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The angel of the LORD found Hagar beside a spring of water in the wilderness, along the road to Shur. The angel said to her, “Hagar, Sarai’s servant,” … 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?” So that well was named Beer-lahai-roi (which means “well of the Living One who sees me”). It can still be found between Kadesh and Bered. (Genesis 16:7-8, 13-14 NLT)
Scripture is replete with names for God, each of which describe something about His character. We encounter one of those names here in Genesis 16 – a name ascribed to God by an Egyptian slave named Hagar. She calls Him “The God Who Sees”, or perhaps more accurately “The God Who Sees Me”.
Hagar found herself alone and in a bad situation not entirely of her own making. She had been a servant, literally a slave, in the household of Abram and Sarai for over 10 years, likely given to Abram by Pharaoh when they sojourned in Egypt (Genesis 12:16). Betrayed by her own people, given to Abram by Sarai in an attempt to help God fulfill His promise of a descendant, then chased out of the house by Sarai, she finds herself alone, pregnant, and traveling across the desert in an attempt to return to Egypt. If anyone had a reason to feel invisible and overlooked, it was Hagar.
It is here that the angel of the Lord found Hagar. This is not just any angel, it is the Lord Himself who appears to Hagar, in what scholars would call a theophany. Notice, the angel addresses Hagar by name, acknowledges her circumstances, and then addresses her future. What a breath of fresh air for Hagar who had only been addressed as the servant girl by Abram and Sarai. Hagar, who must have felt invisible, unimportant, and overlooked now knows that the God of Abraham knows her by name, and cares for her individually. So, she calls Him “the God who sees me.”
Maybe today, you feel overlooked, overwhelmed, and invisible. Perhaps it feels like you are wandering in an inhospitable desert. The very one who saw Hagar at the pool in the wilderness has not misplaced you. He sees you. Take time today, for the first time in a long time or perhaps for the first time, to see the Lord in your circumstances and linger by the pool of Living Water.
By Jesse Smith
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