Who is God? - 6 October 2015
The One who Sees Me
Louise Gevers
She gave this name to the LORD who spoke to her: "You are the God who sees me," for she said, "I have now seen the One who sees me." Genesis 16:13
A name is very important. It is the means by which a person is set apart as an individual and is given dignity; no-one would ever like to be referred to as ‘boy’, ‘girl’ or ‘it’ all his life. Your name determines who you are; it is the means by which you are introduced to someone and how that person refers to you afterwards.
A name usually also carries a meaning, which often reflects in the personality, character, or nature of its owner. This sets parents-to-be the difficult task of choosing a name worthy of their young, and often takes a full nine months to do it.
In the above Scripture, we have the surprising example of Hagar, a young slave girl, giving a name to God. She does not call Him by a single proper noun, but by her experience of one of His characteristics. He is to her “the God who sees me”.
Unlike Abram, she had not had the privilege of having God visit her personally, yet God’s actions show that He was as aware of her, the slave girl, as He was of her master Abram. In fact, it was Abram and, his wife, Sarah’s impatience to see God’s promises fulfilled, in their seemingly hopeless situation, which led to Hagar’s dire situation in the first place.
God had promised Abram that He would make a great nation of him through his offspring, even though Sarah was barren and past child-bearing. Abram and Sarah used faulty human reasoning and logic to interpret God’s promise, thus using Sarah’s young slave girl to provide the child. Then when God, in His timing, produced the miracle and Sarah gave birth to Isaac, Hagar and her son, Ishmael, were banished into the desert and would have died there, had it not been for the caring God, who saw their desperate situation and came to their rescue.
We all have moments in life when we feel helpless, fragile, vulnerable and alone, like Hagar, and wonder who actually knows or cares that we feel frightened and desperate. Do we trust in ‘the God who sees me’ to rescue us?
Who is God to me?
Prayer: All-seeing God, You see each me in my own unique situation and alone know my needs. Please enable me to see You at work in every aspect of my life, through Jesus Christ the Lord. Amen