I don't have a problem with the laity having an active role in the administrative needs of a parish, or of those laity being women. I do see a problem with a heavily dispproportionate amount of women doing these tasks. Where are the men and what are they doing?
[ . . . ]
I find these statistics disturbing. It says we aren't reaching half our church community. We need to do something to pull them in. We need active male role models just as much as we need active female role models. What is it that is keeping them from forming?
I don't know, but I would suggest (in no particular order) the following points from my exposure to Catholic and Protestant churches. I haven't been to more than half a dozen Orthodox parishes, so I don't know if most of these apply as much there as well.
Why Men Don't Go to Church Anymore?
-- female pastors (the male ego doesn't like to be nagged at or preached to; see also the last point on this list)
-- wimpy, effeminate male pastors
-- hymns, preaching and church decoration that emphasize sentimentality and femininity
-- sermons that boil down to "be nice"
-- scandals which belie any call to a higher level of moral living
-- silence in the face of rational and scientific challenges to religion
-- political sermons
-- little or no ministry to practical needs of normal people (i.e., people who aren't homeless, crippled, or on the other side of the planet)
-- very little discussion of money except asking for it (i.e. plenty of begging and calls to "stewardship" but nothing about the Christian management of money in personal / family life)
-- no calls to discipline and sacrifice; no practical plans for growing into a disciplined lifestyle, i.e., how to start fasting... [Note: that might not be true at most Orthodox parishes.]
-- preaching that the Gospel is about "relationships" and charitable works (i.e., almost nothing about worship, self-discipline, sacrifice, and union with God)
-- Generally, a sense that church is a place for ladies and children and old people.
That's just my two cents worth.
-- John