Eleanor, a devoted church member for nearly 50 years, passed away feeling abandoned by the very community she served so faithfully. Despite organizing events, tithing generously, and supporting others for decades, her church turned silent when she needed help after becoming disabled. No one visited. No one called. Not even a card came.
Even in hospice, her final request to see her longtime pastor went unfulfilled. Instead, another pastor showed up—not to comfort her, but to ask if she’d include the church in her will.
She planned her own funeral, deliberately excluding the church. Surrounded by those who truly cared, stories of her strength and love filled the room. Later, during the will reading, the pastors—expecting a donation—were left stunned when Eleanor left them a single penny each.
Her final words to them:
“You may call it petty. I call it proportionate.”
Instead, she left her legacy to those who showed up: her family, a kind reverend, and the charities she supported.
Eleanor reminded us all—love without action is empty, and faith without care means nothing. She chose who was worth remembering.