
Wife of Abraham and mother of Isaac. Despite years of waiting, her faith was rewarded with the fulfillment of God's promise.
Sarah, originally named Sarai, was the wife of Abraham and one of the most significant women in biblical history. Born in Ur of the Chaldees, she journeyed with her husband into an unknown land, trusting in a promise from God that seemed impossible.
For decades, Sarah lived with the heartbreak of barrenness in a culture where a woman's worth was closely tied to her ability to bear children. Yet God had promised Abraham that his descendants would be as numerous as the stars. The waiting tested Sarah deeply — at one point she gave her servant Hagar to Abraham, leading to the birth of Ishmael and years of household tension.
When three visitors came to Abraham's tent and declared that Sarah would have a son within a year, she laughed in disbelief. She was ninety years old. But God's response was defining: 'Is anything too hard for the Lord?' True to His word, Isaac was born — his very name meaning 'he laughs' — turning Sarah's laughter of doubt into laughter of joy.
Sarah's story is one of imperfect faith meeting a perfect God. She stumbled, she doubted, she tried to take matters into her own hands. Yet God remained faithful to His promise. The New Testament honors her as a woman of faith (Hebrews 11:11) and a model of inner beauty and trust (1 Peter 3:5-6).
Sarah died at the age of 127 in Hebron, and Abraham mourned and wept for her. She remains a foundational matriarch — the mother through whom the covenant line continued, ultimately leading to Jesus Christ.
"Is anything too hard for the Lord? I will return to you at the appointed time next year, and Sarah will have a son."
— Genesis 18:14
"By faith Sarah herself received power to conceive, even when she was past the age, since she considered him faithful who had promised."
— Hebrews 11:11
"Sarah said, 'God has brought me laughter, and everyone who hears about this will laugh with me."
— Genesis 21:6
"For this is how the holy women who hoped in God used to adorn themselves, by submitting to their own husbands, as Sarah obeyed Abraham, calling him lord."
— 1 Peter 3:5-6
"Look to Abraham, your father, and to Sarah, who gave you birth. When I called him he was only one man, and I blessed him and made him many."
— Isaiah 51:2
Sarah waited 25 years for the promised child. Her story teaches us that God's delays are not denials. His timing is always purposeful and perfect
Sarah laughed at God's promise, yet she is remembered as a woman of faith. God doesn't require perfect faith, He works through our honest struggles and questions.
When Sarah gave Hagar to Abraham, she tried to fulfill God's promise through human effort. This reminds us that our solutions apart from God often create complications.
Isaac's name means 'laughter.' After years of tears and waiting, God turned Sarah's sorrow into overwhelming joy, a pattern He repeats throughout Scripture.
Peter highlights Sarah as an example of women whose beauty comes from a gentle and quiet spirit, not outward adornment. True beauty that is imperishable.
7-Days Journey with Sarah
A week-long devotional journey inspired by Sarah's life.
Each day includes a reflection task and a key Scripture verse
Modern obedience often requires leaving what feels secure before the outcome is visible. Sarah reminds us that faith can begin with a step into the unknown.
Write down one area of your life where you’re waiting on God. Commit it to prayer and release the timeline to Him.
📖 Proverbs 3:5-6
Prayer: “Lord, help me obey You even when I cannot see the full plan. Give me courage to leave familiar places of comfort. Teach me to trust Your leading.”
Focus: Trust, obedience, and active courage.
Modern believers often live in the tension between promise and fulfilment. Faith is learning to remain faithful in that in-between space.
Read Genesis 12:1-3. Journal about a promise God has placed on your heart and how you feel about the wait.
📖 Genesis 12:1-3
Prayer: “Father, help me live faithfully in the waiting season. Keep me from discouragement when the promise is slow. Strengthen me to remain steady.”
Focus: Trust, faith and encouragement.
Modern impatience can still lead us into shortcuts that create more pain than peace. Not every open door is God’s answer.
Identify one situation where you’ve tried to ‘help God along.’ Pray for the strength to let go and trust His plan.
📖 Proverbs 16:9
Prayer: “Father, keep me from forcing outcomes. Give me patience to wait for Your way. Heal the consequences of my hurried decisions.”
Focus: Patience, decisions, let go and let God.
Modern shame can be replaced with joy, but often through a process. God can heal what was mocked or despised.
Sarah made mistakes with Hagar. Write down past mistakes you still carry and pray for grace to forgive yourself.
📖 1 John 1:9
Prayer: “
Lord, heal every place of shame. Turn mockery into testimony. Let joy rise where hurt once lived.”
Modern maturity often comes through long seasons, not shortcuts. God forms trust through time.
Read Romans 8:28. List three difficult seasons that God used for good in your life.
📖 Romans 8:28
Prayer: “Lord, help me remain faithful over years, not just moments. Teach me long obedience. Sustain me through the process.”
Modern answered prayer does not end the story. God’s gifts often lead into new seasons of stewardship and trust.
Write out five promises from Scripture on cards. Place them where you’ll see them daily.
📖 2 Corinthians 1:20
Prayer: “Lord, help me steward fulfilled promises well. Keep me faithful in the next season. Teach me to keep trusting even after breakthrough”
Modern families are often complicated, and faith does not remove every tension. But God’s wisdom can guide responses.
If married, do something unexpected for your spouse today. If single, pray for your future relationships.
📖 Ephesians 5:25-28
Prayer: “
Lord, give me wisdom in family complexity. Help me speak truth with grace. Lead me in peace.”