Aunty Sally’s story is a portrait of lifelong faith. Through nearly a century of listening, learning, and loving others well, she reminds us that spiritual maturity is found not in knowledge alone, but in a heart continually open to God’s voice and presence.
Faith That Serves: A Lifetime of Prayer and Presence
At ninety-nine years old, Aunty Sally embodies a faith that has been lived deeply and attentively. Her first lesson is simple but profound: listen. When she prays, she doesn’t just talk—she listens. For her, prayer is a conversation where silence has as much value as speech. She lives what James 1:19 calls us to: “be quick to listen, slow to speak.” In her presence, you sense the wisdom that only comes from years of paying attention to the still, small voice of God.
What stands out most about Aunty Sally is how naturally she weaves Scripture into her stories. Verses flow from her lips as effortlessly as memories. Each passage, each story from the Bible, isn’t just something she’s memorized—it’s something she’s lived. She recalls the freedom of the Spirit, the longing of the soul, the holiness of ordinary ground, and the promise that “if God is for us, who can be against us.” To listen to her speak is to realize that the Word of God has taken root in her—not as abstract knowledge, but as a living, breathing guide for daily life.
Over the years, she has seen how God works not only in personal revelation, but through the people He places along the way. Her sister Hazel was one such person—a companion in faith who first brought her to church when she was searching for meaning and guidance as a mother. Together they attended services, shared meals, and supported one another through every season of life. Their relationship is a living example of how God uses community to sustain and grow us.
Aunty Sally’s story is filled with such encounters—each one a reminder that God’s presence often shows up through ordinary people in extraordinary ways. Friends, family, and even strangers became instruments of grace: a couple whose simple invitation led her husband to faith, a young man who appeared at just the right moment to protect her from danger, and a friend who joined her in prayer for someone lost in grief. Each moment affirmed what she has always believed—that God moves through people, and that no encounter is ever by accident.
Listening to Aunty Sally, you sense that her life has become a prayer—one long conversation between her and the One who’s been faithful through every season. Her story reminds us that to grow spiritually is to remain a student of the Word, a listener of the Spirit, and a lover of people.
She is living proof that formation is not about reaching an endpoint—it’s about walking with God, step by step, decade by decade, letting His Word shape your life until it becomes indistinguishable from your own.
