NO CONDEMNATION IN CHRIST JESUS
by Octavius Winslow
"The Spirit of
Adoption"
"For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to
fear; but ye have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba,
Father." Romans 8:15
For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave
again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship. And by him we cry,
"Abba, Father." Romans 8:15
So you should not be like cowering, fearful slaves. You
should behave instead like God's very own children, adopted into his
family—calling him "Father, dear Father." Romans 8:15
It is most distinctly affirmed in this passage, that the
children of God are emancipated from the spirit of bondage- the present and
mournful condition of all the unregenerate. The question here arises, what
is the spirit of bondage of which the Apostle speaks? It exhibits itself in
various forms, yet, essentially, it is the same spirit. The world, for
example, holds in cruel bondage all its devotees. It enslaves the intellect
by its opinions, the heart by its pleasures, the imagination by its
promises, the soul by its religion- leading it a willing captive, a victim
garlanded for the sacrifice. They are described as "walking according to the
course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the
spirit that now works in the children of disobedience."
But it is the moral law- the spirit of bondage which genders fear- to which
the passage particularly refers. Its commands are exceedingly broad, and the
obedience upon which it insists unqualifiedly perfect; and yet, with all the
breadth of the precept, and the rigidness of the requirement, it offers no
helping hand. It shows a man his sin, but not his pardon. It teaches him his
weakness, but tells him not where his great strength lies. It thunders in
his ear his misery and condemnation, but whispers not a word of mercy and of
hope. Emancipated, as the justified believer really is, from the condemning
power of this law, yet, alas! how much of its bondage spirit does he still
retain! How few of the sons of God realize the possession and largeness of
their birthright! How few rise to the dimity and the privilege of their
adoption! How few see their completeness in Christ Jesus, and read the
sentence of their pardon written in the
heart's blood of Immanuel! How few walk in a large place, and by the sunny
joyousness and lofty aspirations of their spirit, evidence that they have
"not received the spirit of bondage again to fear!"
"But you have received the Spirit of adoption." The
Spirit of adoption is the same as the Spirit of God. There are two essential
features which identify him as such. The first is, he imparts the nature of
the Father to all the children of the family. In this there is a wide
difference between a human and a Divine adoption. Man can only confer his
name and his inheritance upon the child he adopts. But in the adoption of
God, to the name and inheritance of God is added the Divine nature imparted
in regeneration; so that, in the words of our Lord, we become manifestly the
"children of our Father who is in heaven." The second feature is- having
begotten the nature of the Father, he then breathes the spirit of the child
into the heart. He inspires a filial love. The love which glows in the
believer's heart is the affection of a child to its parent. It is not a
servile bondage, but a filial and free spirit. Oh, sweet and holy emotion!
How tender and confiding, how clinging and childlike is it! Such ought to be
our love to God. He is our Father- we are his children. Why should not our
love to him be marked by more of the exquisite tenderness, and the
unquestioning confidence, and the calm repose of a child reclining upon a
parent's breast? A childlike fear of God is another inspiration of the
Spirit of adoption. Love and fear are twin graces in the Christian
character. The Spirit of God is the Author of both; and both dwell together
and co-operate in the same renewed heart. It is not the dread of the
servant, but the holy trembling of the child, of which we speak. It is a
filial, loving, reverential fear. A childlike trust in God also springs from
the Spirit
of adoption. The trust of a child is implicit, affectionate, and
unquestioning. Upon whose counsel may he so safely rely, in whose affection
may he so fully confide, upon whose fidelity may he so confidently trust, as
a parent's? God is your Father, O child of a divine adoption, of a heavenly
birth! Let your trust in him be the result of the relationship you sustain.
It admits you to the closest intimacy, and invites you to the most perfect
confidence. You have not a need, nor an anxiety, nor a grief which is not
all his own. His adoption of your person- an act of his spontaneous and most
free grace- pledged him to transfer all your individual interests to
himself. To these we must add a filial obedience: "If you love me, keep my
commandments." Obedience, whether to the Savior's precept, or to the
Father's law, is the test of love; and love is the spring of obedience. "All
that the Lord God has spoken to us will we do," is the language of that
heart where the Spirit of adoption dwells. Such are some of the features of
adoption.
"Whereby we cry, Abba, Father." The Apostle employs in
the original two different languages. It may not be improper to infer, that
in using both the Syriac and the Greek form- the one being familiar to the
Jew, and the other to the Gentile- he would denote that both the Christian
Jew and the believing Gentile were children of one family, and were. alike
privileged to approach God as a Father. Christ, our peace, has broken down
the middle wall of partition that was between them; and now, at the same
mercy-seat, the Christian Jew and the believing Gentile, both one in Christ
Jesus, meet, as rays of light converge and blend in one common center- at
the feet of their reconciled Father. The expressions, too, set forth the
peculiarity and intensity of the affection. Literally, "Abba, Father,"
signifies "My Father." No bond-servant was permitted thus to address the
master of the family; it was a privilege peculiar and sacred to the child.
And when our blessed Lord would teach his disciples to pray, he led them to
the mercy-seat, and sealed these precious words upon their lips- "Our
Father, who is in heaven." And after his resurrection, with increased
emphasis and intensity did he give utterance to the same truth. Previously
to his death his words were, "go to the Father." But when he came back from
the grave, every truth he had before enunciated seemed quickened as with new
life. How tender and touching were his words- "I ascend unto my Father, and
to your Father; to my God, and to your God." No longer a bond-slave, but a
son, oh, claim the dignity and privilege of your birthright! Approach God as
your Father.
"Abba, Father!" How tender the relation! how intense the
affection! what power it imparts to prayer! What may you not ask, and what
can God refuse, with "Abba, Father" breathing in lowliness and love from
your lips? Remember, it is an inalienable, unchangeable relation. Never, in
any instance, or under any circumstance the most aggravated, does God forget
it. He is as much our Father when he chastises, as when he approves; as much
so when he frowns, as when he smiles; as much so when he brims the cup of
adversity, as when he bids us drink the cup of salvation. Behold the
touching display of it in his gracious restorings: "But when he was yet a
great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and fell on
his neck and kissed him." In all his wanderings, that father's love had
never lost sight of his wayward child. It tracked him along all his
windings, followed him to the very swine-trough, hovered around him even
then, and waited and welcomed his return. We may doubt, and debase, and deny
our divine relationship, yet God will never disown us as his children,
nor disinherit us as his heirs. We may cease to act as a child, he will
never cease to love as a Father. To him, then, as to a Father at all times
repair. "Have faith in God." Confide in his heart to love you; in his
counsel to guide you; and in his power to sustain you. Cast from you the
fetters that enthrall, and pray to be upheld by his free Spirit. "Where the
Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty."