Wives, God Sees You
This post was written by Angela Suh, a Women’s Ministry intern at Harvest USA.
As a Harvest USA intern, some of my time has been dedicated to serving sexually betrayed wives through our biblical support group. I quickly learned that sexual betrayal in marriage has complicated, painful consequences and observed the tension these wives experience through feeling hopelessly stuck in their marriages.
A sexually betrayed wife faces her husbandโs violation of the marriage covenant. When children are present, she may have to consider boundaries and relational dynamics within the home. She may be burdened with the familyโs finances if the sexual betrayal caused his unemployment. Wives are sometimes unseen by their church leadership and left to suffer alone. Regardless of their circumstances, these betrayed wives are โbent overโ (Luke 13:10โ17), desperate (like Hannah, 1 Sam. 1), and longing to be seen (Gen. 16).
As I grieved with these women, I turned to Godโs words to Hagarโa woman shunned, moving toward a dead end, and longing to be seen.
Echoes of the Fall
Hagar was Saraiโs Egyptian servant. Because Sarai was frustrated by her infertility, she commanded her husband, Abram, to โgo in toโ Hagar so Sarai might obtain children through her. He listened, and when Hagar conceived, she looked at Sarai with contempt. Therefore, Sarai dealt harshly with Hagar and Hagar fled (Gen. 16:1โ6).
Sin drives this entire narrative. Sarai sinfully doubted Godโs promise to provide a son, leading her to take matters into her own hands. Abramโs sinful desires caused him to listen to his wifeโs voice and sleep with Hagar rather than protect Sarai (and Hagar) with Godโs promises.
Does this ring a bell? Sarai and Abramโs behavior mirrors the fall in the Garden of Eden. Rather than clinging to Godโs commands and promises, Eve doubted his words. She pursued knowledge with her very own handsโ โshe took of its fruit and ate, and she also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ateโ โlike Sarai, who โtook Hagar the Egyptian, her servant, and gave her to Abram her husband as a wifeโ (Gen. 3:6 and 16:3, my emphasis). Adam ate the fruit, without any question or objection, and Abram took a second wife.
Although the degree and impact of our sin may differ, itโs humbling to acknowledge that we have more similarities than differences when it comes to sinning against God.
Then the story in Genesis 16 reveals another layer of sin: Hagar responded to the wrong committed against her by being sinfully contemptuous of Sarai and running away (Gen. 16:4).
Sin begets sin and comes from the heart (Luke 6:45). The complex consequences of sexual unfaithfulness are not random or isolated from the person or circumstances. But they are birthed from the desires of the heart (James 1:14). Wives can see their husbandsโ sin for what it is even as, by Godโs grace, they soberly recognize and confess their own sinfulness. This is not to shift the blame or put responsibility for the husbandโs unfaithfulness onto the wife. But we live in a sinful world as sinful individuals. Although the degree and impact of our sin may differ, itโs humbling to acknowledge that we have more similarities than differences when it comes to sinning against God.
The God Who Sees
In Hagarโs flight, she meets the angel of the Lord โby a spring of water in the wilderness.โ He asked, โHagar, servant of Sarai, where have you come from and where are you going?โ (Gen. 16:7โ8). The angel of the Lord identified Hagar for who she was and met her where she was. Among all the titles and names he couldโve used, the angel identified her as โservant of Sarai.โ He looked at her with sober and realistic eyes.
The dualistic inquiry, โWhere have you come from and where are you going,โ recognizes Hagarโs past and notices her destination. Often, a sexually betrayed wife is so consumed by her husbandโs failure and sin that all she wants to doโif not physically, then emotionally and spirituallyโis run away.
But Godโs Word shows our Father stopping to ask his broken daughters where theyโre coming from and where theyโre going. God is all-knowing; he doesnโt need this information. Itโs like God asking Adam, โWhere are you?โ after the fall (Gen. 3:9). Of course, God knowsโhe is the God who sees. If God already knows, why does he ask?
The God Who Saves
God calls out and approaches in judgment. Yet Godโs pursuit of Adam and Eve reveals his mercy. In questioning Hagar, God reveals his kindness.
Friends, his inquiry is not to put us to shame but to meet us exactly where we are; he is never too far behind or ahead. Even when Hagar couldnโt see her destination, God carefully and firmly directed her. His ways and thoughts are higher than ours (Isaiah 55:9).
After the angel of the Lord commanded Hagar to return to Sarai and declared Godโs promises, she identified God as โa God of seeing.โ She said, โTruly here I have seen him who looks after meโ (Gen. 16:13). While broken and rejected, Hagar was seen and looked after by God, and that was enough for her.
While broken and rejected, Hagar was seen and looked after by God, and that was enough for her.
Hagarโs circumstances were not fixed. She still had to bear Abramโs child and return to her mistress. However, Hagar didnโt find comfort in her circumstances but in the God who cared for her. Out in the desertโlonely, scared, and running away from a terrible situationโthe God of the universe pursued Hagar. He knew her, looked after her, and โlistened to [her] afflictionโ (Gen. 16:11).
This is my hope and prayer for wives suffering from sexual betrayal: that they would lay their souls bare before God and be satisfied in him alone. I pray for reconciliation, for husbands to turn from their sins. But above all, I pray for wives to know and believe that God sees and looks after them. He gave his one and only Son, the perfect Husband, to take on his brideโs every sin and redeem all her suffering. He will bring us to our final dwelling place, where he will wipe away every tear. There will be no more death, sorrow, crying, or pain (Rev. 21:4). Until that day: Come, Lord Jesus, come.