressure that demands conformity over authenticity.
"I knew what was true for me and what God wanted me to do. Rather than being faithful to God and myself and my revelation, I betrayed it and broke the divine trust in me, my own self-trust, and enervated my trust in the divine."
Critics might argue that institutional leaders have a responsibility to maintain order and that personal promptings can sometimes be subjective or misinterpreted. However, the piece effectively counters this by highlighting the specific harm done when a leader's administrative convenience is prioritized over an individual's spiritual clarity, suggesting that the cost of such "order" is the erosion of the very faith the institution claims to protect.
The Hannah Paradigm and Epistemic Confidence
To offer a counter-model, the article turns to the biblical figure of Hannah, drawing a sharp parallel between her experience in the temple and the modern female believer's struggle. Wayfare notes that in 1 Samuel, Hannah is "deeply distressed" and "wept bitterly" while praying silently, only to be accused of drunkenness by the priest Eli. The text highlights her defiant response: "No, my lord, I am a woman deeply troubled... I have been speaking out of my great anxiety and vexation all this time." The piece argues that Hannah's willingness to risk her reputation to defend her own experience is the essence of "spiritual fidelity."
The commentary introduces the philosophical concept of "gendered epistemic confidence," citing Pamela Sue Anderson to explain how women are often socially conditioned to doubt their own capacity to know. Wayfare suggests that women are frequently "at a remove from their own knowing" because they believe their experiences must be mediated by others. This is where the article connects deeply to the historical context of the Latter-day Saint tradition, where the priesthood structure has historically been the exclusive domain of men, creating a structural environment where women's spiritual insights are often filtered through male authority. Just as the stake president and mission president in the author's life acted as gatekeepers, the priest Eli acted as a gatekeeper of spiritual legitimacy in Hannah's time.
"Hannah looked crazy, but she wasn't. She understood who she was to God, what she needed to do, and what she wanted. Hannah took seriously her righteous desires and her understanding of who God wanted her to be."
The piece further reinterprets a scripture from Mosiah 4:9, where King Benjamin states that "man doth not comprehend all the things which the Lord can comprehend." While traditionally read as a call for general humility, Wayfare proposes a radical gendered reading: an injunction for women to resist the diminishment of their confidence by male authorities who, like Benjamin's "man," cannot comprehend all that God knows. This reframing challenges the reader to consider that true humility before God might require a firm stance against human intermediaries who claim to speak for Him.
The Cost of Niceness
The final thrust of the argument addresses the cultural value of "niceness" as a barrier to spiritual integrity. Wayfare posits that the pressure to be agreeable often subverts the project of being a servant of Christ, citing Paul's warning in Galatians 1:10 against "people-pleasing." The article suggests that the community must "rank [integrity] above niceness and people-pleasing when they are at odds with one another." This is a crucial distinction, as it moves the conversation from personal guilt to communal responsibility. The piece implies that the silence and compliance often praised in religious women are actually forms of spiritual betrayal.
"It is the woman, in this narrative, who carries the whole story and brings God's purposes to fruition. She believes her own experience of God and does not allow someone else to distort her confidence in that knowing."
A counterpoint worth considering is the potential for this argument to be co-opted by those seeking to dismiss all institutional guidance as inherently patriarchal. The article walks a fine line, advocating for personal revelation without entirely discarding the role of community or leadership. However, its focus remains firmly on the internal mechanism of trust rather than the external structure of the church, making it a call for internal resilience rather than external rebellion.
Bottom Line
Wayfare's most compelling contribution is its redefinition of spiritual fidelity not as obedience to hierarchy, but as faithfulness to one's own divinely given intuition. The article's greatest vulnerability lies in its reliance on personal narrative, which, while powerful, may struggle to convince those who view institutional authority as the sole arbiter of truth. Yet, for any reader who has ever felt the quiet ache of ignoring their own conscience to please a leader, this piece offers a necessary validation: your knowing is valid, and your fidelity to it is the highest form of worship.