he
apostle Paul declares that the Father "predestined us to
adoption as sons [and daughters] through Jesus Christ to Himself" (Ephesians
1:5). There are three huge points in this short declaration. The first is the
idea of predestination, the second the purpose of our adoption, and the third is
that this was planned to be accomplished through Jesus Christ.
Many are horrified by the idea
of predestination, but it is actually at the heart of the gospel. For it means
that we were known and loved, named and claimed by the Father himself before the
foundation of the world. The Calvinists have done a hatchet job on
predestination by limiting the Father’s heart and love to a select few, to the
exclusion of others. But don’t let their error keep you from seeing that the
Father himself loved you before he created the world and it has never crossed
his mind to stop.
For Paul, the God who
predestines is not the isolated, faceless, nameless, omni-being, or the cold,
unapproachable, cosmic judge of our fallen imaginations. The God who predestines
is Jesus’ Father. And this relationship is not sad or lonely or boring. This
relationship is alive with other-centered love, with passion and fellowship. The
Father’s purpose for us flows out of his relationship with his Son. So it is not
surprising that Paul’s thinking moves from this relationship between the Father
and the Son to our adoption. Could anything be more stunning than reading that
we were predestined by Jesus’ Father to be adopted into his family?
A real relationship
Adoption means far more than
being given legal status before a distant divine being. Status is not a bad
thing, of course, but it is nowhere near real relationship. The gift to be given
to us in adoption is nothing less than the Father himself. Read the verse again,
"He predestined us to adoption as sons through Jesus Christ to Himself."
What the Father desires is a real relationship with us, not mere legalities. He
wants communion, fellowship, shared life, not religious and external obedience
to a set of rules. He wants us to know him and his love with his Son. His plan
is to give us a real place in the life and fellowship and glory that he shares
with his Son and Spirit. We are to be drawn in love and grace into the
Trinitarian life of God. This is the truth that tells us how valuable and wanted
and cherished we are.
When Paul glances back through
history into eternity to find the rhyme and reason of it all, he sees the
beautiful relationship between the Father, Son and Spirit and then he sees the
decision to give us a personal place within it. That is what adoption means, and
Paul tells us that this was the plan before the creation of the world. But as
rich and beautiful and almost unbelievable as this news is, Paul adds one more
revolutionary point.
Long before the creation
Who is responsible for bringing
the Father’s dreams for us to fruition? Are we dealing here with a great dream
of the Father for us but no strategy for its being worked out? Were the Father’s
plans entrusted to Adam, to Israel, to the church? Note carefully what Paul
says, "He predestined us to adoption as sons through Jesus Christ"
(italics mine). Jesus’ coming is not plan "B" quickly thought up and implemented
after the failure of plan "A" in Adam. Jesus is the original plan, the alpha and
the omega, the eternal Word of God, the good shepherd appointed before the
creation of the world.
What Paul is telling us is that
the Father’s Son was "on the road to becoming flesh," to borrow a phrase from
the eminent Reformed theologian, Thomas F. Torrance, before the first particle
of creation was called into being. The fall of Adam, the sin of humanity, the
calling of Israel and the giving of the Law, all fall under the heading of "the
coming of the Father’s Son."
Before all these things happened
in our history, God had purposed to make us his own through adoption by sending
his Son, Jesus Christ, to make our redemption possible. Our faith rests "on the
hope of eternal life, which God, who does not lie, promised before the beginning
of time" (Titus 1:2). •
Dr. C. Baxter Kruger is
the Director of Perichoresis Ministries and the President of Mediator Lures,
which manufactures specialty fishing lures. For more information visit
www.perichoresis.org.