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Radio Broadcast Transcript
Grace and Glory
"The Blessing of Adoption - Part 1"
By P. G. Mathew, M.A., M.Div., Th.M.
Message #95017
Copyright © 1995 by P. G. Mathew
Today we want to look at the subject of adoption as taught in
the Holy Scriptures. You have heard the complaint leveled against
pro-life people by pro-abortion people that abortion is the way
to go because pro-life people are not compassionate enough to
adopt unwanted children. Of course that is not true. Even in this
church we know a number of people who have adopted children, and
who are giving these children a great future - giving them love
and affection, and a great opportunity to live a proper life.
Now, in the Jewish culture of the Old Testament, people did not
practice adoption, generally speaking. Why? Because they had
other ways of dealing with this problem. One way was called
levirate marriage. This meant a brother was to marry his
brother's widow and raise children for his brother. Another
alternative was polygamy. In 1 Samuel Elkanah's first wife,
Hannah, was "without child" - that is, not able to bear
children - and so Elkanah married another wife in order to have
children. The third alternative used sometimes was easy divorce.
So, generally speaking, levirate marriage, polygamy and easy
divorce solved the problem of adoption in the Old Testament
Jewish culture.
Now in the Roman and Greek cultures adoption was widely
practiced. Normally it meant the adoption of young males, not
females. The adoptee, usually a young male, was taken out of his
previous state and installed, or placed, in a new relationship
with his new father. In a Roman household the father was the
potentate, the person of great power, who could even kill members
of his own family, although this was not often practiced. So the
Greek word for adoption is huiothesia - huios
means son and thesia means placement. It means
installation of a person as a son. All his old debts were
canceled, and in effect the adopted child started a new life with
new privileges and responsibilities under the rule of the new
father.
Now adoption today as well as then is a judicial act. It is a
legal act. The adopted child is granted full rights and
privileges of sonship in a family in which he had no rights of
his own previously. Essentially, then, adoption is the bestowal
of a new relationship.
Of course, we know that no one adopts anyone unless their action
is based on love. The father loves this boy and it is understood
that this boy will sever all his previous relationships and thus
secures a new set of relationships. This is true even in modern
times. The adopting parents see to it that the child severs all
previous relationships so that his natural father and mother will
not claim anything later on.
We are interested in this doctrine as it is taught in the Holy
Scriptures because of our spiritual adoption into God's family.
We have spoken before about the order of salvation, which is
calling, regeneration, repentance and faith, pardon of sins, and
justification. Now all these steps of salvation logically must
precede adoption, even though we understand all these things take
place simultaneously. But logically you must first be effectually
called and regenerated. You must repent and believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ, and you are justified by faith. All these steps are
preconditions for this blessing of adoption to take place in our
lives.
According to Professor John Murray, "Adoption is the apex of
redemptive blessing." In other words, it is the highest
possible blessing you can experience in redemption. This point is
made by St. Paul in Ephesians 1:5 where we read, "For he
chose us in him before the creation of the world" - he is
speaking about unconditional election of us by God from all
eternity - "to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love
he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus
Christ." God's predestination of us is for this specific
blessing, that we be adopted as sons of God.
Regeneration relates us to God as God the Creator, who creates in
us new life and a new nature, and justification relates us to God
as our Judge. But adoption relates us to God as our heavenly
Father. This is a very important point you should keep in mind.
Also, regeneration places us into the kingdom of God. Without
regeneration no one can see or enter into the God's kingdom,
Jesus Christ said in John 3. However, adoption places us in the
family of God.
Let's look at some scriptures to study this doctrine of adoption,
by which God relates us to himself as our Father. John 1:12-13
says, "Yet to all who received him [Jesus Christ], to those
who believed in his name, he gave the right" - right, exousia
, authority - "to become the children of God - children born
not of natural descent nor of human decision nor a husband's
will, but born of God." So notice in that scripture, first
we see regeneration. Verse 13 speaks about regeneration, which is
a precondition for the blessing of adoption. Then it speaks about
receiving Christ (believing in his name.) And we know, according
to our theology, that no one can believe on the Lord Jesus Christ
or repent of his sins unless God causes him to be born again. So
here is the order: first, there is regeneration; second, there is
receiving Christ by believing in him; and third, God gave the
right. So that is why this is the highest blessing imaginable for
a Christian. There is a bestowal, a giving of authority, a giving
of right to this child who is adopted by God the Father into
God's family. He gave the right.
Fourthly, what is this right for? To become children of God. That
is speaking about adoption. So there is regeneration and there is
faith in Christ. There is bestowment of exousia -
authority - right, so that you can come to the presence of God
without fear and without shame, without embarrassment. You know
that you have the right to come to his presence because God has
given you the right to come. And then - this is what adoption is
all about - you are children of God.
Now John also talks about this in 1 John. Turn to chapter 3, and
let's read the first couple of verses: "How great is the
love the Father has lavished on us" - here he is speaking
about adoption. Now, the agent of adoption is not God the Son or
God the Holy Spirit. The one who adopts us is specifically God
the Father. And the basis of all this is love. It says, "How
great is the love the Father has lavished on us. . ." So the
agent of this adoptive activity is God the Father. And God the
Father lavishes or bestows something upon us. What is it? The
blessing of adoption. And so it says, "How great is the love
the Father has lavished on us that we should be called" -
what? Children of God. That is the adoption we are speaking
about, which John already made reference to in his gospel in
chapter 1, verse 12. And not only that, but here he adds,
"And that is what we are." In other words, this
adoption is a blessing that we as believers experience even now,
right now. That is what we are! In other words, we who are
believers come to God the Father as his adopted sons.
In John 8, Jesus spoke about the unbelieving Jews as children,
not of God, but of the devil. That was our relationship also. We
were children of the devil. We were children of Adam. It is from
that family, by God's redemption, that we are taken out and
installed - that is huiothesia - we are installed
legally as sons in the family of God, entitled to all privileges
and status and dignity. That is our present position.
However, as adopted children we are going to enjoy the fullness
of the blessings of adoption only when we are glorified. That
happens when we receive the resurrection body and when all sin is
removed from us. Then we can come and see God, our heavenly
Father, face to face. That is what John says in 1 John 3:2.
"Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will
be has not yet been made known. But we know this, that when he
appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he
is." This is the beatific vision. The highest possible
blessing any human being can experience is the blessing of
fellowship with God face to face - to be embraced by God, loved
by God. We will see him face to face. And we have to wait for
that simply because of sin that is still in our bodies.
St. Paul makes reference to this in Romans 8:19: "The
creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God" -
notice, they are sons by adoption - "to be revealed."
The revelation of the sons of God is something that we are still
waiting for. That revelation will be a revelation of the sons of
God without sin in all glory. So Paul speaks again in Romans
8:23. He makes this statement: "Not only so, but we
ourselves who have the firstfruits of the Spirit groan inwardly
as we" - what? "wait eagerly for our adoption as
sons" - that is, the future installment of our adoption,
which is what? "the redemption of our bodies." That is
the resurrection of our bodies. When that happens, sin will
totally be done away with.
Look at verse 29 of Romans 8: "For those God foreknew he
also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that
he might be the firstborn among many brothers." When God
reveals the sons of God, they will be made conformable to the
image of Jesus Christ our older brother. It is at that time we
will see God as he is. At that time we will enjoy the fullness of
the blessing that is ours as adopted sons.
So we understood that God the Father is the agent of this
activity, but the Holy Spirit also has something to do in this
act of adoption. What does the Holy Spirit do? The Holy Spirit
creates within our subjectivity filial affection for our new
heavenly Father. He creates within us confidence and affection
for God, so that we deliberately and consciously know that we are
God's sons by adoption, and we therefore cry, "Abba,
Father," like a little child. The Talmud says that when a
child is weaned, the child will say, "Abba" and
"Imma" - "Abba" means "Daddy" and
"Imma" means "Mother." And that is something
we also do, because the Holy Spirit creates within us this bond
of relationship with God. He creates within us love for the
Father. He creates within us great confidence before the Father,
so that we also cry by the Holy Spirit, "Abba, Father."
That is the Holy Spirit's activity.
We are told about this in several places, in Galatians 4:5-7, and
also in Romans, chapter 8, verse 15: "For you did not
receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to fear, but you
received the Spirit of adoption" - the Spirit of sonship -
"and by him" - that is, by the Holy Spirit - "we
cry, 'Abba, Father.'" Now this is a very sure proof that you
are a child of God. Is there a Spirit-produced cry to God the
Father? The Holy Spirit is the one who produces that kind of
inner state and confidence and affection. It is not just
theoretical. It is not just believing a certain way, and
therefore you are a Christian. That itself is one way of proving
that we are children of God, but this is the highest form of
proof that we can have. It is not just a theoretical and
intellectual deduction, but it is based on this subjective
reality created within us by the third Person of the Trinity, the
Holy Spirit.
And I know for sure that I am a child of God, because I cry to
God the Father. I pray to him. I speak to him. That is the sure
sign of our being adopted into the family of God, of being taken
out of the devil's family, out of Adam's family, and of having
been made sons and daughters of God, entitled to all the
blessings that accrue to us on the basis of this legal placement
and installation in the family of God. May we rejoice as we more
fully understand this glorious doctrine of adoption!
Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL
VERSION. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible
Society. Used by permission of International Bible Society.
"NIV" and "New International Version"
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and
Trademark office by International Bible Society.
Grace and Glory features Biblical teachings of the Christian
faith with P. G. Mathew, Bible teacher and former professor in
Greek and theology. Audio
cassettes are available for $3.00.
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