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It is the angel of the Lord who finds Hagar. This is the first appearance of the phrase angel of the Lord
in Scripture, and as we compare it with other uses, we find that this
refers to none other than the pre-incarnate Christ. He says several
things to her. First, Where do you come from, and where are you going?
These are arresting questions. Hagar answers the first, but she has
nothing to say to the second. She does not know where she is going.
Where can she go? The question draws her helplessness sharply to her
attention.
Then the angel says, Return and submit. This is the only way
to experience the grace and blessing of God. Had she gone on wandering
into the wilderness, it would have been disastrous. Both she and the
child in her womb would have died. When God finds us wandering, this is
always what He says: Return and submit! Submit to the circumstances you dislike, and I will work it out. To do anything else is folly.
With the command to return comes the promise of blessing. Blessing always follows obedience. I will multiply your descendants so that they will be too numerous to count. And then follows the prophecy of Ishmael's nature. He shall be a wild ass of a man, his hand against every man and every man's hand against him. He will be a nonconformist, a Missouri mule—a man with whom no one can get along.
Hagar, glimpsing here something of God's omniscience and power, names Him The God Who Sees Me. This is the circumstance that gripped her. Here is a God who sees me and knows me just as I am as well as all that concerns me. So she named the well The Well of the Living One Who Sees Me.
Have you found God to be the one who lives and sees, the one who
knows all about your life and your circumstances? The one who knows the
past and the future and says to you as He said to Hagar, Return and submit? That is the place of promised blessing.
We are also told that this well is located between Kadesh and Bered. Kadesh means holiness, and Bered means hail or judgment.
Here is the well of grace, lying between holiness and judgment. When we
begin to stray from the place of God's blessing toward the certainty of
judgment, God meets us on the way at the well of grace, saying, Wait
a minute. I don't want to have to make this known to others. I don't
want to judge you openly. I don't want to bring trial or affliction or
heartache into your life to make you listen. Listen now. Return and
submit so I won't have to do this. That is the well of grace. So Hagar returns, and Ishmael is born.
Dear Father, teach me that You are the God Who Sees Me, and when I run, teach me to return and submit.
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