Congratulations
Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa
April 2026
AMOM Winner• Member of Youth, Women's Movement and Active Singer
We celebrate your faithful service and lasting impact in the house of God. Your dedication is seen and honored.
# Amazing Member of the Month — April 2025
Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa
(A Woman Whose Whole Life Is an Act of Worship)
There are people in the house of God who make noise, and then there are people whose very presence makes the house feel more like God's house. Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa is the latter. She does not announce herself. She does not demand recognition. She simply walks in — robed in quiet conviction, unhurried faithfulness, and a love for God so unmistakable that even the walls of Afrancho Central Assembly seem to lean in when she enters. After more than **twenty years** of unbroken, unwavering service in this assembly, she has become something rare and precious: a living landmark of what it looks like to give your whole life to the Lord — not in a season, not in a moment — but every single day, through every single act, in every single room she occupies.
This April, we do not simply celebrate a faithful member. We celebrate a woman who has made faithfulness look like art.
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Twenty Years and Still Burning
> *"They shall still bear fruit in old age; they shall be fresh and flourishing."*
> — Psalm 92:14
Twenty years is not a statistic. It is a testimony.
It is the accumulation of two decades of Sunday mornings when she could have stayed home but chose the house of God instead. It is twenty years of women's meetings attended, hymns rehearsed, behind-the-scenes labour rendered, and prayers offered in secret that only heaven heard. It is twenty years of showing up — not because someone was watching, not because it was convenient, not because the road was always smooth — but because her love for the Lord made showing up non-negotiable.
In the life of any local church, there is a category of member that institutional language struggles to fully capture. They are not the loudest voices in the room. They are not always on the programme. But when you trace the invisible threads that hold the congregation together — the threads of intercession, of quiet service, of faithful presence, of unspoken encouragement — those threads almost always lead back to someone like Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa. Someone who decided, long ago, that this church was worth her best — and has never stopped deciding that, every morning since.
Twenty years is not a number. It is a declaration of love.
The Women's Movement: A Ministry She Carries with Her Whole Heart
The Women's Movement of The Apostolic Church Ghana is one of the pillars of the spiritual formation and communal care of the assembly, and within it, Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa has been more than a participant — she has been a pillar within the pillar.
To serve in the Women's Movement is to accept a call that is often invisible to the wider congregation but absolutely indispensable to its health. It is pastoral care rendered in quieter registers: in the conversations that happen after meetings, in the counsel given to younger women navigating life's storms, in the prayer circles that form around sisters who are barely holding on, in the collective voice of women who have decided to trust God together. It is the kind of ministry that does not always produce headlines, but it produces transformed lives — and those lives are the real headlines of heaven.
Deaconess Mary has carried this ministry with the kind of dedication that makes other women want to serve better. Her commitment is not performative. She does not serve in the Women's Movement to be seen; she serves because she genuinely believes in the spiritual power of women who are consecrated to God and to one another. She models what it looks like to be fully present — not just physically, but spiritually and emotionally — in every gathering. She brings her whole self, and in doing so, she draws the whole selves of those around her.
> Her presence in the Women's Movement is not a contribution. It is a cornerstone.
The Voice That Carries Heaven in It
*A Prolific Singer and Champion of Sacred Hymns*
If you have ever sat in a service at Afrancho Central Assembly and felt something shift in the atmosphere — something quiet and sacred that crept in before the sermon even began — there is a reasonable chance that Deaconess Mary's voice had something to do with it.
She is a prolific singer. But that description, accurate as it is, does not do justice to what her singing actually *is*. To sing is a common enough gift. To sing with the kind of spiritual weight she brings — to open your mouth and have people feel like they have moved closer to the throne of God — that is another matter entirely. Her voice is not merely pleasant. It is *purposeful*. Every note she releases carries the theology of a woman who has spent decades in the presence of the Lord. You do not sing like that without having lived it.
But what makes her musical contribution most distinctive is her deep, passionate advocacy for sacred hymns. In an age when many congregations have moved entirely toward contemporary worship expressions, Deaconess Mary has stood faithfully as a guardian of the old wells. She understands that the great hymns of the faith are not relics; they are reservoirs. They carry centuries of Christian testimony, doctrinal precision, and hard-won spiritual truth set to melody. They are the songs that sustained believers in dungeons and on death marches and in the long quiet years of ordinary faithfulness. They deserve to be sung — sung well, sung knowingly, sung with reverence.
Her recitals of sacred hymns are not performances. They are *proclamations*. When she leads a congregation in an old hymn, she is not simply recovering a musical tradition; she is reminding the church of its roots, its heritage, and the God who has been faithful across every generation. She is saying, without a single spoken word: *This faith is ancient. This God is faithful. These songs have carried people through, and they will carry us too.*
> In her voice, history meets the present. In her hymns, the cloud of witnesses draws near.
Apostolic Distinctiveness: She Does Not Just Wear the Standard — She *Is* the Standard
To speak of Apostolic Distinctiveness is to speak of one of the most foundational identity markers of The Apostolic Church Ghana — the conviction that holiness is not merely an inward condition but an outward expression, that the way we present ourselves reflects our understanding of whose we are, and that there is honour and beauty and power in maintaining the standards God has entrusted to this movement.
Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa is not simply compliant with the standard of Apostolic Distinctiveness. She *embodies* it — and in embodying it, she makes it beautiful.
In a generation where the pressure to conform to prevailing cultural aesthetics is immense, where the lines of modesty and consecration are constantly being renegotiated, where younger members look around for examples of what it looks like to maintain the standard with dignity and without apology — Deaconess Mary stands as a living, breathing, luminous answer. She does not carry the standard reluctantly. She does not bear it with a spirit of legalism or pride. She wears it as a woman who has understood, in the deepest and most personal terms, that holiness is a love language. That consecration is not constraint — it is consecration *to* something, to *Someone*, and that Someone is worthy of every sacrifice the standard asks.
To see her is to see the standard worn gracefully. To know her is to understand why the standard exists at all.
> She does not just uphold Apostolic Distinctiveness. She reveals why it matters.
The Ministry Behind the Curtain
*Faithful in What the Camera Never Captures*
There is a theology of hiddenness running through the Scriptures that the church has always known, even when it struggles to practice. It is the theology of the woman who sweeps her house looking for one lost coin. The theology of the servant who buries her talent in good soil and tends it in secret. The theology of the prayers offered in a closed room, rewarded by the Father who sees in secret.
Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa lives this theology.
She is one of those rare, irreplaceable members who understand that the church is held together not only by what happens on the platform but by everything that happens before the platform is set up, after the service is over, and in all the in-between spaces that no one photographs. The behind-the-scenes work — the preparation, the care, the logistics of love, the small acts of service that create the conditions for God to move — this is her domain, and she has claimed it with quiet, fierce dedication.
The church often does not know what it owes to people like her. It cannot fully account for how many services flowed smoothly because she made sure something was in place. It cannot fully trace how many members felt welcomed because she made them feel seen. It cannot fully measure how much of what happens in the visible life of the congregation is rooted in the invisible labour of her hands and her prayers.
But God knows. And that, for Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa, has always been enough.
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Education at Heart
*Investing in the Future She May Never Personally See*
Deaconess Mary carries within her a deep, settled conviction about the power of education — not as a secular commodity, but as a sacred investment. She understands that a mind well-formed and well-furnished is a tool God can use, a platform from which the gospel can be proclaimed with greater clarity and reach.
This conviction is not merely philosophical. It shows in how she engages with the young people around her. It shows in the encouragement she offers, in the interest she takes, in the quiet but unmistakable message she sends to every child and young person in her orbit: *Your future matters. Your education matters. Apply yourself. God is in it.*
There is something profound about a woman who has spent over two decades in service to a local church choosing to invest not only in the present congregation but in the people who will carry the church forward long after her season of service has run its course. That is not just kindness. That is vision. That is a woman who has understood that the kingdom of God is bigger than any single generation, and that her job is to serve her generation faithfully while setting up the next one for greatness.
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Kindness That Costs Her Something, and Love That Has No Bottom
You can tell a great deal about a person's spiritual condition by the quality of their kindness.
Kindness that is merely social — kindness that is deployed when it is comfortable, when it is reciprocated, when it costs nothing — that is not the kindness of the kingdom. But the kindness that persists when it is inconvenient, that reaches across difference and difficulty, that flows toward people who cannot offer anything in return — that is the kindness of God Himself, expressed through a vessel surrendered enough to carry it.
Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa carries that kindness. It is not a personality trait she performs. It is a spiritual reality she inhabits. People who have been on the receiving end of her kindness do not speak of it the way one speaks of a social courtesy. They speak of it the way one speaks of an encounter with grace.
And her love — *her love* — is the kind that theologians spend their careers trying to articulate. It is not an emotion she manages. It is a current she lives inside. She loves the Lord with a totality that reshapes everything around it: her service, her singing, her standards, her sacrifice, her investment in the young, her labour behind the scenes. All of it flows from the same source. All of it is an expression of a woman who decided, somewhere in the depths of her walk with God, that to love Him was the whole assignment — and that she would give herself to that assignment without reservation, without exhaustion, and without end.
You see it in how she treats the person no one is paying attention to. You see it in how she shows up in moments of grief, in moments of celebration, in moments of need. You see it in the way she sings — as someone singing *to* Someone, not merely *for* an audience. You see it in the standard she wears, in the service she renders, in the quiet authority she carries.
> Everything she does is evidence of a love affair with God that is now over twenty years deep — and still, by the grace of heaven, growing.
What the Assembly Owes Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa
It would be easy to describe this tribute as a celebration. It is that. But it is also something more. It is a corporate act of seeing — of choosing, deliberately, to make visible what has operated faithfully in the invisible. It is the church saying: *We see you. We honour you. We are grateful.*
Afrancho Central Assembly is what it is, in part, because of members like Deaconess Mary Ampofowaa. Her twenty-plus years of faithful service have left a permanent imprint on this congregation — in the spiritual atmosphere, in the lives of women she has mentored and modelled before, in the hymns that have been sung and will continue to be sung, in the hearts of young people who watched her and decided that lifelong consecration was not only possible but beautiful.
She will not stand here and take a bow. That is not who she is. But the least this assembly can do is stand and acknowledge what God has done in and through this woman — and to thank Him for entrusting her to us.
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## A Charge to the Assembly
Let us honour Deaconess Mary not only with words today, but with imitation across the seasons to come. Let the young women in this assembly look at her life and find in it a map. Let the young men look and understand what consecrated womanhood looks like in its fullness. Let every member find in her example permission to serve in secret, to sing with passion, to love without limits, and to remain — because remaining, as she has shown us, is itself a form of greatness.
And to Deaconess Mary herself, this assembly says what the Lord will one day say in fuller and more glorious terms:
> **"Well done, good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a few things — I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your Lord."**
> — Matthew 25:23
We celebrate you. We honour you. We love you.
*Amazing Member of the Month — April 2025*
*TAC-GH Afrancho Central Assembly*
*tac-ghafranchocentral.org/members-hub/amom*