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So on the screen behind me, if
you'll remember approximately a month ago, we gathered together
to look at an overview of the doctrine of adoption. And so
I'd like to begin just reading this relatively short section
of the 1689 Confession to orient our minds toward the track that
we find in the word of God on this very important teaching
on the doctrine of adoption. So if you'll follow with me.
1689 chapter 12 of Adoption. All those
that are justified, God vouchsafed in and for the sake of his only
son Jesus Christ to make partakers of of the grace of adoption by
which we are taken into the number and enjoy the liberties and privileges
of the children of God. Having his name put upon them,
receive the spirit of adoption, have access to the throne of
grace with boldness, are enabled to cry, Abba, Father, are pitied,
protected, provided for, and chastened by him as by a father. yet never cast off, but sealed
to the day of redemption and inherit the promises as heirs
of everlasting salvation. So my task this evening is going
to, I want to give you something of just an introduction of where
we've been in this study and then to look at those benefits
which which come to us as the result of our adoption in Jesus
Christ to God the Father. So if you turn in your copy of
the scriptures with me to Ephesians chapter 1. Ephesians chapter
1, we'll all begin reading at verse 3. Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ. who has blessed us in Christ
with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, even
as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world,
that we should be holy and blameless before him. Verse five, in love
he predestined us for adoption to himself as sons through Jesus
Christ according to the purpose of his will, to the praise of
the glory of his grace. which he has blessed us in the
beloved. In him we have redemption through
his blood, the forgiveness of our sins, of our trespasses,
according to the riches of his grace, which he lavished upon
us in all wisdom and insight, making known to us the mystery
of his will, according to the purpose which he set forth in
Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things
in him, things in heaven, things on earth. Verse 11, in him we
have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according
to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel
of his will, so that we who were the first to hope in Christ might
be to the praise of his glory. We have returned to verse 5 in
this passage, specifically our adoption as sons of God through
the work of our Lord Jesus Christ. Previously, we considered the
meaning of adoption used here. It is nothing less than God breaking
off our ties with the devil of any claims that he may have had
on us and places us into his family as his sons and daughters. Adoption is a legal act. It is in God's civil court. Adoption
follows faith in Christ. As you'll recall from John chapter
1 beginning at verse 12, the Apostle John writes, but to all
who did receive him, that is Christ, who believed in his name,
he gave the right to become children of God. who were born not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man,
but of God. And so from our text in Ephesians,
it is God the Father who authors our adoption, having planned
it from eternity past. The Lord Jesus Christ as the
divine agent, our older brother secures our adoption through
his saving work on the cross, uniting us to himself. which
is intimately tied to the work of adoption, that act. The Holy
Spirit testifies to us of our adoption and comes into us and
enables us to cry, Abba, Father. As we see in Romans 8.14, he
also seals us for the day of redemption when our adoption
will be made fully known. And so think of it with me. Every
time you or I bow in prayer, like the Lord Jesus, we call
God our Father. We are reminded that Father is
the Christian name for God. And so what an unspeakable privilege
that we have. As Packer writes, the revelation
to the believer that God is his Father is, in a sense, a climax
to the Bible. And so this evening, we will
do a deep dive, as it were, into the blessings that come to us
as favored children of God. Our duty, as you see, comes directly
from Chapter 12 of the 1689 Confession, which is identical, of course,
in the Westminster Confession, found in the back of the Red
Hymnal. You need to refer to that. And
so picture with me. When I look back, roughly 10%
of the students that I taught in my previous job were adopted
children. And not all of them were adopted
in infancy. And so you can imagine coming
in to that adoptive family as a somewhat older child, really
wondering, what is this going to be like? Will I have a seat
at the table? Will there be a bed that I can
call my own? Will I be accepted? Will I really
be loved? Will I be listened to in this
new family of mine? You and I as Christians, we have
something of an adjustment that we need to make as we've believed
in Jesus Christ, as we embrace the gospel as it's revealed to
us, And we take on these new privileges that we're going to
learn about this evening, as well as those responsibilities
of being members of God's household. There's going to be a reorientation
to how we look at life. And so I hope that as we go through
this outline rather quickly, there's a lot to cover. Hopefully
this will give us something of a roadmap on how that transition
to living in the household of God, being part of his family,
should look and feel like for each of us. And so if you refer with me to
your handout, Roman numeral one, first we are received into the
family of God. Under that, 1689 uses the phrase
that we are taken into the number. And so from chapter 12 of the
Confession on adoption, the framers list the benefits of our adoption
by God. Those who are justified by faith
are taken into the number. Now in the context of the confession,
the number refers to the specific individuals whom God predestined
for salvation. They are effectually called by
God the Father in the gospel, and they place their trust in
Christ alone for salvation, and they are incorporated into the
church Christ's bride. The number of the elect is so
certain and definite that it cannot be increased or diminished. As we read in Galatians 3, for
in Christ Jesus you are sons of God through faith. So our
adoption actually occurs upon our faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. Secondly, under B, we are members
of God's household. We are members of God's household. The Greek word behind this is
oikios. You remember of, you've probably
heard of a Greek yogurt that's similar in its name. It means
of being of one's family that we find used in several passages,
not the least of them, 1 Timothy 5.8. In a familiar passage, if
you would turn to Ephesians chapter two, just over one chapter from
where you are, Paul is going to trace out for us our spiritual
journey from being children of wrath, dominated by evil powers,
living out fleshly and darkened lives, being separated from God,
sons of disobedience, Paul calls us. And we were. But by the grace
of God, we were made alive in Christ through faith. Verse 8
and 9. As we already established our
adoption as sons and daughters of God, though determined prior
to creation, actually occurs when we trust in Christ. not
prior to faith, in verse 12. Paul reminds us that we were
previously separated from the commonwealth of Israel, aliens
to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God
in the world. And then that big word, but God,
those two words, but God. We were brought near by the blood
of Christ. We were reconciled, both Jew
and Gentile, into one body through Christ. Look at verse 19 with
me. So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you
are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household
of God. Built on the foundation of the
apostles and the prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone
in whom the whole structure being joined together grows into a
holy temple in the Lord. In him you also are being built
together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit. So we
are in God's household. Spurgeon describes that as being
a new place for you to live. You are of God's household. Where
Paul urges us in Galatians 10, Sorry, Galatians 6 verse 10,
where Paul urges Christians to do good to all, especially among
God's family. If you're to look at 1 Timothy
5 and verse 8, Paul reminds believers of their duty to care for those,
of their own natural families, those in their own households.
And so we can therefore say that, like caring for our own natural
families, being privileged to having a family, of receiving
their care, their provision, their comfort. In a similar way,
we are cared for by our Heavenly Father, and we are to extend
His care to others in God's family. In other words, our care of our
families mirrors the care that God has for those in His household. And so my question for you now
is, have you heeded Yahweh's gracious invitation that you
heard from in Isaiah 55 this morning? Have you trusted in
Christ for salvation and turned from your sins? And so if that
is so, you have the assurance of being in that number of which
we read here. You are of the household of God,
of the household of faith. Praise God. That being established,
what does being a child of God really mean for us as believers
in Jesus Christ? So we've looked at the fact that
we're received into the family of God. Onto Roman numeral two,
we're privileged as children of God. There are privileges
that come to you and me as believers in Jesus Christ. The first of
which I have here is that we bear God's name. We bear God's
name. What does that mean that we bear
God's name? It simply means that we belong
to God. It speaks of ownership. of, Spurgeon
would say, proprietorship, of possession. We belong to God
forever. He himself has marked us out
to be his very own cherished ones in Christ. We are his people,
and he is our God. And so when you look in the mirror,
you can say to that person, I belong to God. I am not my own. I belong
to Christ. As Thomas Boston has written,
our old name is forever laid aside and we rightly take Christ's
name upon us. Think of Revelation 3, verse
12, where the Lord Jesus says, and the one who conquers, I will
make him a pillar in the temple of my God. He shall never go
out of it, and I will write on him the name of my God, and the
name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem, which comes down
from my God out of heaven, and my own new name. And so we bear
God's name as those that believe in Jesus Christ. But there's
more. We also read the spirit of adoption
as we learned from Romans chapter 8 recently, beginning at verse
15. But you have received the spirit
of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, Abba, Father. The spirit
himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of
God. And so God's spirit is given
to us to dwell in us. He Himself ratifies our adoption. He can never lie, but only testifies
to the truth that we have been adopted by God and are united
to Christ by faith. Our sonship is immutable and
confirms our title to all the promises. Irreversibly so, we
are enabled by the Spirit to pray like Jesus did, calling
God Father. And so we can see that we bear
God's name. We have the spirit of adoption. We also have undersea. We have
access to the throne of grace with boldness. If you would flip
back, if you're in Romans, to chapter five and look at the
first two verses to remind us of this privilege. Therefore,
having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through
our Lord Jesus Christ. Verse two, I'd like you to focus
on, through him, We also have obtained access by faith into
the grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the
glory of God. And so what you see there is
that that access we have is in the perfect tense. And so it
began when we first trusted in Christ, and it continues on forever
into the future. From Ephesians 2, verse 18, for
through him, that is through Christ, We, both Jew and Gentile
alike, have access in one spirit to the Father. And again, that's
present tense, so it is ongoing. It is a present reality. Previously,
any access we might have had to God in prayer was blocked
because of our sin nature, fallen in Adam. and our actual rebel
lifestyle as well. But God, who is rich in mercy,
sent his son through, and through his atoning work on the cross,
his perfect humanity and sinless life, gave himself as the Lamb
of God so that we might be reconciled, be made friends of God. And that
access is not through some ritual system of animal sacrifice, but
it is access in one's spirit to the Father. It is a spiritual
access. Now, the Easter season has come
and gone, but I'd like you to reflect upon what we find, one
of those realities of that crucifixion of Christ in Matthew 27, verse
51. Following Jesus' immediate death on the cross, we read,
and behold, the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top
to bottom, and the earth shook, and the rocks were split. I want
you to think with me for a moment what that curtain represented.
In a word, it was separation. the great reality of our sinful
nature and our sinful bent on our side and the absolute holiness
of God on the other. Only the high priest, as you
know, could pass through to the other side and only with blood
from a perfect sacrifice. And that only once a year to
atone for the sins of the people. And yet in his flesh, the Lord
Jesus Christ removed that curtain, that separation. And so when
Christ died, that curtain was once for all removed. That event
marked then how we view the cross of Christ. And that's exactly
how the writer to the Hebrews has it in Hebrews 10. verse 19,
beginning there, "...therefore, brothers," in Hebrews 10, 19,
"...therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the
holy places by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way that
he opened for us through the curtain," that is, through his
flesh, And since we have a great priest over the house of God,
let us draw near with a true heart, in full assurance of faith,
and with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience,
and our bodies washed with pure water." And so the writer to
the Hebrews, leads us to conclude that the way to God is now open,
yet only through Christ. And now we can draw near. Now
we can enter the Holy of Holies into God's presence. We can each
and together approach God through Christ with a true heart and
full assurance. The covenant meal that we celebrate
this evening commemorates and celebrates that access. So you
can see that we have We bear God's name. We have the spirit
of adoption. We have access to the throne
of grace. With boldness, we see. We're
also enabled, under Part D, we are enabled to cry, Abba, Father. as we read from Galatians 4 verse
6. And because you are sons, God
has sent the spirit of his son into our hearts, where we cry,
Abba, Father. And as we said previously, that
word Abba coming over from the Aramaic would have shocked those
New Testament readers and those that heard the Lord Jesus as
well, where we can address God as our Father. Luther has written,
this is but a little word, Abba, and yet it comprehends all things.
The mouth speaks not, but the affection of the heart speaks
after this manner. Although I may be oppressed with
anguish and terror on every side, and seem to be forsaken and utterly
cast away from your presence, yet I am your child, and you
are my father for Christ's sake. I am beloved because of the beloved. And so we can see that we have
access in God's presence, and we are enabled to cry, Abba,
Father. And let's move on then, as we've
looked at the privileges that we have as children of God, we
want to look at the care that we receive as children of God,
as the redeemed of God under Roman numeral three. First, the
framers note that we are pitied by God. Now immediately, you're
probably thinking of Psalm 103 verse 13. We are pitied by God. As a father
shows compassion to his children, so the Lord has compassion on
those who fear him. Like Jacob in Genesis 33, if
you remember when Esau invited Jacob and his company to go ahead
before them as a guard as they went into Canaan. Jacob responded
to his brother in verse 13. But Jacob said to him, my Lord
knows that the children are frail and that their nursing flocks
and herds are a care to me. If they are driven hard for one
day, all the flocks will die. Let my Lord pass on ahead of
his servant, and I will lead on slowly at the pace of the
livestock that are ahead of me and at the pace of the children
until I come to my Lord to stay here. Our heavenly Father is not one
who will drive us from one duty to the next as one drives cattle. because he will bear patiently
with us, so that not the slowest child is left behind and brought to discouragement
because of the hardness of the way. Well, why is that? Well,
verse 14 in Psalm 103 explains why. because he knows our frame. He remembers that we are but
dust. God has measured our strength
and will not challenge our spirit more than we are able to bear. And so we are pitied by God.
He knows all about us, our strengths, our weakness, where we would
be given into despair and discouragement and temptation the easiest. We
read, and this is well under Part B, that we are protected
by God. Knowing us fully, we are protected by God. From Proverbs
14, 26. In the fear of the Lord, one
has strong confidence, and his children will have a refuge. Or Psalm 46, verse 1. God is
our refuge and strength. God is our refuge and strength. A very help, a very present help
in trouble. And so in times of discouragement
and challenge, Luther could call upon his fellow reformer, Philip
Melanchthon, and say, come, Philip, let's sing the 46th Psalm. And
as you know, this is the basis of Luther's great hymn, A Mighty
Fortress is Our God, a paraphrase of that psalm. It is said, and
the words of this are actually inscribed on the base of Luther's
tomb. It is said to be the greatest
hymn of the greatest man in the greatest period in German history. And so we are protected by our
great God. He is our fortress, but more
than that, If you'll move on to part C, we are provided for
by God. With David, we can see in Psalm
34, verse 10, that we are provided for by God. Psalm 34, verse 10,
the young lions suffer want and hunger, but those who seek the
Lord lack no good thing. or a well-known passage in Matthew
6, beginning at verse 30. But if God so clothes the grass
of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown
into the oven, will not he much more clothe you, O you of little
faith? And therefore do not be anxious,
saying, what shall we eat, or what shall we drink, or what
shall we wear? For the Gentiles seek after all these things,
and your Heavenly Father knows that you need all. Verse 33,
but seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and
all these things will be added to you. We also remember Peter's
exhortation in 1 Peter 5, verse 6, where he says, humble yourselves,
therefore, under the mighty hand of God, that at the proper time
He may exalt you. Verse 7, casting all your anxieties
on Him, for He cares for you. we are cared for and provided
for by God. Think as well of Matthew chapter
7, where the Lord Jesus teaches us about prayer, beginning at
verse 9. Or which one of you, if his son
asks him for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for
a fish, will give him a serpent? If you then, being evil, Know
how to give good gifts to your children. How much more will
your Father, who is in heaven, give you good things to those
who seek him? Most certainly of all, the gift
of the Holy Spirit. So as we are instructed by Paul
in 1 Timothy 5.8 that fathers are to provide for their own
household, otherwise he has denied the faith, would our heavenly
father care any less for his own than the weakest saint, meeting
this minimum standard? God will certainly provide for
you, Christian. And so mark that down, God will
provide for you. And yet in our outline, we move
on. We also see as well that we are chastened. by God as his
children. A well-known passage in Hebrews
chapter 12, beginning at verse 5. Here we are chastened by God
and his children, where the writer to the Hebrews writes, and have
you forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as sons? And
he's quoting from Proverbs here. My son, do not regard lightly
the discipline of the Lord, nor be weary when reproved by him. For the Lord disciplines the
one he loves and chastens every son whom he receives. It is for
discipline that you have to endure. God is treating you as sons for
what son is there whom his father does not discipline. And so if
you are left without discipline in which all have participated,
then you are illegitimate children and not sons. And besides this,
We have had earthly fathers who disciplined us and we respected
them. Shall we not much more be subject
to the Father of spirits and live? For they disciplined us
for a short time as it seemed best to them, but he, that is
God, disciplines us for our good that we may share in his holiness. And so for the moment all discipline
seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful
fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.
And so note the balance in the scripture. Our wise father will
not have a brat running about his house, leaving trouble and
mischief in his wake. In love, he will chasten and
train out of us every peevish spirit, every sinful pattern,
and do whatever is needed to further conform us to the image
of his son. which is the purpose of a redemption.
And so while God punishes his enemies, he chastens his children. Spurgeon writes, God is no foolish
father. If he adopts a child, he adopts
it so that he may be a kind and wise father. And though he does
not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men for naught,
though when his strokes are felt, his strokes are fewer than our
crimes and lighter than our guilt. And yet at the same time, he
never spares the rod. He knows he would ruin his children
if he did, and therefore sometimes he lays it on with no sparing
hand and makes them cry out and groan while they think that he
has turned to be their enemy. And so God is going to chasten
his children whom he loves, the one for whom he sent his son
to die, and he will keep them in the way that is to that celestial
city. And under this section, as well,
we can see that we are received into the family of God. We receive
privileges as children of God. We are cared for as by a loving
and yet principled father. In Roman numeral four, we are
preserved by the power of God. We are preserved by the power
of God. And under that, we are never
cast off. We can never be cast off from Isaiah 54, verse 8.
In overflowing anger for a moment, I hid my face from you. But with
everlasting love, I will have compassion on you, says the Lord,
your Redeemer. Or well known to us as well,
Lamentations 3, 31. For the Lord will not cast off
forever, but though he cause grief, he will have compassion
according to the abundance of his steadfast, his hesed love. For he does not afflict, from
his heart or grieve the children of men. And so dear Christian,
your heavenly father would not send his only begotten son into
the world for you to believe on him, only to cast you away
in the end. His love is everlasting as his
compassion, as we see in Lamentations. And so we are cast off, but more
we are eternally secure, as we read from Ephesians, Chapter 1, verse 13, we are eternally
secure. In Him you also, when you heard
of the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed
in Him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is
the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of
it, to the praise of His glory. And Peter, as well, is going
to allude to this blessing, as well, in 1 Peter 1. Blessed be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. According to his
great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living
hope, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead,
to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, unfading, kept in
heaven for you, who by God's power are being guarded, are
being kept, through faith, for a salvation ready to be revealed
at the last time. And so through faith, though
our faith will be tested in this life, and experiencing a variety
of trials, as Peter will go on to describe, and along with our
persecutions, God preserves every adopted son and daughter, which
results in praise and glory to God at Christ's return. So God
himself stands watch over your soul. No one will snatch you
from his powerful hand, nor from the Lord Jesus. We are not God's
child on Tuesday, and then on Thursday we're children of the
devil again. No. Though we sin and are chastened,
God will never cast us off. But also, Roman numeral five,
we are graced with the promises of God. We can see that we're
received, we're privileged, we're cared for, and we are preserved,
but we are graced with promises. We are heirs of eternal salvation
that you see under there, heirs of eternal salvation. From Hebrews
9 verse 15, therefore Jesus is the mediator of a new covenant
so that those who called may receive the promised eternal
inheritance. since a death has occurred that
redeems them from the transgressions committed under the first covenant.
Or a chapter ahead in Hebrews 10 verse 36, for you have need
of endurance so that when you have done the will of God you
may receive what has been promised. We are not to despair on the
road to the celestial city. But we are to endure what hardships
God has placed along our path. For our entrance into the city
of God is one as children of the great king. And don't think
that you're abandoned by God in the dungeon of giant despair. Recall like Christian the promises
of God that will unlock that door that is in the castle of
giant despair. And so we are heirs of eternal
salvation. We have an inheritance that is
laid up for us in heaven. And you'll remember from Pilgrim's
Progress that was a matter of comfort and delight for Christian
on his way to the Celestial City. So we are heirs of salvation,
but more, under B, we are possessors of a storehouse of promises.
Peter writes about this in 2 Peter 1, beginning at verse 3. We are
possessors of a storehouse of promises. Verse 4. his precious and very great promises,
so that through them you may become partakers of the divine
nature, having escaped from the corruption that is in the world
because of sinful desire. Now the Apostle Paul refers to
this storehouse as well in 2 Corinthians 1, verse 20, where he writes,
for all the promises of God find their yes in him, that is in
Christ. And that is why it is through
him that we utter our amen to God for his glory. And so Paul
is expressing his confidence in God fulfilling all of his
promises to his children. They are certain to come to pass.
And nothing in heaven or earth can prevent that from taking
place. We have, as one writer puts it, a storehouse of blessings
and a chest of goodwill and the promises of God. God is not a
man that he should lie, as we read in Numbers 23. And therefore,
we ought to store up in our minds God's promises in times of health,
for days of sickness, and in times of peace for future trials. Consider Spurgeon's Faith Checkbook. If you've ever seen that devotional,
it's a wonderful collection of devotionals that focus upon all
the promises of God. Or, at the very least, make a
point of noting God's promises in your regular reading of the
scriptures. And I'll throw out one. Perhaps you're one this
evening who's struggling with, God, what do you want me to do
with this or that particular situation? Well, we need look
no further than James 1 verse 5, right? If any of you lacks
wisdom, let him ask of God who gives generously and without
reproach, and it will be given to him. So you have promised
wisdom that you must ask for. And so we are possessors of a
storehouse of promises that we can only allude to at this point. But now we need to move on finally
to Roman numeral Six, what are the duties, or at least some
of the duties, of God's adopted children? As we've looked at
being received into the family of God, receiving privileges
in that household of God, being cared for, being preserved, What
are the duties of God's adopted children? First, here, is to
often reflect upon our new identity. And we need not look no further
than 1 John 3, verse 1, where the Apostle John writes,
see what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should
be called children of God, the inestimable privilege of being
called children of God. And so we are, John writes. The reason why the world does
not know us is that it did not know him. And so learn from the
Apostle John the manner with which the Father loves us. But
also note how that love comes to us. It is a love that is given. It is graciously given to us. You and I are children of God,
not by performing some service to God or giving to the church
so as to have God in our debt. No, far from it. Our so-called
good works could never earn such a privilege. It is by the grace
of God and Christ alone. And so in times of trial and
discouragement, may these realities come home to comfort and to keep
you in the way. So are you like that somewhat
older, somewhat nervous adopted child in the household of God? Where do I sit? Is this seat
mine? Is it safe to sit here at the
table? Is there a place at the table for me? Oh, yes. Is there a place where I can
sleep that I can call my own? Am I going to be listened to?
Am I going to be loved? Do I really belong here? Will
I be supported in my times of trouble, of good health and in
bad? May these lessons come home to
you and to me as we reflect often upon our tremendous unspeakable
privilege as being adopted children of God. What an honor, what an
honor to be adopted children of God. But secondly, under this,
to love all true people of God. Two chapters later, John writes,
by this we know that we love the children of God when we love
God and obey his commands. If we love God, then that's upon
us to show that love in all those that name the name of Christ
and are in that family with us. Don't reflect upon past injuries,
whether real or conjured up in your mind, presumed. Find some
practical outlet for your love for those who share in the same
inheritance as you. Thirdly, our duty would be to
reject the ways of the world. If you flip back to chapter two
of John's epistle, 1 John 2 verse 15, do not love the world or
the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the
love of the Father is not in him. What a sobering thought. To have been received as God's
adopted child through Jesus Christ, by grace alone, and then to deny
that love. by going back to the world. Keep
the love of the Father ever before your heart and mind, and you'll
not trade it for the idols this world sets before your eyes.
Would you, like Lot's wife, look back with longing to Sodom? Would you trade away your assurance
for this present world like Demas did, and suffer the shipwreck
of your soul? But also, as well under D, often
go to your Father in prayer, often go to your father in prayer.
And I have to confess, this is an neglected duty and honor that
I fall far short of what I'm speaking. We are children of
God, not servants under the law. That little prayer, Abba, Father,
should set us on our way in our private devotions and in our
corporate times of prayer, whether on Wednesday or on the Lord's
Day as well, as God's gathered household. In the storms of life,
God is a very present help in trouble, Psalm 41. Or 1 Peter
5, 7, casting all your cares upon him, for he cares for you. And then finally here, rejoice
in our hope of heaven with God. Rejoice in our hope of heaven
with God. Going back to that same passage
in 1 John 3, verse 2. Behold, sorry, beloved, we are
God's children now. and what we will be has not yet
appeared, but we know that when he appears, we shall be like
him, because we shall see him as he is. And everyone who thus
hopes in him purifies himself as he is pure. And so in closing,
while those of us who have trusted in Christ enjoy such privileges
and receive so much care from God as his children, I'm sober
to think of how none of these benefits we've outlined this
evening come to those who don't know Christ. My unbelieving friend,
consider all you have to gain by trusting Christ. For the forgiveness of your sins
and turning away from those sins to God, as we heard this morning.
never to be alone, never to be shut out, never to be cast away
and disregarded, chastened but not destroyed, loved and restored
to the God who made you to fulfill God's purpose for which he made
you. God comes to you in the gospel of his Son, with terms
of peace as we plainly heard from Isaiah 55 this morning. There is a day coming, yet unknown,
yet certain, when he will wrap up this universe and judge every
man, every woman, every boy, every girl for their works, according
to their works. How much better for you to come
to Christ today to be received by God. than to be cast into
the outer darkness for all eternity. May you pray for grace to choose
rightly today. And I close with that promise
that we began with from John 1 verse 12. But to all who did
receive him, who believed in his name, in Jesus' name, he
gave the right, he gave the right to become children of God. who
were born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of
the will of man, but they were born of God." Well, let's pray. Father, as we've surveyed a number
of themes that are really throughout your Scriptures, We pray that
you would intensify our focus as we find these themes throughout
your word, as they're fulfilled, certainly in our Lord Jesus Christ. Lord, help us to once again take
advantage of our tremendous privilege that we have in calling you our
Father, being adopted into your family through Christ. We pray
all these things in his name. Amen.
Blessings of Adoption Pt 2
Series Lord's Supper Meditations
| Sermon ID | 57232216164093 |
| Duration | 44:16 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Language | English |
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