God’s Love – For the Rejected
by Sue Griffiths
Abraham, that great patriarch of faith, that great Friend of God – Abraham also wobbled in his faith. When he doubted that he would ever have a child with his own wife Sarai, at Sarai’s suggestion, he takes his wife’s maid Hagar to have a son with her.
So now, Hagar is pregnant, and the maid despises her barren mistress. Sarai responds with jealousy and bullying, until the pregnant Hagar flees into the desert, while Abraham does nothing.
But God has seen it all. An angel of God meets Hagar in the desert. He addresses her by name. He knows she is pregnant with a son. He tells her to return to her mistress and that her son is to be called Ishmael – which means ‘God hears me’.
This rejected woman, Hagar, has met an angel! No-one else seems to care for her plight and the injustice done to her. But God sees her. Hagar says, ‘I have now seen the One who sees me.’ She returns to Abraham and Sarai, and her son Ishmael is born. There is celebration for this son’s birth. This is the heir to Abraham! Or is he?
The miracle happens, and barren Sarai gives birth to Isaac. Tension rises again between Sarah and Hagar until Hagar is turned out, a second time, into the desert, this time with her son.
She has no escort, no donkey even. Just food on her shoulder and a skin of water. Is she meant to survive on that? When the water is gone, she hides her son under a bush and moves away. She can’t bear to see him die. But God hears her. God sees her. He meets Hagar in the desert – again!
God makes promises to Hagar about her son: ‘Lift the boy up and take him by the hand and I will make him into a great nation.’ Then God opens Hagar’s eyes, and she sees a well of water. And we are told: ‘God was with the boy as he grew up. He lived in the desert and became an archer’ (Genesis 21:17-18).
This is a sorry story of disobedience, of not believing God’s promises, of rivalry and weakness. But, for me, it is also a story of God caring for the downtrodden, the disobedient, the rejected. Hagar and her son were so rejected. And God met her, in her deep distress, twice. He saw her. He saw it all.
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