Do you remember Hagar, from the book of Genesis?
Hagar was a slave girl of Abraham’s wife Sarah. As the years
passed and their promised child still didn’t arrive, the couple started getting
nervous about God’s timetable, and Sarah started scheming: Hagar would
sleep with Abraham and conceive an heir for the octogenarian. Her plan worked
too well: Hagar, when she realized she was pregnant, “no longer respected” her
barren mistress (16:4). Sarah, in response, “dealt harshly” with her (16:6),
causing the young woman to run away.
Now Hagar, a slave girl forced to bear her master’s child,
is wandering alone in the desert, with no idea where to find shelter or
provisions and no place to make a home for her son. It’s hard to imagine a more
desperate, hopeless situation for a young girl to find herself in.
And that’s when it happened. “The angel of
the Lord found Hagar beside a spring of water in the wilderness,
along the road to Shur.” (Gen 16:7) When she must have thought all was lost,
Hagar was found. I love that it tells you exactly where she was
when that angel appeared: beside the spring along the road to Shur. I can just
imagine Hagar telling the story, ‘I was on the road to Shur, and I got to the
spring—you know the place—and that’s when I heard this voice…’
The angel assured her that she could return home and told
her,
“You will give birth to a son. You are to name him Ishmael
(which means ‘God hears’), for the Lord has heard your cry of
distress…”
Thereafter, Hagar used another name to refer to
the Lord, who had spoken to her. She said, “You are the God who sees me.” She
also said, “Have I truly seen the One who sees me?” (16:11, 13)
In Hebrew, “the God who sees me” (verse 13) is a name: El-roi.
That’s who the Lord was to Hagar. The God who found her, heard her cry, and saw
her.
Hagar’s story is an example of something we see a lot in
scripture: how God arrives just at the moment when you feel most lost and
alone, when things seem most hopeless, right when you’re tempted to despair.
There and then is when you hear the voice of God.
A vulnerable girl roaming, parched and pregnant, through the
desert.
Slaves wailing as their Egyptian masters murder their
newborns.
A fisherman out of his boat and out of his depth, flailing
in the waves, crying out for a Savior.
A body tattered with nail, spear, and thorn holes lying in a
pitch-black tomb, the entrance stonewalled shut.
And that’s when God shows up.
That’s because, no matter how dark and desperate your
circumstances are, God is El-roi. The Lord sees you and hears you. And,
because God is El-roi, the God who sees, there is always hope.
You can listen to this devotional right here:
1 comment:
THANK YOU, SIR😊
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