Adopted by God
based on Romans 8:14-17
by Rev. Randy Quinn
For all who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God. For you did not
receive a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received a
spirit of adoption. When we cry, "Abba! Father!" it is that very Spirit bearing
witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then
heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ – if, in fact, we suffer with
him so that we may also be glorified with him.
Romans 8:14-17
How many of you have
grandchildren? How many have had good relationships with your grandparents?
More than once I’ve seen bumper stickers and sweat shirts that say “if I had
known grandchildren were so fun, I would’ve had them first;” and at the High
School graduation last Sunday, the speaker suggested that we get along with our
grandparents because, as he said, “we share a common enemy” in the generation
between us. J
Ronda sees our grandchildren more
often than I do, so it’s not surprising that on those times when I do see them,
they respond better to her than they do to me. Children are like that. Even
Melissa responds more to people who have spent time with her. When we spend
time with our grandchildren, there is a certain amount of trust that develops, a
trust that allows love to be shared.
And while it’s true God has no
grandchildren; that kind of a relationship is certainly an apt one to begin with
as we try to discern what it means to be God’s children, children who once
belonged to a different family and are now included in God’s family.
Paul tries to explain it by using
adoption as an analogy – or perhaps it’s more accurate to say that adoption is a
symbol, since in theological terms, a symbol is something that participates in
something as well as pointing toward it.
In our culture, we are familiar
with the concept of adoption. Our family is just one example since we have
adopted children in our home. Some of you do, too. We have also heard the
stories of people who go to foreign countries to adopt children from orphanages
and raise them in the context of a loving family.
But our culture also talks about
adoption as a choice and a commitment to ideas and causes. Congress “adopts” a
law, for instance. People adopt animals at the zoo, which really means they
help provide financial support for the zoo. I have also seen signs along the
highways that indicate someone has ‘adopted’ that portion of a road or a rest
area – which means they help keep it clean for the rest of us.
We even use the language of
adoption when we refer to people who immigrate to the United States – or who
emigrate from here to someplace else. We speak of their adopted country and the
process of adopting the customs of that new place.
Paul is writing to the church in
Rome where adoption was most popular among the wealthy class of citizens. Rich
Romans would often find intelligent people – including children, slaves, and
adults – and take them in and teach them how to manage their estates; and then
they would leave the estate to them when they died. Rarely was there an
emotional attachment to these adopted children, however.
Although I don’t know of any in
particular, I can imagine there were people who looked forward to working for
those wealthy benefactors, hoping they might inherit a portion of their wealth.
There is no comparable concept in
the Hebrew Scriptures, however. The Law of Moses simply did not address
adoption. We have stories of people taking in and caring for family members –
such as the story of Mordecai taking in Esther or the story of Ruth claiming her
familial ties to Naomi – but nowhere is there a story of adoption in the sense
that either we or the Romans thought of it.
That makes our text for today all
the more profound. Paul is using a Roman institution to explain a key aspect of
our faith, tying it to the Hebrew concept of God selecting the people of Israel
to be a chosen people. If, as the Gospel of John tells us, Jesus is the “only
begotten son” of God (Jn. 3:16), Paul is telling us that Jesus is not an only
child. Others have been chosen to be a part of the family, too.
And like the Roman concept, there
is an inheritance associated with our new status as God’s children; unlike the
Roman experience, however, we are given permission to use the intimate language
of children: we can call God Abba, a phrase that is closer to our word
Daddy than anything else.
So Paul is telling us that
because the Holy Spirit has come, we can claim the same intimate relationship
with God the Father that Jesus had.
As you know, Ronda and I have
three adopted children from two different biological families. That means that
in our family anyway, adoption affects more than the child-parent relationship.
It also means the children in our family are siblings of other children – some
adopted, some biological.
In the family of God, there are
no grandchildren, but that doesn’t mean there are no siblings. Each of us here
can call God Daddy, but so can a lot of other people.
In the family of God, we use the
symbol of baptism to mark our adoption. It is the point at which we recognize
our new family relationships – including the ‘sibling’ relationship between us
(which is part of why we include the congregation in the liturgy when we baptize
someone or welcome a new member to the church).
We confirm that relationship when
we take the vows of membership and accept our responsibilities as brothers or
sisters in faith. God has invited us to become a part of this large family; God
desires to welcome us by adopting us as individual children, creating a sense of
family within the church.
As we spend time with God, our
Heavenly Father, as we listen to and learn from Jesus our spiritual brother, we
begin to trust God’s Spirit to direct us. The love that exists between the
Father and the Son becomes a part of our own lives and the Holy Spirit gives us
power, power to become children of God (Jn. 1:12).
Thanks be to God. Amen.