A truly compassionate and advanced society protects its vulnerable and opens doors of opportunity for everyone. At Teleios, we wanted to look closely at how this impacts women globally. Our research reveals a powerful truth: Christian foundations and societal freedom go hand in hand with the wellbeing of women.
Here is what the data tells us when we compare the top 50 countries from the Human Freedom Index against the top 50 countries that persecute Christians (from the Open Doors World Watch List).
The Data: Freedom, Faith, and Wellbeing
The contrast is stark. Women living in free, largely Christian nations experience vastly different lives from those in repressive environments.
- Overall Wellbeing: In free countries, 23% of women are thriving, compared to just 18% in persecuting countries.
- Life Satisfaction: On a 0–10 scale, women in free nations rate their satisfaction at 6.6, compared to 5.1 in persecuting nations.
- Education & Literacy: Literacy rates reach 98% in free countries versus 77% in persecuting ones. School life expectancy also jumps from 12 to 17 years.
- Health & Longevity: Women in free nations live longer (83 years vs. 73 years) and face a drastically lower maternal mortality rate—only 15 per 100,000 compared to a heartbreaking 180 per 100,000 in persecuting nations.
- Safety & Security: The lifetime experience of violence drops from 34% down to 22% in free countries. On a 0–100 sex trafficking scale, free countries score significantly better at 20 versus 57.
- Economic Opportunity: Labor force participation is higher at54% compared to 44%.
The connection to faith is clear: of the top 50 freest countries analyzed, 35 are classified as Christian nations by the CIA, compared to just 4 of the persecuting countries. Ultimately, countries that persecute Christians consistently show poorer measures for women’s freedom, safety, and life satisfaction.
A History of Dignity and Leadership
This empowerment isn’t a modern accident; it is rooted in Christian history. Compared to ancient Roman and Greek cultures—where a woman’s capacity to function outside the home was severely limited—Christianity historically offered women unique opportunities to progress. Even through the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Enlightenment, women in Christian societies frequently amassed wealth and exercised genuine political power.
Today, so much of the vital work of the church rests on the capable shoulders of women. They offer a rich, indispensable resource for every aspect of Christian life.
While the Apostle Paul noted specific roles regarding family structure and congregational worship during times of church conflict (1 Corinthians 14:34-35; 1 Timotht 2:8-12), and family structure, the overarching message of the New Testament Epistles is one of unity. The vast majority of biblical promises, privileges, and admonishments to holy living apply identically to both genders.
Marriage exists to beautifully symbolize the relationship between Christ and the church as an evangelical outreach. Together, as equals before God, men and women serve in faith to spread the Gospel and build the church.
Both historically and right now, the Christian faith heightens the value, dignity, and status of women.
Thank you for exploring these findings with us. Join us again soon as we continue to dive into the data and look at how the Bible helps shape our society and our individual lives.
WILLIAM STEWART, MD
References:
https://teleiosresearch.com/impactofchristianpersecutiononfreedomandwellbeing/
https://teleiosresearch.com/the-effect-of-christian-persecution-on-wellbeing-of-women/
For questions or to view more of our research
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