Some crises don’t come from sudden tragedy but from long-term mistreatment, exclusion, or being pushed out when you are no longer convenient. Scripture does not ignore these experiences. One of the most overlooked yet powerful stories of hope in crisis belongs to Hagar.
Scripture
“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 (NIV)
Historical Context
Hagar was an Egyptian enslaved woman in Abraham’s household. She had no power, no legal protection, and no voice. Used to produce an heir, she was later mistreated and ultimately sent away into the wilderness with her child—effectively discarded.
In the ancient world, this was a death sentence. A woman, a foreigner, enslaved, alone, and without resources had no realistic hope of survival.
Yet Genesis tells us something radical: God met Hagar in the wilderness. Not Abraham. Not Sarah. God.
Hagar became the first person in Scripture to name God—calling Him El Roi, “the God who sees me.” Her hope was born not from safety or stability, but from being seen in her most vulnerable moment.
Modern Application
Hope in crisis is sometimes born after abandonment.
- Hope may come after rejection, not before it. God met Hagar after she was sent away, not while she was protected.
- Being unseen by people does not mean being unseen by God. Hagar’s value did not depend on her status or usefulness.
- Hope does not erase trauma—but it can interrupt despair. God did not erase Hagar’s past; He sustained her future.
- Survival itself can be holy. In some seasons, hope looks like staying alive, caring for your child, or trusting God for the next step only.
For those who have been marginalized, harmed, or quietly erased—Hagar’s story insists that God’s attention is not reserved for the powerful or respectable.
Reflection Questions
- Have you ever felt used, discarded, or overlooked in a crisis?
- Where might God be meeting you after disappointment rather than before it?
- What does it mean for you personally to believe God sees you?
- What small form of hope is sustaining you right now?
Closing Prayer
God who sees,
You meet us in places we did not choose and circumstances we did not deserve. When we feel abandoned, remind us that You are near. When our hope feels fragile, help us trust that being seen by You is enough to keep going. Strengthen those surviving crisis quietly and courageously. Speak life where the world has spoken loss. We rest in Your attentive care.
Amen.

