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Seen in The Wilderness: Meeting The God who Sees You When You Feel Invisible
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8231517558
- EAN9798231517558
- Date de parution27/10/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurWalzone Press
Résumé
You did not choose the wilderness; but somehow, you woke up in it. Maybe it was heartbreak. Abandonment. A diagnosis. A betrayal. Or just the slow erosion of joy. You look around and see silence. You feel unseen. Forgotten. Misunderstood. But here is the truth: the wilderness is not a punishment. It is a place of encounter. In Genesis 16, Hagar, a servant, a woman rejected and used, runs into the desert.
Pregnant, alone, and desperate, she meets God. Not in a temple. Not in a crowd. But in the wilderness. And she gives Him a name: El Roi, "The God who sees me."This book is for every Hagar. Every soul who has been cast out, overlooked, or silenced. It is a journey of healing, identity, and divine restoration. Because the God who saw Hagar sees you too. There comes a point in life when you find yourself in a place you never planned to be, a place of emptiness, silence, and searching.
It is not always a physical wilderness, but an emotional or spiritual one. You go through the motions of life, yet deep inside, you wonder if anyone really sees you. Maybe you have smiled through exhaustion, prayed through uncertainty, or served others while silently feeling unseen. You have questioned your worth, your purpose, or even God's attention toward you. And perhaps you have thought, Does God still notice me here? Does He still have a plan for me when I feel lost and forgotten?If those questions have ever crossed your heart, this book is for you.
The wilderness is not just a location, it is a condition of the soul. It ss the space between what was and what will be. It is where God strips away the noise, the distractions, and the false identities that we have carried, so He can reveal who we truly are. Its uncomfortable, but it's also holy. Because in the wilderness, the same God who led Hagar to a well of living water can meet you in your emptiness and show you that you are seen, valued, and loved beyond measure.
This journey is not about escaping the wilderness; it is about encountering God in it. Hagar's story in Genesis 16 is a powerful reminder that being unseen by others does not mean being unnoticed by God. She was a servant, a foreigner, and a woman who felt used and forgotten. Yet in her moment of despair, God showed up, not with condemnation, but with compassion.
Pregnant, alone, and desperate, she meets God. Not in a temple. Not in a crowd. But in the wilderness. And she gives Him a name: El Roi, "The God who sees me."This book is for every Hagar. Every soul who has been cast out, overlooked, or silenced. It is a journey of healing, identity, and divine restoration. Because the God who saw Hagar sees you too. There comes a point in life when you find yourself in a place you never planned to be, a place of emptiness, silence, and searching.
It is not always a physical wilderness, but an emotional or spiritual one. You go through the motions of life, yet deep inside, you wonder if anyone really sees you. Maybe you have smiled through exhaustion, prayed through uncertainty, or served others while silently feeling unseen. You have questioned your worth, your purpose, or even God's attention toward you. And perhaps you have thought, Does God still notice me here? Does He still have a plan for me when I feel lost and forgotten?If those questions have ever crossed your heart, this book is for you.
The wilderness is not just a location, it is a condition of the soul. It ss the space between what was and what will be. It is where God strips away the noise, the distractions, and the false identities that we have carried, so He can reveal who we truly are. Its uncomfortable, but it's also holy. Because in the wilderness, the same God who led Hagar to a well of living water can meet you in your emptiness and show you that you are seen, valued, and loved beyond measure.
This journey is not about escaping the wilderness; it is about encountering God in it. Hagar's story in Genesis 16 is a powerful reminder that being unseen by others does not mean being unnoticed by God. She was a servant, a foreigner, and a woman who felt used and forgotten. Yet in her moment of despair, God showed up, not with condemnation, but with compassion.
You did not choose the wilderness; but somehow, you woke up in it. Maybe it was heartbreak. Abandonment. A diagnosis. A betrayal. Or just the slow erosion of joy. You look around and see silence. You feel unseen. Forgotten. Misunderstood. But here is the truth: the wilderness is not a punishment. It is a place of encounter. In Genesis 16, Hagar, a servant, a woman rejected and used, runs into the desert.
Pregnant, alone, and desperate, she meets God. Not in a temple. Not in a crowd. But in the wilderness. And she gives Him a name: El Roi, "The God who sees me."This book is for every Hagar. Every soul who has been cast out, overlooked, or silenced. It is a journey of healing, identity, and divine restoration. Because the God who saw Hagar sees you too. There comes a point in life when you find yourself in a place you never planned to be, a place of emptiness, silence, and searching.
It is not always a physical wilderness, but an emotional or spiritual one. You go through the motions of life, yet deep inside, you wonder if anyone really sees you. Maybe you have smiled through exhaustion, prayed through uncertainty, or served others while silently feeling unseen. You have questioned your worth, your purpose, or even God's attention toward you. And perhaps you have thought, Does God still notice me here? Does He still have a plan for me when I feel lost and forgotten?If those questions have ever crossed your heart, this book is for you.
The wilderness is not just a location, it is a condition of the soul. It ss the space between what was and what will be. It is where God strips away the noise, the distractions, and the false identities that we have carried, so He can reveal who we truly are. Its uncomfortable, but it's also holy. Because in the wilderness, the same God who led Hagar to a well of living water can meet you in your emptiness and show you that you are seen, valued, and loved beyond measure.
This journey is not about escaping the wilderness; it is about encountering God in it. Hagar's story in Genesis 16 is a powerful reminder that being unseen by others does not mean being unnoticed by God. She was a servant, a foreigner, and a woman who felt used and forgotten. Yet in her moment of despair, God showed up, not with condemnation, but with compassion.
Pregnant, alone, and desperate, she meets God. Not in a temple. Not in a crowd. But in the wilderness. And she gives Him a name: El Roi, "The God who sees me."This book is for every Hagar. Every soul who has been cast out, overlooked, or silenced. It is a journey of healing, identity, and divine restoration. Because the God who saw Hagar sees you too. There comes a point in life when you find yourself in a place you never planned to be, a place of emptiness, silence, and searching.
It is not always a physical wilderness, but an emotional or spiritual one. You go through the motions of life, yet deep inside, you wonder if anyone really sees you. Maybe you have smiled through exhaustion, prayed through uncertainty, or served others while silently feeling unseen. You have questioned your worth, your purpose, or even God's attention toward you. And perhaps you have thought, Does God still notice me here? Does He still have a plan for me when I feel lost and forgotten?If those questions have ever crossed your heart, this book is for you.
The wilderness is not just a location, it is a condition of the soul. It ss the space between what was and what will be. It is where God strips away the noise, the distractions, and the false identities that we have carried, so He can reveal who we truly are. Its uncomfortable, but it's also holy. Because in the wilderness, the same God who led Hagar to a well of living water can meet you in your emptiness and show you that you are seen, valued, and loved beyond measure.
This journey is not about escaping the wilderness; it is about encountering God in it. Hagar's story in Genesis 16 is a powerful reminder that being unseen by others does not mean being unnoticed by God. She was a servant, a foreigner, and a woman who felt used and forgotten. Yet in her moment of despair, God showed up, not with condemnation, but with compassion.






















