- Adopted
Sons
-
by Christopher Cuddy
[Introductory note: this article is the second of a
three-part series introducing the Church’s teaching
on the doctrine of justification. In the first
article
Part I we
examined the Church’s understanding of the doctrine
of original sin. In this second article we will
examine what the Church says about the doctrine of
“justification” itself, and how it relates to our
daily walk with God. Next month, in the third
article, we will examine how the Catholic and
Protestant understandings of justification are
similar, different, and how they relate.]
# # #
I was born an orphan. For the first three months of my
life I had no mother and no father. I was without a
home. I was without a family. I was alone.
I often wonder what would have happened if I had remained
an orphan. Although it is difficult for me to
imagine growing up in a Korean orphanage, such would
have been my life had I not been adopted. I would
probably have grown up alone; never knowing the love
of a true father and mother. Never knowing what it
means to love and to be loved. Who knows what would
have happened...
By the grace of God, however, I was adopted three months
after my birth, and I was brought over to the United
States where I was reared in a loving Christian
home. While I was always grateful for my adoption,
it wasn’t until I became a Catholic that I began to
see how truly blessed I was. My experience of
adoption on a natural level really helped me to see
and understand the implications of my supernatural
adoption into God’s divine family. I came to see –
in an amazing new way – that families are not simply
groups of biological organisms that share similar
traits and characteristics. Quite the contrary: at
its core a “family” is not biological and
physical but rather it is theological and
spiritual. Why is this? Well, simply put,
it is because God is the Father of a divine family
and we are His children. That’s why Jesus taught us
to call God “Father” (see Luke 11:2-4). Far from
giving His disciples a mere title to call God, He
was imparting to them a profound truth about the
reality of our relationship with God: we are not
merely God’s creatures; we are His divine sons!
This is so utterly important for understanding the
Catholic view of justification. This is essential
for understanding the Catholic view of life.
In last month’s article, we saw how Adam and Eve fell from
their position as God’s divine son and daughter.
They were created to share in God’s divine life.
They were created to be members of His divine
family. When they sinned, however, they fell from
their status as divine sons and rejected God as
their Father. They lost the very special gift of
sanctifying grace (God’s life and power in their
soul). In a very real sense, they gave up a part of
who they were. They were not alone in their fallen
condition, however. All of their descendents were
born in a state of original sin: they were born
without God’s divine life in their souls. They were
spiritual orphans.
Christ changed all of this, however. Through His
incarnation, death, resurrection, and ascension we
are given an opportunity to be adopted back into
God’s divine family. While Adam and Eve had been
created as sons of God who fell through sin, we are
given a chance to be recreated (or “reborn”) back
into God’s divine family and a life of grace. This
is what the Catholic Church teaches about the
doctrine of justification. At the Council of Trent
the Church clearly defined “justification” as the
process by which we are both made and
declared to be sons and daughters of God. The
Council of Trent says that justification is a
“translation from that state in which man is born a
child of the first Adam, to the state of grace and
of the adoption of the sons of God through the
second Adam, Jesus Christ, our Savior”
Council of Trent Session Six, Chapter Four.
Thus, justification is sonship. It is the process
by which we are able to share and participate in
Christ’s own divine Sonship and Life. While we are
all born as fallen sons of Adam, Christ made it
possible for us to be reborn as divine sons of God.
The Catholic Church was not making this up. The idea that
justification is sonship is found throughout the
Bible. 1 John 3:1 states: “See what love the Father
has given us, that we should be called children of
God; and so we are.” This verse clearly states that
we are not just “declared” or “called” God’s
children, but that we actually become and are
His children. God doesn’t just “say” that we are
His sons: His words have power and He actually
makes us His children. In Galatians 3:26 St.
Paul writes: “in Christ
Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith.” It
is in and through Christ’s own Sonship that we can
become sons of God. In the very next verse St. Paul
goes on to say that we have been “baptized into
Christ” and through our baptism we have “put on
Christ” (Gal. 3:27). This theme of fatherhood-sonship
is also found in Galatians 4:1-7. Christ saved us
from our state as “fallen sons” so that we could be
reborn (through baptism) and adopted into God’s
divine family.
Two of my favorite paragraphs in the entire
Catechism of the Catholic Church
are paragraphs 1996 and 1997 Section
1996-1997. These sections in the
Catechism say that God’s grace is both God’s
undeserved favor and His own divine life.
God not only looks upon us as His children, He
actually gives Himself to us: He pours His own Life
and Power into our empty/sinful souls. This is what
God does as a Father. This is what we receive as
His sons.
Just as a natural son receives an inheritance from his
natural parents, so we - through our life in Christ
- receive a heavenly inheritance from our heavenly
Father. Paragraph 2009 Section
2009 of the Catechism states
that our adoption into God’s family enables us to
share in Christ’s inheritance and makes us
“co-heirs” with Jesus. This is very important. As
sons and heirs of our Heavenly Father, we don’t
“obligate” God to gives us eternal life in heaven
any more than I “obligate” my own parents to give me
an earthly inheritance. My parents have written me
into their will because I am their son and they love
me; not because they “owe” me anything. Our parents
leave us an inheritance out of love for us. It is
pure gift. In the same way, God does not “owe” us
heaven, but He gives it to us as a divine
inheritance because we are His adopted sons and He
loves us. Our salvation is purely because of the
grace and love of God. God graciously gives to His
children what they could never achieve on their
own.
This may be all fine and dandy to read and think about, but
how does this affect our everyday lives? Does this
understanding of justification and salvation as
sonship have any application on how we live? Does
it really matter?
Yes! It matters profoundly, and it affects every aspect of
our lives. It affects how we look at Mass and
receive Communion. If we truly believe that God is
our Heavenly Father - and that we are His divine
sons - then we will come to see that Mass is not
just a boring religious ceremony but rather a
heavenly Family meal! Like any good Father, God
feeds and nurtures His children. God only gives His
children the very best (supernatural) food so that
they can grow and mature in their faith and
relationship with Him. At Mass we receive “Food
from Heaven.” We eat at our Heavenly Father’s
table, and we receive His Life, Power, Strength, and
Being.
Our understanding of God as Father also affects how we
pray. A lot of people are afraid to talk to God.
They think that God is so holy and righteous that He
doesn’t want His sinful creatures to even try
praying to Him. But if we realize that God is a
loving Father, we do not have to come before Him
with a servant’s fear and dread: we can run into His
open loving arms as His children. God is not a
cosmic dictator who eagerly awaits the moment when
He can annihilate His sinful creatures. He is a
heavenly Father who calls His children to sincere
repentance, and He wants them to be filled with His
divine Love and Grace. Nothing is too trivial in
God’s eyes. This is why Jesus taught His disciples
to call God Father. He wants His children to pray
to Him about every aspect of their lives. Our
Heavenly Father wants to have an intimate
relationship with His adopted children.
Finally, our understanding of God as Father affects how we
live. God is a Father, and He loves as a Father.
We are God’s adopted sons and daughters, and we
should live a life of loving obedience to our
Heavenly Father. Natural parents love their
children, and they want what’s best for their sons
and daughters. This is why parents have household
rules: they want their children to grow up safely.
As a supernatural Father, God wants what is best for
His divine children, and He designs His laws and
commandments to help His children mature spiritually
and grow closer to Him. God didn’t arbitrarily
conjure up laws to keep His children from having
fun. All of God’s commandments come from His loving
desire to give what is best to His children. He
wants to protect them from the harm of sin. True
freedom is only found in the loving guidance and
instruction of our Heavenly Father.
In conclusion, God is a Father and we are His
adopted sons and daughters. This is what the
Catholic Church teaches about the doctrine of
justification. This is how we are saved. In the
first article Part
I we saw that Adam and Eve were
originally created as God’s children, but they
rebelled against their heavenly Father and fell into
sin. In this article, we have seen that the Father
loved us so much that He sent His own Son to lead us
back to the Father so that we could be “adopted”
(“reborn”) back into God’s divine family. In next
month’s article, we will look at a few of the
Protestant beliefs about justification and examine
how they relate to the Catholic view.
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