Soulmate Gem
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Hagar: The Woman Who Named God | Genesis 16, 21 | Women of the Bible.
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Read More »In the beginning of the story, we might feel sorry for Sarah. She was dragged halfway across the Middle East because her husband was driven to pursue a vision that God had revealed only to him. We might empathize with Sarah’s agonizing situation, still childless years after her husband first heard God’s promise to make him the father of many nations. It was not uncommon in biblical times for people of power or status to seek children through their servants (the story of the feuding sisters Rachel and Leah, for example). Sarah suggests that Abraham sleep with her Egyptian slave girl Hagar to secure an heir. Once Hagar conceives, Hagar (perhaps understandably) looks down on her mistress Sarah, who later comes to regret the entire strategy. Sarah complains bitterly to Abraham, and Abraham—who comes off like a wave tossed about by the stormy seas of Sarah’s jealousy in this tale—abandons poor Hagar to the wrath of his disaffected wife. The pregnant Hagar, subjected to Sarah’s cruelty, runs away to the wilderness. She runs from humiliation and oppression into certain death. An angel of the Lord meets her in the wilderness and tells her to return and submit to Sarah. God assures her that she, too, will be the mother of a great nation. In response, Hagar becomes the only character in the Bible to name God: El Roi, “the God who sees me” (Genesis 16:13). Fast forward to our story in Genesis 21, and Hagar is sent away a second time to die in the wilderness, this time with her young child, Ishmael. Though she is met and saved by an angel again, this time her exile is permanent. Hagar’s story is Israel’s story. She is a slave, just as the children of Israel had been slaves in Egypt. Yet, in this story, Hagar was an Egyptian woman enslaved by an Israelite taskmaster. Consider what God might be saying to us through the irony of flipping these power dynamics. Hagar becomes a threat to her mistress once she delivers a son, just as Israel became a threat to Pharaoh when the people grew in number. Hagar suffered abuse at the hands of Sarah and Abraham, just as Israel faced abuse at the hands of its Egyptian taskmasters. And just as the Israelites ran away from their bondage in Egypt, so Hagar ran away from the cruelty of her mistress. Hagar’s story is an exodus story.
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Read More »There is no perfect person in all of the Bible’s stories. Every character in Genesis is as flawed as each one of us. Abraham and Sarah doubted God’s plan and promises. Hagar suffered sexual, physical, and emotional abuse at the hands of a man and woman who were bound to protect her and her child. At the same time, we can relate to Sarah and feel sorry for her. We pity Hagar. Perhaps we even feel sorry for Abraham as well. We recognize in this weird, strange story people who are, like us, deeply and irrevocably human. They are us. All of us. In the story of Hagar, we see both Israel’s story and our own story. Both Israel and the nations share a common destiny as children created, sustained, loved, and ultimately rescued by the same God. The people of the covenant are representative of all humanity. Wherever we might be found in our own wilderness stories, God is there with us, sustaining us, loving us, and rescuing us.
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