Summary
This book explores Paul’s adoption language and what it teaches about salvation, identity, and Christian assurance. Burke examines key Pauline texts and situates adoption within the wider story of redemption, showing how the metaphor speaks of belonging, status, inheritance, and intimate access to God. The work pays attention to historical background where it is helpful, but the main focus is on careful reading of Scripture and on drawing out theological meaning. Adoption is presented not as a sentimental idea, but as a strong gospel reality grounded in the work of Christ and applied by the Spirit. For pastors, the theme is rich for preaching and counselling, because it connects justification, sanctification, and assurance, and it speaks to the fears and loneliness that often shape modern life.
Strengths
The chief strength is how it gives substance to a familiar word. Many Christians speak of being children of God but struggle to grasp what that means. This book helps you explain adoption with biblical depth, showing its Trinitarian shape, the Father’s welcome, the Son’s redemptive work, and the Spirit’s testimony. It also helps you avoid common confusions, such as treating adoption as merely an emotional feeling or as a separate blessing detached from union with Christ. The exegetical sections are useful for sermon preparation, especially on Romans 8 and Galatians 4, and the theological synthesis gives a coherent framework for teaching the doctrine across the church. There is a steady pastoral aim, to lead the reader to assurance and to obedience rooted in belonging rather than in fear.
Limitations
The focus is primarily Pauline, so those looking for a full biblical theology of sonship across the Old and New Testaments will need to supplement it. Some historical discussions may feel brief to specialists, though they are usually sufficient for the purpose. There is also a risk that readers will treat adoption as a therapeutic message only, rather than as a covenantal reality that includes discipline, obedience, and family likeness. The book points towards these dimensions, but you will still need to apply them carefully in preaching and pastoral care. Finally, because the metaphor is so pastorally attractive, there can be a temptation to make it the single controlling category for Christian identity, whereas Scripture uses many complementary images. This book is best used as a deep dive into one vital theme, not as an exclusive framework.
How We Would Use It
We would use this in preparing sermons on Romans and Galatians, and in pastoral counselling where assurance, belonging, and identity are in view. It also works well in small group settings, because the theme is both accessible and transformative when properly taught. In training contexts it can help young preachers learn to handle metaphors carefully, drawing out meaning from the text rather than importing modern assumptions. For congregational teaching it provides strong content for baptism classes, discipleship courses, or teaching on the Holy Spirit’s witness. Read it with a view to application, identify the pastoral problems your people face, then show how adoption speaks to fear, shame, and striving with the gospel of grace.
Closing Recommendation
This is a helpful study of a gospel rich theme. If you want to preach and teach adoption with greater accuracy and warmth, it is a resource that will serve you well.
Trevor J. Burke
Trevor J. Burke is a Northern Irish New Testament scholar of the late twentieth and early twenty first century, working within evangelical Protestant theology.
He has contributed to studies on Paul, church life, and early Christian communities, often combining close textual work with theological reflection. His writings seek to illuminate the social and pastoral dimensions of the New Testament letters.
Burke is appreciated for careful exegesis and thoughtful engagement with the life of the local church. He writes accessibly while remaining attentive to historical and literary context. His work serves pastors and students who desire both scholarly insight and practical application.
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical