In the first four posts on the coming of the Spirit, the emphasis was on the Spirit’s work in us together as the church. In the next four, we want to see how the Spirit works in us as individuals.
First, the Spirit makes us God’s children. Romans 8:15-17 tells us that it is through the Spirit that we are adopted, it is through the Spirit that we call God our Father. Because we are God’s children, we are heirs. We have an inheritance. One day we will receive resurrected glorious bodies like Christ’s resurrected glorious body (I Corinthians 15) – we will be co-heirs with Christ. We will dwell in a new heaven and new earth where there will be no more pain or crying or death (Revelation 21:1-4).
Our response to this should be hope. We have a great hope of a day when we will be with the Lord, and there will be no more sin, no more suffering, no more sickness, no more pain, no more death. In the last week, an older man in our church passed away, and a young woman in our community passed away. In the face of death, how we need this hope!
In the midst of trials and struggles – times of loss, sickness, surgery, family problems, and so much more, we can cling to our hope of a better day that is ours through the Spirit. In the midst of good times that God blesses us with for our enjoyment, we can cling to the hope that even better days are coming through the Spirit. In the face of our own deaths someday, we can cling to the hope that a day is coming when even death will be defeated and we will dwell in paradise with the Lord forever – all because the Spirit has made us God’s children.
Is this hope alive in us today? Do we live in the good times and the bad times holding on to the hope of what God has prepared for us? Or do we get so caught up in life today, that we forget our hope? Our hope can give us strength and courage for today. Our hope can clarify our priorities and motivate us to live for Christ in this life. Are we living each day in light of our glorious hope?
The Spirit makes us God’s children and heirs of a great inheritance, and so we have hope. Let’s live like it!