woman of the cloth

English

Noun

woman of the cloth (plural women of the cloth)

  1. (rare, Christianity) A female member of the clergy; compare man of the cloth.
    Synonym: clergywoman
    • 2020 July 24, Karen Gibson, “This precious moment of healing”, in Church Times[1]:
      What many didn’t know at the time is that this incredible woman of the cloth had left the side of her own ailing mother to do what she felt was the only thing she could do: confess the sins of her predecessors, beg for forgiveness of those wronged, and, in so doing, help to heal the wounds of a community.
    • 2024 May 31, “Press: Vennells appears in the court of the columnists”, in Church Times[2]:
      “I can’t quite get my head round the idea that Vennells is a woman of the cloth,” Camilla Long wrote in The Sunday Times: “A priest who’s paid £700,000 a year? Who’s then perfectly happy to sit by while thousands of her own employees are persecuted, arrested, slung in jail, or, in at least four horrific cases, kill themselves? And then, even after it began to emerge they might not be guilty, still demonise them, dismissing them, in one email that drew gasps, as ‘inadequate’ people who ‘bored’ her? As a friend said: ‘What sort of Christian is she?’”