This message was preached at Word Of Grace Church on 15th March 2026, by Lasya. For the audio , please click here. For the worship, please click here. Seen, Heard, and Held: The Story of Hagar
We are in a series exploring women from the Bible, and today
we turn to a surprising and often overlooked figure—Hagar.
She has been called many things: a problem, a mistake, a
consequence of poor decisions. Her story is wrapped in pain, rejection, and
injustice. A slave. A foreigner. A woman used and discarded. And yet, hers is
one of the most powerful encounters with God in all of Scripture.
Hagar becomes the first person—not just the first woman—to
whom the Angel of the Lord appears.
Her story unfolds in three defining stages: The Crisis,
The Contempt, and The Crossroad.
1. The Crisis
Hagar enters the biblical narrative in the middle of a
deeply human struggle—a crisis of faith, infertility, and moral compromise.
Sarai, unable to bear children, turns to a culturally
accepted but spiritually misguided solution. Instead of trusting God’s promise,
she leans on human reasoning. She gives Hagar, her servant, to Abram in an
attempt to produce the promised child.
This wasn’t just a decision—it was a reflection of misplaced
trust.
Sarai knew about God, but in that moment, she didn’t
trust His nature.
How often do we do the same?
When life feels delayed or uncertain, we’re tempted to look
for quick solutions:
- Overworking
- Endless
scrolling
- Emotional
escapes
- Seeking
validation from the wrong places
We try to solve spiritual problems with worldly answers.
Abram, too, fails in this moment. Instead of leading with
discernment and faith, he passively agrees. Like Adam in the garden, he
abdicates responsibility.
And Hagar?
She has no voice in the matter.
She isn’t consulted. She isn’t comforted. She is simply taken.
What’s important to recognize is this: Hagar’s situation
was not the result of her sin, but the sin of others.
Sometimes, the pain we carry is not self-inflicted—but
inherited, imposed, or inflicted by others.
And if we’re honest, like Sarai, we can sometimes let our
past wounds shape harmful patterns. The hurt we don’t heal can become hurt we
pass on.
2. The Contempt
After Hagar conceives, the situation quickly unravels.
What began as a “solution” becomes a breeding ground for
pride, jealousy, and resentment.
Hagar begins to look at Sarai with contempt. In her culture,
fertility was status, and suddenly Hagar had what Sarai did not.
But before we judge her too quickly, we should pause.
How often do we measure worth by comparison?
How often do we silently rank ourselves against others?
Contempt is subtle—but destructive.
Sarai, now wounded and humiliated, lashes out. Instead of
reflecting, she blames Abram. Abram, again avoiding responsibility, hands Hagar
back to Sarai.
“Do whatever you want.”
And Sarai does—harshly.
The abuse becomes so unbearable that Hagar flees into the
wilderness, possibly pregnant and alone.
What started as a lack of trust in God spirals into broken
relationships, injustice, and suffering.
This is the danger of pursuing outcomes without God.
Because success without God is not success—it’s a setup for
deeper brokenness.
3. The Crossroad
And then, everything changes.
In the wilderness, at her lowest point, Hagar has an
encounter that transforms her story.
God finds her.
Not Abram.
Not Sarai.
God.
She is by a spring of water when the Angel of the Lord
appears and asks her a profound question:
“Where have you come from, and where are you going?”
Hagar knows what she’s running from—but she doesn’t know
where she’s headed.
And isn’t that true for so many of us?
We know our pain.
We know what we want to escape.
But we often don’t know the right direction forward.
God meets her in that confusion.
He calls her by name.
He sees her.
He speaks to her.
For the first time in her story, Hagar is truly
acknowledged.
God asks her to return—not as a dismissal of her pain, but
as a redirection of her purpose. Along with the instruction comes a promise:
her child will not be forgotten. He will be blessed.
She is told to name her son Ishmael, meaning “God
hears.”
For a woman who had been unseen, unheard, and
disregarded—this changes everything.
And her response is remarkable.
She gives God a name:
El Roi — “The God who sees me.”
A Story That Changes Ours
Hagar’s story is not ultimately about suffering—it’s about encounter.
One moment with God redefines her identity.
She is no longer just:
- A
slave
- A
victim
- A
mistake
She becomes someone seen, heard, and known by God.
And that truth extends to us.
We all face crossroads in life:
- Will
we live defined by our pain?
- Or
will we live under God’s purpose?
Hagar chose to believe that her suffering would not be the
final word over her life.
And we are invited to make the same choice.
Why This Matters
Why follow God, even when it’s difficult?
Because:
- He
sees you when others overlook you
- He
hears you when no one else listens
- He
meets you in your wilderness
There is no deeper hope than this.
If you’ve ever felt unseen, unheard, or forgotten—Hagar’s
story reminds you:
You are not invisible to God.
He is still El Roi.
The God who sees.
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