As recorded in Review and Herald, Dec. 12, 1881
RESOLVED, That all candidates for license and ordination should be
examined with reference to their intellectual and spiritual fitness for the
successful discharge of the duties which will devolve upon them as licentiates
and ordained ministers.
This was spoken to by D. M. Canright, D. H. Lamson, W. H. Littlejohn,
S. H. Lane, G. C. Tenney, E. R. Jones, W. C. White, A. S. Hutchins, and R. M.
Kilgore, and adopted.
RESOLVED, That females possessing the necessary qualifications to fill that position, may, with perfect propriety, be set apart by ordination to the work of the Christian ministry.
This was discussed by J. O. Corliss, A. C. Bourdeau, E. R. Jones, D. H.
Lamson, W. H. Littlejohn, A. S. Hutchins, D. M. Canright, and J. N. Loughborough, and referred to the General Conference Committee.
You're right, it never became church policy.
But the fact remains that the church was ready to ordain women in 1881, and resolved to do so.
Ellen White never attended that sessions. Her husband had just died. But her son, W. C. White, was present.
If you read the minutes of GC Sessions around the time, you will see several other resolutions that are referred to the General Conference Committee. Some resolutions they refered for further study. But on others there is no note that it should be studied further. When it is simply referred to the GC committee without a call for “study,” the usual outcome was that the committee accepted the basic resolution and made further plans as to how to implement it.
The same session has a resolution to renew the credentials of the Southern workers, this too was referred to the GC committee.
What is even more interesting, is that even though a resolution was made for ordaining women, there doesn't seem to be any documents from that time indicating that anyone among the Adventist leadership was greatly opposed to the idea of ordaining women.
Those guys weren't shy when it came to writing fiery articles against something they preceived as unbiblical and dangerous to the truth. Are there any articles decrying the resolution?
The resolution to ordain women was published in both the Signs of the Times and the Review and Herald, was there a great outcry like there is today against it?
According to one reporter --
"Researchers have gone through the annual editions of the Seventh-day Adventist Yearbook listing all of the ministers and their credentials, and found that in the years after this resolution in 1881, more and more of the women serving as ministers were given a Ministerial License. In the Adventist system, this has always been the first step toward ordination, followed five or more years later with ordination itself."
It would be interesting to map this out on a graph, and just see when it peaked and when it started to fall off and why.
The General Conference Committee has never reported back concerning this resolution.
It's very true that as the decades went by, women pretty much disappeared from higher church offices. Till by the 1950's I don't think there were any in higher leadership positions. And those who worked for the church were receiving only a small percentage of a wage a man doing the same job would receive.