Amazing Children of the Bible Series
Meditation on Exodus 1:8-2:10
Rev. Dr. Karen Crawford
First Presbyterian Church of Smithtown
July 12, 2026

It hasn’t yet been two weeks since I returned from our denomination’s 227th General Assembly in Milwaukee. I am still processing much of what happened there. But today, I would like to share about the delightful tribute to Margaret Towner at G.A.
Margaret, who turned 101 in March, was born in Columbia, Missouri, in 1925, and grew up in the Presbyterian Church. Her father was the Rev. Dr. Milton Carsley Towner, who would become a prominent American educator, psychologist, and religious scholar. Her mother was active in the church and supportive of her daughter’s dreams. In Carleton College, Marg majored in pre-med and graduated with a B.A. in 1948. She had been into photography since a young girl as a hobby but was trained in college by a fellow student who had served as a photographer in the Army. After college, she would work as a medical photographer for the Mayo Clinic until she moved back to Syracuse where her mother was living. There, she used her skills as a photographer with Presbyterian churches. As she became more involved with churches, people began to ask her, “Marg, why don’t you explore ministry?”
So she did. She attended Union Theological Seminary in New York, earning a Bachelor of Divinity Degree in 1954. But women were not permitted to serve in full ministry roles until a 1955 decision of General Assembly, which went into effect in 1956. This paved the way for Margaret’s ordination on October 24 of that year by Cayuga-Syracuse Presbytery. That day was far from smooth or routine for her and the church. There was confusion, and her mother fielded a flurry of phone calls from the media asking, “Is she going to be the first?”
Eugene Carson Blake, Stated Clerk of the General Assembly at the time, then canvased all the other presbyteries in the U.S. Sure enough, Margaret Towner would be the first woman ordained to the ministry of Word and Sacrament. When the media found out, Life Magazine sent one of most famous photographers in the country, Alfred Eisenstaedt, to cover her ordination. The Allentown church usually gave a black robe to those being ordained as ministers. But they didn’t give Margaret a robe. They gave her a set of encyclopedias. Not having a robe to wear, her mother borrowed one for her from Forster Freeman, probably the shortest minister in the presbytery, Margaret says. It still didn’t fit. The wife of the Allentown pastor and one of the choir members sat down and hemmed it up so she could be dressed and ready for the 8 p.m. ordination service.

The two pastors Margaret had worked with in Allentown did not approve of women’s ordination. She decided to invite them to participate in the service. One was to deliver the sermon and the other to do the prayer before the service when all the elders and ministers gathered. It was there that one of the clergy, Bill McConaughy, gave her a beautiful cross from Iona that she wears to this day.
Those early years as she started out in ministry were difficult. In Allentown, she was permitted in the pulpit only when she gave the benediction at her own service of ordination. She was allowed to pantomime the service during Communion in the overflow auditorium. Meanwhile, she received letters from wives of ministers telling her that the Bible forbids women from preaching and accusing her of taking away the jobs of their husbands.
The persecution went on in other ways when we she was serving First Presbyterian Church of Kalamazoo, Michigan. People would call the church office to ask who was preaching on Sunday. If the secretary said Margaret, they weren’t going to come. “They just didn’t have any idea,” Margaret says, “of what a female can do.”
Today, we began our series of amazing children of the Bible with Miriam. Did you happen notice that she isn’t named in our passage in Exodus when she, with guidance from her mother, saves the life of her baby brother Moses? This isn’t unusual for women and girls in the Bible. They are often mentioned through their relationship with an important male character. In this case, her brother Moses. But she will be named later.
Miriam is probably 7 years old[1] when she is watching over her brother in the Nile, floating in the basket her mother has carefully made and waterproofed. The princess, moved with compassion by the baby’s cries and beauty, and persuaded by Miriam to pay his own Hebrew mother to nurse him, isn’t named, either. She never will be. But then again, her father, the Pharoah who didn’t know how Joseph had saved Egypt and hated and feared his descendants because they were growing too strong and numerous, isn’t named, as well. Most scholars agree that he is not named because he does not need to be remembered.
Miriam’s mother, another important female character, isn’t named in this passage. We do know her priestly family line, as Exodus begins the story describing Moses’ parents, “Now a man from the house of Levi went and married a Levite woman.” The Levites were an Israelite tribe descended from Levi, the third son of Jacob and Leah, and half-brother to Joseph. They were selected to serve God in the Holy Temple and were different from the other tribes in that they received no land inheritance; they were supported by the tithes of the people. Exodus 6:20 tells us that the mother’s name is Jochebed, and her husband is Amran—and is also her nephew.
You may not realize that Miriam is the first woman to be explicitly called a prophet in the Bible. Not only that. She is the first person to be called a “prophet” in the Bible, too. [2] She is introduced in Exodus 15:20 as “Miriam the prophet, Aaron’s sister” before she famously leads the Israelite women in song and dance to celebrate the crossing of the Red Sea. She picks up her tambourine and sings her “Song of Miriam”:
“Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously,
horse and rider he has thrown into the sea.” (Exodus 15:21)
Like all the people of the Bible, including her brothers, Miriam is very human. All three struggle in their faith and complain to God throughout the wilderness trials. But she remains supportive of Moses until many years have passed—and the land of the promise is nowhere in sight. The straw that breaks the camel’s back is when Moses divorces his longtime wife, Zipporah, and marries a Cushite woman, not a Hebrew. We read in Numbers 12:1-2, “While they were at Hazeroth, Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses because of the Cushite woman whom he had married (for he had indeed married a Cushite woman); and they said, ‘Has the Lord spoken only through Moses? Has he not spoken through us also?’ And the Lord heard it.” Miriam is struck with leprosy, and Aaron cries out to God on her behalf. She is healed in 7 days but, like her brothers, will die before reaching the Land of the Promise. Still, she will be remembered by later prophets to be as important in the mission to save Israel as her two brothers. The Lord speaks through Micah 6:4,
“I brought you up out of Egypt
and redeemed you from the land of slavery.
I sent Moses to lead you,
also Aaron and Miriam.”
Today, as we baptize Luke Andrew, I urge you to remember that it may be a few years before all of Luke’s spiritual gifts are evident. And that he will be very human and won’t have the ability to sit still and remain quiet for some time, yet. But as we nurture him in the faith, teach him about the love and grace of Jesus Christ, and support his family, the Lord will use him to fulfill God’s wonderful plans, perhaps while he is still young like Miriam at age 7. The important thing is to encourage him in all his dreams and never forget that with God, all things are possible.
Margaret’s parents had no idea when their daughter was a teenager, obsessed with photography, that she would become a minister. Margaret herself had no inkling when she was studying pre-med that God had planned a future that included her serving in ordained ministry. How could they when women’s gifts for ministry were not even recognized by the Church until 1955 when she was 30 years old?
Looking back, Marg remembers one thing that she said years ago that she has often regretted saying. Trying to placate those in the church who were against the ordination of women, she told “Presbyterian Life that ordained women would likely serve as associate pastors, in roles subordinate to men, rather than alone. She faced pushback from the upcoming generation of women to follow in her footsteps.” The statement has come back to haunt her, she says, as the article is still read by students who have sent many unhappy letters, saying, “Hey, look I want to pastor on my own. Maybe that’s not your bag.”[3]
While Marg did start in pastoral roles that were subordinate to men, she was a strong advocate for women receiving equal pay and opportunity. Eventually, her pay equaled that of her two male co-pastors with whom she served a parish of 6 churches in the last 17 years of her ministry. Marg would go on to serve as a role model for women with her leadership roles in the national church, chairing such committees as the Language of God, the Holy Spirit, and Worship and Theology. She would go on to become in 1981 the Vice Moderator of the 193rd General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.
When asked how she will be remembered, she prays that others won’t just remember her mistakes, but that they will graciously remember “some of the fun things,” she says with a smile, that “we did together in ministry.” She has become a big believer in the Holy Spirit to lead the Church in ways that the leaders “feel called to go, in whatever ministry they feel called to. And to persevere. Hang in there.”
As we clapped in standing ovation after the tribute, Co-Moderator Tony Larsen at GA in Milwaukee said, “Margaret, we do remember your contributions in ministry. We remember your faithfulness, your courage, your boldness.”
Let us pray.
Holy One, thank you for your Spirit that continues to the lead the Church in surprising ways. Thank you for all the women and girls, such as Miriam and Margaret, who are models for women and men in ministry today. Forgive us for our mistakes, dear Lord, and stir us to have grace for one another and ourselves. Help us to inspire and encourage our next generation, including little Luke Andrew, to be courageous like Miriam and Margaret. To be faithful. To be bold. To believe that with God, all things are possible. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
[1] Nissan Mandel, “The Story of Miriam in the Bible” (Viewed on July 11, 2026) at https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/112396/jewish/The-Story-of-Miriam-in-the-Bible.htm
[2] Phyllis Trible, “Miriam: Bible” in Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. 20 March 2009. Jewish Women’s Archive. Viewed on July 11, 2026 at https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/miriam-bible.
[3] Ed Wicklein, “Margaret Towners Reflects.” Presbyterian Historical Society Blog (1978) Accessed on July 11, 2026 at https://pcusa.org/news-storytelling/blogs/historical-society-blog/margaret-towner-reflects
















