
Beth Allison Barr: How Marriage Replaced Ordination as a Woman's Path to Ministry
Sep 23, 2025
Beth Allison Barr, the James Vardaman Endowed Chair of History at Baylor University, delves into the intricate history of the pastor's wife role, highlighting how it evolved from ancient ordination practices to a modern expectation tied to marriage in ministry. She discusses historical figures like St. Milberga and Delilah Morrill, illustrating how women once held significant leadership roles that were later diminished. Barr also addresses the damaging effects of gender hierarchies in church culture and shares advice for women navigating these complex dynamics.
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Women Have Always Been Ordained
- Women have always served in ordained and pastoral roles, but definitions of ordination have been rewritten to exclude them.
- Beth Allison Barr shows history repeatedly redefines rules to push women out rather than women never serving.
St. Milberga's Erased Leadership
- St. Milberga led a mixed monastery and was ordained by the Archbishop of Canterbury in the 7th century.
- Her male successors later recast her legacy, erasing her authority from history.
Pastor's Wife Role Is Historically Recent
- The pastor's wife role is a recent historical invention emerging after the Reformation and solidifying in 20th-century evangelicalism.
- Marriage became a marker of Protestant ministry, and the pastor's wife role evolved into an assumed ministerial job.






