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Octavius Winslow

1 John 3:1

1 John 3:1
Octavius Winslow September, 13 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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September, 13 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about adoption as sons of God?

The Bible speaks of our adoption as sons through God's love, affirming our identity as children of God in 1 John 3:1.

1 John 3:1 emphasizes the incredible love of the Father in calling us His children. This adoption signifies a profound and intimate relationship with God, one that reflects His grace and mercy. The very idea of being called sons of God may generate doubts in our minds due to our sinful nature and the challenges we face, but it remains a fundamental truth affirmed by Scripture. We are to embrace this identity, despite the world's inability to recognize us, as it failed to know Christ Himself. The verification of our sonship comes through the witness of the Holy Spirit within us rather than our fluctuating feelings or others' opinions.

1 John 3:1

How do we know our adoption as God's children is true?

Our identity as God's children is confirmed by the Holy Spirit's witness in our hearts, as stated in Romans 8:16.

The assurance of our adoption as God's children does not come from our feelings or the opinions of others, which can be misleading. Instead, it is the Holy Spirit who bears witness with our spirit that we are indeed children of God (Romans 8:16). This internal testimony is crucial, especially when doubts arise due to our sins or the hardships we face in life, which might falsely challenge our assurance of sonship. Even in our weakness and struggles, the Spirit's witness provides a firm foundation for our confidence in God's love and the reality of our adoption. Thus, we can affirm that our status as God's children is secure, regardless of external circumstances.

Romans 8:16, 1 John 3:1

Why is understanding our adoption important for Christians?

Understanding our adoption is vital as it shapes our identity and confidence in God's love and grace.

The doctrine of adoption is crucial for Christians as it radically alters our understanding of our relationship with God. Knowing that we are adopted as His children provides us with a profound sense of belonging, purpose, and security in God's love. Despite the challenges and trials we may face, this understanding encourages us to trust in God's plans and purposes for our lives. It also reinforces our mission to live as lights in a dark world that does not recognize our identity. By grasping the depth of this relationship, we are motivated to grow in holiness and reflect Christ’s love to others, understanding that we have a Father who cares for us and desires our spiritual flourishing.

1 John 3:1

“Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God: therefore the world knows us not, because it knew him not.”

— 1 John 3:1

IT is not strange that the fact of his adoption should meet with much misgiving in the Christian's mind, seeing that it is a truth so spiritual, flows from a source so concealed, and has its seat in the profound recesses of the soul. The very stupendousness of the relationship staggers our belief. To be fully assured of our divine adoption demands other than the testimony either of our own feelings, or the opinion of men. Our feelings—sometimes excited and visionary—may mislead; the opinion of others—often fond and partial—may deceive us. The grand, the divine, and only safe testimony is "the Spirit itself bears witness with our spirit." There exists a strong combination of evil, tending to shake the Christian's confidence in the belief of his sonship. Satan is ever on the watch to insinuate the doubt. He tried the experiment with our Lord: "If You be the Son of God." In no instance would it appear that he actually denied the truth of Christ's Divine Sonship; the utmost that his temerity permitted was the suggestion to the mind of a doubt; leaving it there to its own working. Our blessed Lord thus assailed, it is no marvel that His disciples should be exposed to a like assault. The world, too, presumes to call it in question. "The world knows us not, because it knew Him not." Ignorant of the Divine Original, how can it recognize the Divine lineaments in the faint and imperfect copy? It has no vocabulary by which it can decipher the "new name written in the white stone." The sons of God are in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, illumining it with their light, and preserving it by their grace, yet disguised from its knowledge, and hidden from its view. But the strongest doubts touching the validity of his adoption are those engender in the believer's own mind. Oh! there is much there to generate and foster the painful misgiving. We have said that the very greatness of the favor, the stupendousness of the relationship, startles the mind, and staggers our faith. "What! to be a child of God! God my Father! can I be the subject of a change so great, of a relationship so exalted? Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house, that You should exalt me to be a King's son? Is this the manner of men, O Lord God?" And then, there crowd upon the believer's mind thoughts of his own sinfulness and unworthiness of so distinguished a blessing. "Can it be? with such a depravity of heart, such carnality of mind, such rebellion of will, such a propensity to evil each moment, and in everything such backslidings and flaws, does there yet exist within me a nature that links me with the Divine? It seems impossible!" And when to all this are added the varied dispensations of his Heavenly Father, often wearing a rough garb, assuming an aspect somber, threatening, and crushing, oh, it is no marvel that, staggered by a discipline so severe, the fact of God's love to him, and of his close and tender relation to God, should sometimes be a matter of painful doubt; that thus he should reason—"If His child, reposing in His heart, and sealed upon His arm, why is it thus? Would He not have spared me this heavy stroke? Would not this cup have passed my lips? Would He have asked me to slay my Isaac, to resign my Benjamin? All these things are against me." And thus are the children of God constantly tempted to question the fact of their adoption.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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