| Supernatural Adoption |
| (Lat. adoptare, to choose.) |
| Adoption is the gratuitous taking of a stranger as one's own child and heir. |
| According as the adopter is man or God, the adoption is styled human or divine, |
| natural or supernatural. In the present instance there is question only of the |
| divine -- that adoption of man by God in virtue of which we become His sons and |
| heirs. Is this adoption only a figurative way of speaking? Is there substantial |
| authority to vouch for its reality? What idea are we to form of its nature and |
| constituents? A careful consideration of the presentation of Holy Scripture, of the |
| teachings of Christian tradition, and of the theories set forth by theologians |
| relative to our adopted sonship, will help to answer these questions. |
| The Old Testament, which St. Paul aptly compares to the state of childhood and |
| bondage, contains no text that would point conclusively to our adoption. There |
| were indeed saints in the days of the Old Law, and if there were saints there |
| were also adopted children of God, for sanctity and adoption are inseparable |
| effects of the same habitual grace. But as the Old Law did not possess the virtue |
| of giving that grace, neither did it contain a clear intimation of supernatural |
| adoption. Such sayings as those of Exodus (4:22), "Israel is my son, my |
| firstborn", Osee (1:10), "Ye are the sons of the living God", and Romans (9:4), |
| "Israelites to whom belongeth the adoption as of children", are not to be applied |
| to any individual soul, for they were spoken of God's chosen people taken |
| collectively. |
| It is in the New Testament, which marks the fullness of time and the advent of |
| the Redeemer, that we must search for the revelation of this heaven-born privilege |
| (cf. Galatians 4:1). "Son of God" is an expression of no infrequent use in the |
| Synoptic Gospels, and as therein employed, the words apply both to Jesus and |
| to ourselves. But whether, in the case of Jesus, this phrase points to |
| Messiahship only, or would also include the idea of real divine filiation, is a |
| matter of little consequence in our particular case. Surely in our case it cannot of |
| itself afford us a sufficiently stable foundation on which to establish a valid claim |
| to adopted sonship. As a matter of fact, when St. Matthew (v, 9, 45) speaks of |
| the "children of God", he means the peacemakers, and when he speaks of |
| "children of your Father who is in Heaven", he means those who repay hatred |
| with love, thereby implying throughout nothing more than a broad resemblance |
| to, and moral union with God. The charter of our adoption is properly recorded by |
| St. Paul (Romans 8; Ephesians 1; Galatians 4); St. John (Prologue and I Epistle |
| 1, 3); St. Peter (I Epistle 1); and St. James (I Epistle 1). According to these |
| several passages we are begotten, born of God. He is our Father, but in such |
| wise that we may call ourselves, and truly are, His children, the members of His |
| family, brothers of Jesus Christ with whom we partake of the Divine Nature and |
| claim a share in the heavenly heritage. This divine filiation, together with the right |
| of co-heritage, finds its source in God's own will and graceful condescension. |
| When St. Paul, using a technical term borrowed from the Greeks, calls it |
| adoption, we must interpret the word in a merely analogical sense. In general, |
| the correct interpretation of the Scriptural concept of our adoption must follow the |
| golden mean and locate itself midway between the Divine Sonship of Jesus on |
| the one hand, and human adoption on the other -- immeasurably below the |
| former and above the latter. Human adoption may modify the social standing, but |
| adds nothing to the intrinsic worth of an adopted child. Divine adoption, on the |
| contrary, works inward, penetrating to the very core of our life, renovating |
| enriching, transforming it into the likeness of Jesus, "the firstborn among many |
| brethren". Of course it cannot be more than a likeness, an image of the Divine |
| Original mirrored in our imperfect selves. There will ever be between our adoption |
| and the filiation of Jesus the infinite distance which separates created grace from |
| hypostatical union. And yet, that intimate and mysterious communion with |
| Christ, and through Him with God, is the glory of our adopted sonship: "And the |
| glory which thou hast given me, I have given to them -- I in them and thou in me" |
| (John, xvii, 22, 23). |
| The oft-repeated emphasis which Holy Writ lays on our supernatural adoption |
| won great popularity for that dogma in the early Church. Baptism, the laver of |
| regeneration, became the occasion of a spontaneous expression of faith in our |
| adopted sonship. The newly baptised were called infantes, irrespective of age. |
| They assumed names which suggested the idea of adoption, such as Adeptus, |
| Regeneratus, Renatus, Deigenitus, Theogonus, and the like. In the liturgical |
| prayers for neophytes, some of which have survived even to our own day (e.g. the |
| collect for Holy Saturday and the preface for Pentecost), the officiating prelate |
| made it a sacred duty to remind them of this grace of adoption, and to call down |
| from Heaven a like blessing on those who had not yet been so favoured. (See |
| BAPTISM.) The Fathers dwell on this privilege which they are pleased to style |
| deification. St. Irenaeus (Adv. Haereses, iii, 17-19); St. Athanasius (Cont. |
| Arianos, ii, 59); St. Cyril of Alexandria (Comment. on St. John, i, 13, 14); St. |
| John Chrysostom (Homilies on St. Matthew, ii, 2); St. Augustine (Tracts 11 and |
| 12 on St. John); St. Peter Chrysologus (Sermon 72 on the Lord's Prayer) -- all |
| seem willing to spend their eloquence on the sublimity of our adoption. For them |
| it was an uncontradicted primal principle, an ever ready source of instruction for |
| the faithful, as well as an argument against heretics such as the Arians, |
| Macedonians, and Nestorians. The Son is truly God, else how could He deify |
| us? The Holy Ghost is truly God, else how could His indwelling sanctify us? The |
| Incarnation of the Logos is real, else how could our deification be real? Be the |
| value of such arguments what it may, the fact of their having been used, and this |
| to good effect, bears witness to the popularity and common acceptance of the |
| dogma in those days. |
| Some writers, like Scheeben, go further still and look in the patristic writings for |
| set theories regarding the constituent factor of our adoption. They claim that, |
| while the Fathers of the East account for our supernatural sonship by the |
| indwelling of the Holy Ghost, the Fathers of the West maintain that sanctifying |
| grace is the real factor. Such a view is premature. True it is that St. Cyril lays |
| special stress on the presence of the Holy Spirit in the soul of the just man, |
| whereas St. Augustine is more partial towards grace. But it is equally true that |
| neither speaks exclusively, much less pretends to lay down the causa formalis |
| of adoption as we understand it today. In spite of all the catechetic and polemic |
| uses to which the Fathers put this dogma, they left it in no clearer light than did |
| their predecessors, the inspired writers of the distant past. The patristic sayings, |
| like those of Holy Scripture, afford precious data for the framing of a theory, but |
| that theory itself is the work of later ages. |
| What is the essential factor or formal cause of our supernatural adoption? This |
| question was never seriously mooted previous to the scholastic period. The |
| solutions it then received were to a great extent influenced by the then current |
| theories on grace. Peter the Lombard, who identifies grace and charity with the |
| Holy Ghost, was naturally brought to explain our adoption by the sole presence |
| of the Spirit in the soul of the just, to the exclusion of any created and inherent |
| God-given entity. The Nominalists and Scotus, though reluctantly admitting a |
| created entity, nevertheless failed to see in it a valid factor of our divine adoption, |
| and consequently had recourse to a divine positive enactment decreeing and |
| receiving us as children of God and heirs of the Kingdom. Apart from these, a |
| vast majority of the Schoolmen with Alexander Hales, Albert the Great, St. |
| Bonaventure, and preeminently St. Thomas, pointed to habitual grace (an |
| expression coined by Alexander) as the essential factor of our adopted sonship. |
| For them the same inherent quality which gives new life and birth to the soul |
| gives it also a new filiation. Says the Angel of the Schools (III:9:23, ad 3am), |
| "The creature is assimilated to the Word of God in His Unity with the Father; and |
| this is done by grace and charity. . . . Such a likeness perfects the idea of |
| adoption, for to the like is due the same eternal heritage." (See GRACE.) This |
| last view received the seal of the Council of Trent (sess. VI, c. vii, can. 11). The |
| Council first identifies justification with adoption: "To become just and to be heir |
| according to the hope of life everlasting" is one and the same thing. It then |
| proceeds to give the real essence of justification. "Its sole formal cause is the |
| justice of God, not that whereby He Himself is just, but that whereby He maketh |
| us just." Furthermore, it repeatedly characterises the grace of justification and |
| adoption as "no mere extrinsic attribute or favour, but a gift inherent in our |
| hearts." This teaching was still more forcibly emphasized in the Catechism of the |
| Council of Trent (De Bapt., No. 50), and by the condemnation by Pius V of the |
| forty-second proposition of Baius, the contradictory of which reads: "Justice is a |
| grace infused into the soul whereby man is adopted into divine sonship." It would |
| seem that the thoroughness with which the Council of Trent treated this doctrine |
| should have precluded even the possibility of further discussion. Nevertheless the |
| question came to the fore again with Leonard Leys (Lessius), 1623; Denis Petau |
| (Petavius), 1652; and Matthias Scheeben, 1888. According to their views, it |
| could very well be that the unica causa formalis of the Council of Trent is not the |
| complete cause of our adoption, and it is for this reason that they would make |
| the indwelling of the Holy Ghost at least a partial constituent of divine sonship. |
| Here we need waste no words in consideration of the singular idea of making the |
| indwelling of the Holy Ghost an act proper to, and not merely an appropriation of, |
| the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity. As to the main point at issue, if we |
| carefully weigh the posthumous explanations given by Lessius; if we recall the |
| fact that Petavius spoke of the matter under consideration rather en passant; and |
| if we notice the care Scheeben takes to assert that grace is the essential factor |
| of our adoption, the presence of the Holy Ghost being only an integral part and |
| substantial complement of the same, there will be little room for alarm as to the |
| orthodoxy of these distinguished writers. The innovation, however, was not |
| happy. It did not blend with the obvious teaching of the Council of Trent. It ignored |
| the terse interpretation given in the Catechism of the Council of Trent. It served |
| only to complicate and obscure that simple and direct traditional theory, |
| accounting for our regeneration and adoption by the selfsame factor. Still it had |
| the advantage of throwing a stronger light upon the connotations of sanctifying |
| grace, and of setting off in purer relief the relations of the sanctified and adopted |
| soul with the Three Persons of the Blessed Trinity: with the Father, the Author |
| and Giver of grace; with the Incarnate Son, the meritorious Cause and Exemplar |
| of our adoption; and especially with the Holy Ghost, the Bond of our union with |
| God, and the infallible Pledge of our inheritance. It also brought us back to the |
| somewhat forgotten ethical lessons of our communion with the Triune God, and |
| especially with the Holy Ghost, lessons so much insisted upon in ancient |
| patristic literature and the inspired writings. "The Three Persons of the Blessed |
| Trinity, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost", says St. Augustine (Tract 76; In |
| Joan), "come to us as long as we go to Them, They come with Their help, if we |
| go with submission. They come with light, if we go to learn; They come to |
| replenish, if we go to be filled, that our vision of Them be not from without but |
| from within, and that Their indwelling in us be not fleeting but eternal." And St. |
| Paul (I Cor., iii, 16, 17), "Know you not that you are the temple of God and that |
| the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? But if any man violate the temple of God, him |
| shall God destroy. For the temple of God is holy, which you are." From what has |
| been said, it is manifest that our supernatural adoption is an immediate and |
| necessary property of sanctifying grace. The primal concept of sanctifying grace |
| is a new God-given and Godlike life superadded to our natural life. By that very |
| life we are born to God even as the child to its parent, and thus we acquire a new |
| filiation. This filiation is called adoption for two reasons: first, to distinguish it from |
| the one natural filiation which belongs to Jesus; second, to emphasize the fact |
| that we have it only through the free choice and merciful condescension of God. |
| Again, as from our natural filiation many social relations crop up between us and |
| the rest of the world, so our divine life and adoption establish manifold relations |
| between the regenerate and adopted soul on the one hand, and the Triune God |
| on the other. It was not without reason that Scripture and the Eastern Church |
| singled out the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity as the special term of these |
| higher relations. Adoption is the work of love. "What is adoption," says the |
| Council of Frankfort, "if not a union of love?" It is, therefore, meet that it should be |
| traced to, and terminate in, the intimate presence of the Spirit of Love. |
| WILHELM AND SCANNELL, A Manual of Catholic Theology based on Scheeben's Dogmatik |
| (London, 1890); HUNTER, Outlines of Dogmatic Theology (New York, 1894); |
| NIEREMBERG-SCHEEBEN, The Glories of Divine Grace (New York, 1885); DEVINE, Manual of |
| Ascetic Theology or the Supernatural Life of the Soul (London, 1902); NEWMAN, St. Athanasius, II, |
| Deification, Grace of God, Divine Indwelling, Sanctification (London, 1895); BELLAMY, La vie |
| surnaturelle (Paris, 1895); TERRIEN, La Grâce et La Gloire (Paris, 1897); LESSIUS, De |
| Perfectionibus Moribusque Divinis; De Summo Bono et Æternâ Beatitudine (Antwerp, 1620; Paris, |
| 1881); PETAVIUS, Opus de Theologicis Dogmatibus (Bar-le-Duc, 1867); SCHEEBEN, Handbuch |
| der kathol. Dogmatik (Freiburg, 1873); see also current treatises on grace: MAZZELLA, HURTER, |
| PESCH, KATSCHTHALER. |
| J.F. Sollier |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I |
| Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company |
| Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight |
| Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor |
| Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia: NewAdvent.org |