Thousands of women gathered in Southeast Asia for the region’s second-largest women’s conference, and I had the humbling privilege of standing before them to deliver a message that has lived deep in my own spirit: God sees what the world often overlooks.

I didn’t come to that stage because I was strong and unshaken. I came as one who knows what it feels like to be invisible—through cancer, heart disease, divorce, and career loss. Yet in each of those hidden seasons, God showed me that what feels buried is often simply being planted for a greater purpose.

As Matthew 6:4 reminds us:
“Your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.”

The God Who Sees

In Genesis 16, Hagar—mistreated and cast aside—fled into the desert, alone and pregnant. Yet scripture says: “The angel of the Lord found Hagar near a spring in the desert.” (Gen. 16:7)

God not only found her—He spoke life into her. He gave her a promise of descendants too numerous to count. In awe, Hagar named Him Jehovah El Roi—“The God who sees me.”

He is still the God who sees today. He sees the woman carrying water at sunrise. He sees the mother whispering prayers at midnight. He sees the daughter carrying burdens no one else notices. What is hidden from people is treasured by God.

Hidden Strength

Strength doesn’t always roar. Sometimes it’s silent. Sometimes it’s the kind of strength that shows up day after day, without applause or recognition.

Paul described it best: “We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned.” (2 Cor. 4:8-9)

That is hidden strength. Strength rooted not in ourselves, but in the God who sustains us.

Buried or Planted?

Jesus taught: “Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single
seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds.” (John 12:24)

When you feel hidden, overlooked, or buried, remember: burial in God’s hands is planting. What looks like the end is often the beginning of transformation.

God Honors the Hidden Woman

I know this from my own journey. In my darkest seasons, when no one saw my pain, God did. He saw not just the strong Dr. Sheri people recognized, but also the weary, broken, and fearful
me. And in seeing me, He lifted me, healed me, and gave me a new assignment: to speak life into others.

What He did for me, He can and will do for you.

Walking It Out

  • Believe you are never invisible to Him.
  • Receive His strength and mercies every morning.
  • Persevere in faith—your harvest is coming.
  • Support One Another like Ruth and Naomi, standing together in love.

A Final Word

Hagar said: “I have seen the One who sees me.” And today, you can say the same.

You are seen.

You are valued.

You are honored by God.

And that truth will never change.