The Need To Understand A Christian's Adoption IN Christ
"If the love of a father
will not make a child delight in him, what will?" John Owen Reformed
Christians are thoroughly conversant with the language of justification and
sanctification, but adoption seems to have fallen out of our vocabulary. This
would be a shocking situation to Christians of prior generations. A lack of
awareness of our adoption in Christ only paralyzes a Christian's experience of
divine grace. As Paul saw it, our adoption is integral to the good news of the
gospel: "You are no longer a slave, but a son, and if a son, then an heir
through God" (Gal. 4:7).
It is a Christian's adoption
in Christ that holds together the categories of justification and
sanctification. All who believe are made sons of God and partakers of the
divine nature. No wonder John exclaimed: "See what kind of love the Father
has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are"
(1 Jn. 3:1). Adoption is what a Christian is saved to through faith in Christ,
a personal, family bond of love, life, blessing, and calling. As children of
God we have family privileges and family obligations: to know and embrace these
is to enter into the fullness of vital Christian living. Indeed, so central is
the idea of adoption to God's saving plan that the final glorification of the
entire cosmos is bound up with our entering into the family inheritance:
"the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of
God" (Rom. 8:19). Given the awesome biblical teaching on adoption, we are
not wrong in stating that at the very heart of Christianity is the gathering of
the children of God into the Father's love though the saving achievement of
God's Son. What great truths for us to know and embrace!
Reformation 21
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