The God Who Sees: Understanding Genesis 16

A woman in a brown hooded cloak gazes upward in a serene natural setting with trees in the background, illuminated by soft sunlight.

Genesis 16:13–16

This article concludes a four‑part series on Genesis 16. If you missed the earlier pieces, you can find them in previous posts. We began by watching Sarai and Abram take matters into their own hands, creating a mess that wounded everyone involved. Then we followed Hagar as she fled into the wilderness, only to be found by the God who sees the unseen. And in the third article, we watched the Lord gently confront her, call her to return, and assure her that her life and future were not forgotten. All of it prepares us for the final movement of this remarkable chapter.

Hagar returns home changed. She’s still a servant. Her circumstances haven’t magically improved. But she walks back with courage because she knows something she didn’t know before: God sees her.

She names the Lord “The God Who Sees Me” (Genesis 16:13). And Abram receives her testimony. He names the son she gives birth to Ishmael, meaning “God hears” (Genesis 16:15). Hagar’s return spoke to Abram. God showed him that he does hear. He knows. And Abram and Sarai can trust him.

That’s the heartbeat of Genesis 16. Not the failure of Abram and Sarai. Not the conflict between two women. But the God who steps into human mess and says, “I see you.”

He sees your fears. Your waiting. Your disappointments. Your pressures. Your problems. He sees the shortcuts you regret and the wounds you carry. And he invites you to trust him, not because you’ve earned his watchful care over you, but because he is faithful.

God doesn’t need your shortcuts. He needs your trust. And trusting him is something you will never regret.

If you want to meet the God who sees, open your Bible and read Genesis 16:1–16. You may find he has been looking for you all along.

God’s Pursuit in Genesis 16: A Journey of Healing

A pregnant woman in a flowing garment stands in a desert landscape during sunset, gently cradling her belly.

This is the third article in a four‑part series on Genesis 16.

Hagar runs. Who wouldn’t? Sarai mistreated her. Abram didn’t defend her. She was pregnant, alone, and heading toward Egypt, back toward the very slavery she came from.

But then something astonishing happens: “The angel of the Lord found her” (Genesis 16:7).

God searches for her. Picture emergency personnel combing the woods for a missing person. Resources mobilized. Eyes scanning every inch, refusing to give up. Of course, God already knows where Hagar is. But the language “found her” reveals something about God’s heart. The Lord is tenderly pursuing Hagar, stopping at nothing to reach her. To everyone else, she’s just a runaway slave. To God, she is someone worth seeking.

And notice how he approaches her. Not with a lecture. Not with condemnation. But with a question: “Where have you come from, and where are you going?” (Genesis 16:8).

Repentance often begins with a conversation. With honesty. With naming what’s gone wrong. Hagar admits, “I’m running away.” But she isn’t running to anything, just away from her pain. Many of us know that feeling. We run from disappointment, failure, the people who hurt us, or even our sin. But pain has a way of keeping pace with us.

Then comes the hard word: “Return” (Genesis 16:9). Not because Sarai was right. Not because the situation was ideal. But because running never heals anything. Sometimes God calls us to go back, not to abuse or danger, but to the places where bitterness has taken root. The place we least want to revisit is often the place where healing finally begins.

And then comes the comfort: God sees her future. He promises a son. He warns her of hardship. But He assures her she is not forgotten. The God who finds her in the wilderness is the same God who will carry her through what comes next.

This is where the story reaches out to us. Some of us feel unseen, by family, friends, or the world. Some feel like we’ve messed up too badly or wandered too far. Some are running without knowing where we’re going. Genesis 16 tells us about a God who meets people exactly there. A God who asks poignant questions. A God who sees the invisible. A God who pursues wanderers, not to shame them, but to restore them.

If you’ve never read this encounter, take a moment this week to open Genesis 16:7–12. It’s one of the most tender scenes in Scripture. Then ask the Lord to reveal any place where bitterness or resentment has taken root. Let Him make you better instead of bitter. He is near to the crushed in spirit, ready to catch those who fall into his merciful arms.

How the Gospel Rewrites the “Old Self” and Creates a New Life in Christ – Ephesians 4:17–24

Ephesians 4:17-24

In Ephesians 4:17–24, Paul describes two ways of being human: an “old self” that drifts into confusion and emptiness, and a “new self” renewed by the grace of Christ. If you take a moment to read the passage yourself, you’ll notice how honestly it speaks about the human heart.

What’s striking is the step Paul places between “putting off” the old and “putting on” the new. He doesn’t rush from one to the other. He pauses and says, “Be renewed.” Renewal isn’t something we manufacture. It’s something God does in us.

To illustrate this, imagine you’re writing a story using AI. You generate a character. Let’s call him Character B. You tell AI that Character B is self‑absorbed. He’s not cruel. He smiles. He’s polite. He seems pleasant. But underneath, he’s always calculating. If helping someone benefits him, he’s eager. If it costs him something, he suddenly becomes “busy.” AI writes him exactly that way.

Now imagine you rewrite Character B. You give him a new nature. You tell AI to make him genuinely kind and generous. Suddenly the entire story changes. He’s not trying harder. He’s not suppressing his true self. His core code has been rewritten. He doesn’t just act kind; he is kind. He doesn’t just smile; he genuinely cares. When he does good, it flows naturally.

That’s the difference between moralism and the gospel. Moralism says, “Try harder. Fix yourself. Do better.” Many of us grew up with that message, and it left us exhausted. Some walked away from church, because they were handed moralism instead of the gospel.

But the gospel is different. It doesn’t upgrade the old software. It installs an entirely new operating system. You’ll ache for Christ and genuinely want to follow him. It will not seem forced but natural.

Maybe you’ve never experienced that renewal. Paul pauses in this passage because he doesn’t want to assume his readers truly learned Christ. If that’s you, hear this clearly: the gospel does not mean getting your act together and then coming to Christ. The gospel means coming to Christ first and letting him renew you.

If you have a few quiet minutes, open a Bible. Read Ephesians 4:17–24. Let the words speak for themselves. You may find that the hope of a “new self” is closer than you think.

True Comfort in a World Obsessed with Ease

Isaiah 40:1-11

Since the pandemic, comfort has become a cultural obsession. Where do you go for comfort? Do you reach for the half gallon of ice cream in the freezer, settle in for a streaming marathon, or slip into your softest sweatpants?

Isaiah 40 begins with a word we all crave: Comfort. But this comfort doesn’t add pounds, wear thin, or fade with use. It endures when every other source fails. Over the coming weeks, I’ll explore how the comfort Isaiah 40:1–11 offers contrasts with the ways we typically chase comfort today.

We begin with this truth: True comfort comes from God’s redeeming work, not from present ease.

Many of us believe comfort will arrive when our schedules lighten, our workloads shrink, and our relational drama ceases. Isaiah 39 gives us a sobering example of that mindset. King Hezekiah receives devastating news: Babylon will invade, Jerusalem’s treasures will be carried off, and even his sons will be taken. Yet because this disaster won’t happen in his lifetime, he responds, “The word of the LORD… is good,” thinking, at least there will be peace in my days.

Hezekiah found comfort in present ease. It made him selfish. When present ease becomes our highest goal, we stop caring about anyone beyond ourselves.

Isaiah 40 announces better comfort, rooted not in ease but in redemption. God promises that Israel’s warfare will end, not just their exile in Babylon, but the deeper warfare caused by their sin.

Israel had forgotten the God who rescued her. To picture this, imagine a father who leaves his homeland to give his daughter a better life. Back home he was a doctor; here he works as a janitor so she can flourish. She grows up, becomes a doctor herself, but she rarely calls, scarcely visits, and abandons the virtues her father tried to pass down to her. That is what Israel did to God. He redeemed her from Egypt, nurtured her in the wilderness for forty years, passed down a good law, and gave her a verdant homeland. But she turned away. Almost every citizen was complicit. Now God promises to pardon her rebellion, by fully paying for it himself.

True comfort comes from knowing that Christ was crucified to pardon our sin. Hezekiah clung to ease and became self‑centered. Christ discomforted himself to bring us comfort. And that kind of comfort doesn’t shrink our hearts. Rather, it enlarges them. It makes us love God and others more, not less. True comfort gives us a purpose outside of ourselves that enriches us as we enrich the lives of those around us.

What’s Worth Your Head Space? Deep Roots, Part 5

Philippians 4:1-9

Before Paul offers any practical help for anxiety or fractured relationships, he anchors everything with one call: “Stand firm in the Lord” (Philippians 4:1). Last time we explored the practical discipline of reasonableness; now we turn to the battlefield of the mind

In a world overflowing with noise, the Apostle Paul offers a gentle but firm invitation: think about what is worthy of your thinking. The Greek word he uses in Philippians 4:8 carries the sense of accounting, stacking up what is praiseworthy, noble, pure, and lovely. It’s not just about positive thinking; it’s about intentional thinking. What we dwell on shapes who we become.

So count what’s true. Not the half-truths or fear-driven headlines, but the enduring truths of God’s Word. Count what’s noble, worthy of respect and admiration. Count what’s pure, untainted by hidden agendas. Count what’s lovely, beauty that stirs the soul such as a child’s hug, a lake shimmering in sunlight, a melody that lifts the heart, Jesus’ life laid down at the cross for yours.

And count what’s praiseworthy in others. When was the last time you encouraged a fellow believer by saying, “I just love the way I see the Lord at work in you when…”? In a culture quick to critique and slow to affirm, Christians are called to be discerning, not cynical but Spirit-led. Not every news story deserves your attention. Not every social media post needs your engagement. Not every demand is yours to meet. Make your thoughts captive to Christ.

This isn’t easy. That’s why Paul reminds us earlier in his letter: “Work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you…” (Phil. 2:12–13). We’re not left to do this alone. God is at work in us, shaping our desires and strengthening our resolve. But we do have a part to play.

Pray daily. Read Scripture. Mend broken relationships. Seek help when needed. Be reasonable. Take your requests to God. And above of this, focus your thoughts on what is worthy. Let your mind dwell where Christ reigns, and your outlook on life will follow.

In a world that clamors for your attention, choose what’s worth your head space. Choose what’s true, beautiful, and eternal. In two words: choose Christ.

Joy That Surpasses Circumstance: Deep Roots, Part 3

Phillipians 4:1-9

Before offering practical techniques in Phillipians 4:1-9, the Apostle Paul urged his hearers to stand firm in the Lord. Now Paul will turn to what we might call practical techniques, by first commending his hearers to rejoice.

In a world that often equates happiness with comfort, success, or favorable circumstances, the Apostle Paul offers a radically different vision: “Rejoice in the Lord always.” This isn’t a suggestion, but a command. And it’s not rooted in naive optimism or denial of hardship. Paul writes these words not from a sunlit garden but a dank prison cell, chained for proclaiming the gospel. Yet his letter to the Philippians drips with joy, a word mentioned no fewer than sixteen times in just four short chapters.

This joy isn’t circumstantial. It’s relational. It flows not from what Paul has, but from who he knows. The Christianity we encounter in the New Testament is vibrant, radiant, and deeply rooted in Christ. It’s not the slow march of moral obligation, but the joyful dance of grace. When people meet Jesus in Scripture, they don’t become dour; they rejoice. Not because their problems vanish, but because they’ve met the One who walks with them through every storm.

Have you ever reconnected with an old friend and felt like no time had passed? That deep sense of belonging, of being known and loved? That’s the kind of joy Jesus offers, only deeper and ever constant. He’s not a distant deity with a packed calendar. He’s a present Savior, a faithful counselor, a friend who lifts burdens we cannot carry. He took our sin and sorrow and bore it to the cross, putting it to death so we could live free (Colossians 2:14).

Free from the exhausting chase for success. Free from the need to be accepted by everyone. Free from the illusion that life must go our way. We’re free to simply be loved, known, and secure in Christ. That’s where genuine joy lives.

So if your days feel heavy, if the clouds gather, remember Paul’s words. Rejoice, not because life is easy, but because Jesus is near. Joy isn’t a fleeting emotion. It’s a settled state of being, anchored in a relationship with the One who never fails.

Radiate that kind of joy. Not with plastic smiles or forced cheerfulness, but the deep, unshakable gladness that comes from knowing Jesus. That’s the kind of joy our world needs. And it’s ours in Christ.

Deep Roots – Part 2

Philippians 4:1-9

Last time, we pictured an old oak tree – scarred but steadfast – standing firm through every storm. In Philippians 4:1-9, the Apostle Paul urges believers to do the same: to root their lives in something enduring: the gospel. “Stand firm in the Lord,” he writes, reminding us that conviction, not techniques, is what roots us when the winds of life blow.

Now Paul turns from principle to practice. In a surprising move, he names two women – Euodia and Syntyche – who’ve had a falling out. These weren’t strangers. They had once labored side by side in gospel ministry, likely as close friends. But something – perhaps a disagreement over how to carry out the work – has driven a wedge between them. And Paul, in a letter meant to be read aloud to the whole church, calls them to reconciliation.

He calls them out not because they’re bad nor because he’s angry. But because he loves them. He knows their names are written in the Book of Life. He knows their relationship matters.

How often do we see this play out in our own lives? A friendship falters. A family member becomes distant. A disagreement over politics, parenting, or priorities turns into a silent standoff. Maybe you’re in one right now. Maybe you’ve said – or thought – “I’ll never talk to them again.”

Paul doesn’t offer a truce or a compromise. He offers something deeper: “Agree in the Lord.” That doesn’t mean ignoring differences. It means remembering what matters most. It means returning to the shared foundation of Christ, where convictions concerning Christ outweigh personal opinions.

Christ himself modeled this. Though He was God, He didn’t demand His own way. He humbled Himself, took the form of a servant, and invited others to follow. He didn’t force unity. He fostered it through sacrificial love.

So, dear reader, if you’re stewing over someone’s opinion or nursing a grudge, consider this: Christ gave up His right to remain in heaven and came down to bring us together. Can we not do the same?

Let Christ be the center that holds everything else in place. Let the gospel be the soil where reconciliation grows. And let today be the day you take a step toward healing. Agree in the Lord. The oak still stands. So can you.

Known by Being Known

Psalm 139

Who are you, really?

In an age where we curate versions of ourselves through social media and struggle under the weight of comparison, Psalm 139 offers us something far more grounding than image or achievement: the soul-deep truth that we are fully known and deeply loved by God.

This isn’t abstract theology. It’s intensely personal. The God who made the stars also sees you when you lie awake at night, thoughts spinning. He knows every word on your tongue before you speak it, every fear and joy behind your silence. He knows your history, your path, your comings and goings, as a companion. Like a hand gently cupped around a marble about to roll off the table, God’s presence hems us in, protecting us from ourselves and from a world that often forgets our worth if we’ll let him.

This kind of knowing can feel frightening. What if God sees what I’m trying to hide? What if He’s disappointed?

And yet, the Psalmist reminds us that God’s gaze is not a spotlight of shame, but the steady light of love. The One who saw you in the womb and spoke you into existence also sees the parts of you that feel unfinished or unworthy and calls them “wonderfully made.” What would happen if we saw ourselves that way? If instead of chasing approval, we rested in the truth that we were handcrafted with purpose?

Even in moments of pain or confusion, when we might want to flee, we discover we cannot outrun the God who pursues us, to lead us home. Like the poet Malcolm Guite writes, “You search me out and lay your hand upon me,” not to constrain, but to steady and guide.

Perhaps the most freeing realization is this: when we open ourselves to the God who knows us completely, we begin to know ourselves truly. We don’t have to pretend, or pose, or self-promote. We are free to live honestly, courageously, and joyfully, secure in the care of the One who knows us best—and still chooses us.

As George MacDonald, said, “I would rather be what God chose to make me, than the most glorious creature that I could think of. For to have been thought about—born in God’s thoughts—and then made by God, is the dearest, grandest, most precious thing in all thinking.”.  

To be known by God is not merely comforting. It is transforming.

Let yourself be seen. And in being known, come to truly know the One who loves you.