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The smell of chocolate chip cookies wafted through the air as my mom scrubbed the last baking sheet. Shaking the water off her hands, she motioned for me to come near. Standing at the sink, she knelt beside me and whispered in my ear: “I love all my kids, but you’re my favorite.”
To this day, she denies this conversation occurred. I get it—she has the reputation of being a fair mother to uphold. But I know the truth, and the truth has set me free.
Now I have five of my own. On a daily basis, the question of who is the favorite emerges. I deny any allegations but the accusations keep rolling in.
Having favorites doesn't seem right. Yet sometimes it feels like God plays favorites too.
You know the people I’m talking about—the ones in the limelight. The ones whose lives look so easy. The ones who make everything look effortless. Doors open and opportunities arise.
But what about the rest of us? The invisible ones. The ones who hide behind closed doors. The ones working backstage. The exhausted ones. The ones who receive little praise and are often overlooked.
We fly under the radar.
We struggle with loneliness.
We wonder where our place is in the world.
I have been there—I’m still there.
Yet when you spend enough time in the darkness, a terrible lie starts to fester:
What I’m doing doesn’t matter.
The sacrifices I’m making to serve my family go unnoticed. The cost I pay day-in-and-day-out isn’t recorded. The love I extend to others isn’t reciprocated.
As the lie takes root—our view of the Father is twisted. We believe God is keeping a detailed record of our wrongs but failing to take note of our rights.
I found myself complaining to God, standing at
my
kitchen sink—with toddlers at my feet—and God interrupted my rant with three small words:
“I SEE YOU.”
Tears welled in my eyes as truth shot through my core.
He sees me. It doesn’t matter if anyone else does. It doesn’t matter if I measures up to the world’s standard of success.
HE SEES ME.
In Psalm 17:8 David prayed, “Keep me as the apple of your eye; hide me under the shadow of your wings.”
David penned this prayer while hiding in a field from Saul who was out to kill him. Even as a boy, David spent his days in the field tending the sheep—hidden. But the beauty about David's story is even in a place of obscurity—God found him. God sent the prophet Samuel in order to anoint the next king. His father paraded his young, strapping sons (minus David) before the prophet but Samuel wasn't impressed, The future king wasn't found in the limelight but alone in a barren field.
God saw David and he sees you.
The Hebrew phrase, “apple of your eye” means “little man of the eye”—referring to the reflection we see of ourselves when we stare into another’s pupils. To be the apple of God’s eye means we are being watched with great intensity.
Our very image is dancing in the eyes of our Father.
It’s as if God gazes at you and motions for you to come near. He bends down from heaven and whispers in your ear, “I love all my kids, but you’re my favorite.”
May you know this truth—and may this truth set you free.