.
● Gal 4:6 . . And because you are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of His
son into your hearts calling out: Abba! Father.
That verse reveals something very important. The Spirit of His son always
compels folks unified with Christ to call out to his Father, never to his
mother and/or patron saints and angels, and the reason for that is actually
quite simple. Christ always prays to his Father; never to his mother and/or
patron saints and angels, viz: the Father's children exhibit the very same
behavior because the Spirit of His son compels them to pray like His son
prays.
That, by the way, is a pretty good litmus test. If somebody is comfortable
praying to Jesus' mom and/or patron saints and angels, they give away the
fact that they lack the Spirit of God's son in their hearts; which means of
course that they have yet to undergo adoption into His home.
● Rom 8:15 . . For you have not received a spirit of bondage again to fear;
but you have received a spirit of adoption, whereby we call out: Abba!
Father.
The Bible instructs folks unified with Christ to pray in the Spirit (Eph 6:18,
Jude 1:20). When people pray in the Spirit; they pray in accordance with
Mark 14:35-36, Gal 4:6, and Rom 8:15. In other words: they don't pray to
Mary and/or patron saints and angels; no, they pray to the son's Father
same as he did.
Bottom line: God's family circle should feel an overwhelming compulsion to
pray to their adoptive Father without having to be told. It should come
naturally (so to speak), just as naturally as it came to Jesus. And they
should feel an equally overwhelming disgust for praying to anybody else.
So then, people with a habit of praying to Jesus' mom and/or patron saints
and angel obviously have neither the spirit of God's son in their heart, nor
the spirit of adoption; and that is a very serious condition to be in.
● Rom 8:9 . . If anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not
belong to Christ
NOTE: Abba is neither Hebrew nor Greek; it's Aramaic. The word means
father, but not as an ordinary noun, rather, it's a filial vocative.
When my son points me out to one of his friends at the mall and says:
That's my dad over there. then his use of "dad" simply indicates how he
and I are related. But when he shouts: Hey dad, I'm over here! then his
use of "dad" is a filial vocative because he's addressing me personally to get
my attention-- same noun; different sense.
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