8 The child grew and was weaned, and on the day Isaac was weaned Abraham held a great feast. 9 But Sarah saw that the son whom Hagar the Egyptian had borne to Abraham was mocking, 10 and she said to Abraham, “Get rid of that slave woman and her son, for that woman’s son will never share in the inheritance with my son Isaac.” 11 The matter distressed Abraham greatly because it concerned his son. 12 But God said to him, “Do not be so distressed about the boy and your slave woman. Listen to whatever Sarah tells you, because it is through Isaac that your offspring will be reckoned. 13 I will make the son of the slave into a nation also, because he is your offspring.” 14 Early the next morning Abraham took some food and a skin of water and gave them to Hagar. He set them on her shoulders and then sent her off with the boy. She went on her way and wandered in the Desert of Beersheba. 15 When the water in the skin was gone, she put the boy under one of the bushes. 16 Then she went off and sat down about a bowshot away, for she thought, “I cannot watch the boy die.” And as she sat there, she began to sob. 17 God heard the boy crying, and the angel of God called to Hagar from heaven and said to her, “What is the matter, Hagar? Do not be afraid; God has heard the boy crying as he lies there. 18 Lift the boy up and take him by the hand, for I will make him into a great nation.” 19 Then God opened her eyes and she saw a well of water. So she went and filled the skin with water and gave the boy a drink. 20 God was with the boy as he grew up. He lived in the desert and became an archer. 21 While he was living in the Desert of Paran, his mother got a wife for him from Egypt. (Genesis 21:8-21 NIV)
There's a certain new style of story found on social media such as FaceBook, TikTok, Instagram, and others. These stories are called A.I. stories. They follow a certain plot and theme, and most are about dysfunctional families. And boy would this story fit right into that category. With one exception. This story was not generated from Artificial Intelligence. This is a God story. A story about the Father of the Faith, Abraham.
Opening: The Ones Who Weren’t Supposed to Be There
Hagar does not belong in this story, if you follow the logic of the people around her. She is an Egyptian slave woman, a secondary figure in someone else’s covenant narrative. The promise came to Abraham. The covenant was confirmed through Sarah. The child of the promise has now been born, and there is no longer any obvious place for Hagar and her son in the household. Sarah sees to that with a brutal efficiency: get rid of them. There was some impatience on the part of Sarah, who thought that maybe God wanted Abraham to have a son not through her, but someone else, like Hagar, her slave girl. Now that Sarah had her promised child, she is bothered that the "other woman" and her child, are still around. She orders Abraham to send away Hagar and her son, Ishmael.
And so, with a skin of water and some food, Hagar is sent into the desert with her boy. The water runs out. The child is dying. She puts him under a bush and walks away — not because she does not love him, but because she loves him too much to watch what is coming. She sits down a bowshot away and she weeps.
This is one of the rawest scenes of human despair in all of Scripture. And it is precisely here — in the wilderness, with an empty water skin and a dying child and a mother who has given up — that God does something that connects this ancient story directly to the promise of Pentecost.
He opens her eyes.
God Hears the Ones Nobody Else Is Listening For
Before God opens Hagar’s eyes, he does something else. He hears. The angel of God calls to her from heaven and says: “What is wrong, Hagar? Do not be afraid; God has heard the boy crying as he lies there.”
God heard the boy. Not the famous patriarch. Not the covenant heir. The boy who was in the wrong place at the wrong time, the son of the slave woman, the one who had just been expelled from the household of promise. In the middle of the desert, under a bush, voiceless and dying — God heard him.
This is one of the most important Pentecost truths in the entire Old Testament. The Spirit poured out at Pentecost was poured out on all flesh — sons and daughters, young and old, slave and free. Not on the religiously credentialed. Not on the covenant insiders only. All flesh. The Pentecost vision is precisely the vision that Hagar’s story prefigures: a God whose hearing is not limited to the people in the room of promise, whose attention reaches into the desert, whose Spirit goes where the institutionally approved are not looking.
Paul makes this explicit when he quotes the story of Hagar in Galatians 4. He uses the two sons — Ishmael, born of the slave woman, and Isaac, born of the free woman — as a picture of two ways of approaching God: the way of law and human arrangement, and the way of promise and Spirit. The Pentecost outpouring is the fulfillment of the promise — and it overflows every boundary that the law-and-arrangement approach would have drawn around it.
God heard the boy in the desert. He hears the ones the rest of us are not listening for. And the Spirit poured out at Pentecost is the Spirit of that same hearing — moving into the deserts we have not thought to look in, finding the ones under the bushes, calling out to them from heaven.
Then God Opened Her Eyes
The most luminous line in the passage is also the most understated: “Then God opened her eyes and she saw a well of water.”
The well was already there. It had been there all along. Hagar was not saved by a miraculous creation of water in the desert. She was saved by the opening of her eyes to what was already present but invisible to her in her despair.
This is a Pentecost image of the first order. The Spirit at Pentecost did not bring something entirely foreign into the world. He revealed what had been present all along — the risen Christ, the love of the Father, the power of the resurrection that had already occurred — and opened the eyes of the disciples to see it in its fullness. Before Pentecost, they had seen Jesus with their physical eyes. After Pentecost, they saw him with the Spirit’s eyes — and what had seemed like the end of everything became the beginning of everything.
John’s Gospel describes the Spirit as the one who will guide you into all truth — who will take what belongs to Christ and make it known to you, who will open the interior eyes of the believer to see what is already real. The Spirit is, in this sense, the great eye-opener. He does not manufacture a different reality. He opens us to the reality that God has already created and placed before us.
Hagar was weeping at a bowshot’s distance from the water that would save her son. Many of us are doing the same thing. We are sitting at a bowshot’s distance from the resource God has already placed in our desert, unable to see it because grief or fear or exhaustion has closed our eyes. The cry of this passage — and the cry of Pentecost — is: God, open our eyes.
And the promise of the Spirit, poured out on all flesh, is that he is precisely the one who does.
Lift the Boy Up
The angel’s instruction to Hagar before he opens her eyes is worth sitting with: “Lift the boy up and take him by the hand.”
Before the well is revealed. Before the water is poured. Before the rescue is complete. Hagar is asked to do one thing: stop sitting at a distance from the dying child she loves, go back to him, and take his hand.
This is not a trivial instruction. Going back to where the child is means going back to the thing that is breaking her heart. It means facing the grief she walked away from rather than managing it from a safer distance. It means choosing presence over protection of herself from the pain of the situation.
The Pentecost parallel is direct. The disciples in the upper room were sitting at a distance from the city that had crucified their Lord — behind locked doors, managing their grief from a safer distance. The Spirit came and the instruction was the same: go back into the city. Go back to the people who rejected him. Lift the boy up. Take him by the hand. Go to where the need is, not away from it.
And here is the sequence that the passage establishes, and that Pentecost confirms: the going back comes before the eyes are fully opened. Hagar is told to lift the boy before she sees the well. The disciples are told to go into Jerusalem before they fully understand what is about to happen. Faith is asked to move toward the need before the resource is fully visible. And in the moving, the eyes are opened.
God opened her eyes. She saw the well. She filled the skin. She gave the boy a drink. In that order. First the opening. Then the seeing. Then the filling. Then the giving. That is the Pentecost sequence too — Spirit opens, believer sees, receives, pours out.
For Reflection
Hagar’s story is a Pentecost story because it is a story about a God whose Spirit reaches into the deserts that fall outside the boundaries of official blessing — who hears the ones nobody else is listening for, who opens eyes to what is already present and already sufficient, and who sends his people back toward the need rather than away from it.
The well was already there. The water was already waiting. The God who heard the boy already knew where the rescue was. What Hagar needed was not a different desert. She needed opened eyes.
The Spirit poured out at Pentecost is the Spirit who opens eyes. He opened the eyes of the disciples to see the risen Christ in his fullness. He opened the eyes of three thousand in Jerusalem to see their need and the one who met it. He has been opening eyes ever since — in deserts and in upper rooms, in the places where the water has run out and the places where the water was always there but invisible until the Spirit came.
Where are you sitting at a bowshot’s distance from something God is asking you to move toward? Where has despair or exhaustion or the accumulated weight of a hard season closed your eyes to a well that may already be there, waiting to be seen? The same angel who called to Hagar from heaven is calling to you: do not be afraid. Lift the boy up. Take him by the hand. And let the Spirit open what grief has closed.
PRAYER: Loving God thank You for allowing us who try to be at a safe distance to finally hear and approach where the need is. Give us the faith to listen, the faith to have our eyes open. Give us the faith to help those who are in need. Fill our hearts with love, our minds with compassion and our bodies with the boldness to reach out to those in need; for this is the way we will win the world for You; in Jesus' name we pray, amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Be attentive to God's leading, to have our eyes open to the needs aournd us and this help others in loving and genuine ways.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! Going forth in service will win the world for Jesus Christ.
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.
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