God heard the boy crying, and the
angel of God called to Hagar from heaven and said to her, “What is
the matter, Hagar? Do not be afraid; God has heard the boy crying as he
lies there.
Genesis 21:17
This last week has been pretty miserable. Like anyone in crisis, I feel
like most of what I do is wait. Wait for an answer, wait for help, wait for
things to get better…and…nothing.
Well, not nothing,
obviously not nothing. But what feels like a void of unchanging hopelessness.
I'm sure some of you have been there. I also know that some of you are standing
on the other side. Some of you have shared your stories with me, of God
working, of moving from hopeless to hopeful, of trust in God and Jesus's time,
healing the deep places of your heart.
Here we meet Hagar. She
seems like a pawn in someone else's game. She is sent away with a skin of
water and a loaf of bread. She sits away from the bush, unwilling to watch her
son die. Here is hopelessness at its best.
But El Roi answers.
"The God who sees…"
He sees her pain. He sees
her struggle. He sees her hunger. He sees her aching heart. I need to know
that. I need to know that God sees me.
And so He shows me.
I had a friend cry with me
yesterday. Cry. Audibly. I have rarely felt so loved.
I had a friend tell me that
he finally understood what Paul meant when he said he was suffering for another
person. He felt my pain, our pain, as his own.
My sisters have told me
countless times that they would lift my burden if there was any possible way
they could.
I am not just given a loaf
of bread and a skin of water, but meals come, food is served, and sometimes I
don't even know where it came from.
There are prayers said,
sometimes in the wee hours of night, on our behalf.
This is one reason why God
created the Church. This is the visible Church lifting up our arms, when we
ourselves can not. This is the visible Church, wrapping their arms around me
and letting me cry. This is the visible Church seeing through the compassionate
lens of a Savior who came to redeem our crisises and heal our broken
hearts.
This is a God who sees me, through you.
He sees each of us, beautiful
sisters. It is His name. And He can not deny who He is. Whatever our pain,
whatever our joy, whatever our struggle.
El Roi…He sees me. He sees
my sweet, sweet husband. He sees, and that is my Hope each day.