Spirit of Adoption
New Title

For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” (Romans 8:15)
After landing at Domodedovo in Moscow around 8:30 in the morning, we found ourselves in a cab making our way across the city to the KLM Airlines office. Traveling by car in Moscow is an anxiety-producing experience. There is a line or barrier to divide the sides of the roadway, but aside from that, there did not appear to be any definite rules. I eventually shifted my focus from the erratic driving and traffic to the surroundings: the architecture, the buildings, the people, and to the purpose that had brought us to Moscow.
It was in these moments that I was reminded of this verse, and it really came into focus. We had just returned from the city of Novokuznetsk where we had met a sixteen-month-old boy that had spent his entire life in the hospital or the orphanage. Just prior to our second visit with him, we were able to meet with the orphanage personnel to learn all that we could about this child. During the subsequent visit with this little boy, I leaned over to my wife and said, “Whatever the obstacles… whatever it takes… we are going to adopt this little one.” The decision was made; we had chosen to love him.
In this verse, as well as other passages, Paul uses the picture of adoption to describe how we become God’s children. Before we could be adopted into the family, knowing all about us, the Father purposed to do whatever it took to redeem humankind. The cost was that He gave His Son in our place (John 3:16).
To be set free from slavery in Roman times was no small thing. While you might be free, you were still marked with the stigma of slavery. To be adopted was quite another thing. It was to be chosen. To take on the name, the heritage, the status, and the promise, and the security of a new family. In all reality, it was to become a new person no longer identified by your old life.
Sounds familiar does it not? It is a beautiful picture of what happens when we come to Christ.
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. (2 Corinthians 5:17)
This is a familiar verse, but I suspect we sometimes, or perhaps often, read it without grasping the weight of its meaning. In Christ, you have become a new person; you have been adopted into His family.
By Jesse Smith







