God Knows Me
God promised the aging
Abraham and Sarah a son. But when God was unexpectedly slow in fulfilling his
promise, Sarah came up with a ”brilliant” solution. She offered her servant Hagar
to her husband as a surrogate child bearer. It didn’t take long for this
harebrained plan to run amok. When jealous Sarah mistreated pregnant Hagar, Hagar
ran away.
But God chased after Hagar, finding
her in the desert. He asked her: Where
have you come from, and where are you going? Hagar was stunned by this conversation: You are the God who sees me. I have seen the one who sees me. Hagar
then gave God the name, You are the God
who sees me.
Ben Patterson explains Hagar’s
perspective: “For a slave girl who had no rights of her own, who was no more
than a piece of property to her master, . . . there could be no better name. He cared for her. He saw her. He saw her! To God she was not a slave, she was Hagar. Certainly Abram and
Sarai had not seen her. But she was a person, and she now knew that God saw her
as such and that what happened to her mattered to him.”
Similarly, when Jesus went to
the home of Simon, the Pharisee, and a prostitute lavished her perfume, her
tears, and her kisses on Jesus’ feet, Simon was horrified. Jesus confronted Simon’s blindness: Do you see this woman? Simon could not
see that woman. To him, she was a category, a classification, a kind of woman—a
whore. She was not that to Jesus. She was a person, his sister, a daughter of
God. Jesus has never seen a kind of
person. He sees only you and me. To know that, to really be struck by that
truth, is to be transformed.”
Who am I then? As David
contemplated the glory of the heavens, the work of God’s fingers, the moon and
the stars, he asked: What is man that you
are mindful of him, the son of man that you care for him? When we
contemplate the vastness of the universe and an earth with billions of people,
it is mind boggling to think about a God who actually sees me and knows me, a
God who knows me down to the number of hairs on my head!
In other ancient Near East
religions, the gods remained “remote and aloof . . . They created and observed,
but they did not intervene in events.” The concept of a personal God who wanted
to have a relationship with a servant girl, was wildly radical. Like Hagar, you
may think you are disposable—but God doesn’t! He sees you. He sees you! He sees
you!! And he wants to help you become the person he created you to be. God sent
Hagar back to Sarah. Her God-given task was to serve Sarah and raise up her own
son. She obeyed the God who had her in his sights.
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