
One day Toula, now transformed inside and out, is working in her aunt’s travel agency and who should walk by? It is the same stranger that she saw months ago in her parents’ restaurant, Ian Miller.
Why is it that we act in a way that is contrary to what we actually want? She inwardly desires to be seen, and yet she hides. Could it be that deep inside we feel we don’t deserve the thing we want most of all?
A short time later, he walks by the travel agency again. For the first time, she meets his gaze and they make eye contact. They exchange smiles for the first time. What has changed? Perhaps he has become for her, 'the lifter of her head.'
That is what the Lord does for us. Be breaks the chains that bind us to our past, our sin, our shame, or anything else that would cause us to sink downward, to hang our heads, or to otherwise try to hide from his gaze.
Eye contact is a powerful thing. It signals that someone knows you exist. Being in direct eye-contact with someone is a connection. They say that eyes are the window to the soul, so to maintain a steady gaze that is reciprocal is significant. In fact, it communicates that the person is significant to you.
If his face fell, his eyes were no longer lifted towards Jesus’ face. He could not face Jesus knowing deep inside that he loved his wealth more than He loved God.
If you, like Toula, want to be seen – but at the same time are afraid to be seen – take heart. Remember how Ian told Toula, he didn’t remember ‘Frump Girl’, but he remembered her? Jesus would say the same about you.