It was the first question God ever asked of man. Not “What have you done?” or “Why did you fail?” but “Where are you?” A question not of geography, but of relationship. God knew exactly where Adam crouched among the fig leaves and shame. But He asked anyway. Why?
Because grace always initiates the search.
Even after the fall, even after the fruit was bitten and the trust was broken, God came walking. Not storming. Not shouting. Walking. Seeking. Calling. “Where are you?” It’s the voice of a Father who refuses to let sin have the final word.
Sin creates distance. It drives us into the shadows, convinces us we’re better off hiding. But God doesn’t abandon the hiding. He pursues. He invites. He speaks.
The same voice that spoke galaxies into being now speaks to a trembling man. The same breath that stirred life into dust now stirs hope into guilt. “Where are you?” is not condemnation—it’s an invitation. A summons to step out of the shadows. A mercy wrapped in a question.
So if you’re hiding today behind regret, behind fear, behind failure, listen. That voice still calls. Not with anger, but with love. Not to shame, but to restore. The Creator of the cosmos is asking, “Where are you?” Not because He doesn’t know, but because He wants you to know: He’s still seeking. He’s still speaking.
His voice still calls.
I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.