Beetow
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- Joined
- Apr 19, 2020
- Messages
- 2,538
● Rom 8:15-16 . . For you did not receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but
you received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out: Abba, Father. The Spirit
Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God.
That passage tells of a supernatural close encounter of a third kind, so to speak.
Not every Christian undergoes the experience. For example: adherents of
Catholicism and Seventh Day Adventism honestly don't know for sure where they
stand with God-- we're talking about something like 1.37 Billion people. Those two
denominations alone represent approximately 57% of the world's Christians.
* Rom 8:15-16 never happened for Mother Teresa. She complained in private
correspondence with spiritual counselors that she felt not the slightest glimmer of
the Lord's presence virtually her entire five decades in India; leading Teresa to wonder
if there really is a God out there; and she sometimes spoke of Jesus as "the absent
one".
The Spirit of adoption is supposed to make God's people feel at home; not feel left
out. I don't know what went wrong with Teresa but for sure her spiritual condition
was not good.
NOTE: The word "Abba" is transliterated rather than translated; i.e. it's the actual
word; but it's neither Greek nor Hebrew, rather, it's Aramaic.
Abba pertains to one's male parent but not as an ordinary noun. It's a filial
vocative.
For example: When my son points me out to one of his friends and says "That's my
dad over there." Then the word dad simply indicates how he and I are related. But
when he shouts "Hey dad, I'm over here!" then the word dad is a filial vocative
because he's addressing me personally to get my attention.
_
you received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out: Abba, Father. The Spirit
Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God.
That passage tells of a supernatural close encounter of a third kind, so to speak.
Not every Christian undergoes the experience. For example: adherents of
Catholicism and Seventh Day Adventism honestly don't know for sure where they
stand with God-- we're talking about something like 1.37 Billion people. Those two
denominations alone represent approximately 57% of the world's Christians.
* Rom 8:15-16 never happened for Mother Teresa. She complained in private
correspondence with spiritual counselors that she felt not the slightest glimmer of
the Lord's presence virtually her entire five decades in India; leading Teresa to wonder
if there really is a God out there; and she sometimes spoke of Jesus as "the absent
one".
The Spirit of adoption is supposed to make God's people feel at home; not feel left
out. I don't know what went wrong with Teresa but for sure her spiritual condition
was not good.
NOTE: The word "Abba" is transliterated rather than translated; i.e. it's the actual
word; but it's neither Greek nor Hebrew, rather, it's Aramaic.
Abba pertains to one's male parent but not as an ordinary noun. It's a filial
vocative.
For example: When my son points me out to one of his friends and says "That's my
dad over there." Then the word dad simply indicates how he and I are related. But
when he shouts "Hey dad, I'm over here!" then the word dad is a filial vocative
because he's addressing me personally to get my attention.
_