There are two kinds of people in Romans 8:15.
One lives under fear.
The other cries out, “Abba, Father.”
The difference between them is not effort, not merit, not moral track record.
The difference is a Spirit.
“For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, ‘Abba! Father!'” (Romans 8:15, ESV)
“The Spirit you received does not make you slaves, so that you live in fear again; rather, the Spirit you received brought about your adoption to sonship. And by him we cry, ‘Abba, Father.'” (Romans 8:15, NIV)
The verse is built on a single governing contrast: slavery and adoption.
Paul does not simply say Christians have moved from bad to better.
He says they have moved from one legal status to another, one emotional posture to another, one way of approaching God to another entirely.
Understanding the full weight of Romans 8:15 requires following that contrast through every dimension it touches.
Dimension One: Legal Standing
Slavery: The Status Before
A slave in the ancient world had no standing before the master on their own terms.
They came because summoned, not because welcome.
Their presence in the household was contingent on usefulness and compliance.
The relationship was transactional: service rendered, punishment avoided, favor neither expected nor claimed.
This is the spirit Paul describes as the alternative to what believers have received.
Adoption: The Status After
Adoption in the Roman legal world was a serious and irrevocable act.
A Roman father who adopted a son changed that son’s legal standing permanently.
The adopted child took the father’s name, became heir to the father’s estate, and had all previous debts and obligations cancelled.
There was no going back.
Paul reaches for this specific legal concept because it communicates permanence, not merely sentiment.
When he says believers have received the Spirit of adoption, he is saying their legal standing before God has been fundamentally and irreversibly changed.
They are no longer servants in the household on sufferance.
They are children, with all the rights and standing that entails.
Dimension Two: Emotional Posture
Fear: The Language of Slavery
Paul pairs the spirit of slavery with a specific word: fear.
Not reverence, not awe, not the holy fear that Scripture elsewhere praises.
The kind of fear he is describing is the fear of punishment, the fear of a master who watches for failure.
It is the posture of someone who is never sure they have done enough, who lives with the anxiety that today might be the day they fall short in a way that cannot be recovered from.
This is not an abstract theological category.
Many Christians live here practically, even while knowing doctrinally that they are children of God.
They approach God in prayer as someone who must be appeased or satisfied before being approached.
They read their failures as evidence that their standing is in jeopardy.
Peace: The Language of Adoption
The Spirit of adoption displaces fear not by minimizing God’s holiness but by relocating the believer’s standing.
Fear belonged to the old position: the uncertain slave who might be cast out.
The adopted child does not lose reverence for the father, but the dread is gone.
The child knows they are not one bad day away from being disowned.
First John 4:18 carries the same truth from a different angle: perfect love casts out fear, because fear has to do with punishment, and the one who fears has not been perfected in love.
The Spirit of adoption is the same reality as the love being poured out in the heart described in Romans 5:5.
Dimension Three: Prayer Vocabulary
The Spirit That Enables the Cry
The most striking word in Romans 8:15 is a word Paul does not translate.
He leaves it in its original Aramaic: Abba.
Abba is the word a Jewish child used for their father in daily household speech.
It was intimate, immediate, and domestic.
The Jewish community of Paul’s day did not permit slaves to use this word.
Only free members of the family called the head of the household Abba.
Paul’s point is that the Spirit of adoption has given believers access to a word that was previously unavailable to them.
Not the formal distance of a legal relationship, but the unguarded closeness of a child who runs to their parent without wondering whether the timing is appropriate.
The Double Name and Its Weight
Paul says the Spirit enables believers to cry “Abba, Father.”
The doubling is not accidental.
Abba is Aramaic, the daily language of Jesus and the first disciples.
Father is the Greek equivalent, the word that would reach his Roman audience.
By pairing them, Paul signals that this is not a prayer vocabulary limited to one ethnic or linguistic group.
The entire church, Jew and Gentile, slave and free, can approach God with the same word Jesus used when he prayed in Gethsemane in Mark 14:36.
The cry “Abba, Father” is therefore both intimate and universal: the most personal word for God available in human language, offered to everyone who has received the Spirit.
Dimension Four: Relational Access
The Closed Door
The fear-based relationship has an implicit distance built into it.
A slave approaches the master through formal channels, at designated times, for designated purposes.
The relationship is bounded by function.
There is no category of access simply for the sake of being in the presence of the one you belong to.
The Open Door
The Spirit of adoption opens access that is not function-based.
Hebrews 4:16, written within the same theological world as Romans 8, describes the result: believers may come boldly to the throne of grace to receive mercy and find grace to help in times of need.
The word “boldly” translates parresia, meaning frankness, confidence, the freedom of a child who walks into a room without knocking because they live there.
This is not access earned by righteousness.
It is access granted by a relationship.
The adopted child does not approach the Father having first demonstrated adequate worthiness.
They approach because the Father has already made them his.
Dimension Five: Identity
Who the Slave Is
A slave’s identity is defined by function and master.
Remove the function, and the identity dissolves.
This is why the fear-based approach to God produces the particular anxiety Paul is describing: if my standing depends on what I do, then what I do determines who I am.
Failure threatens not just behavior but existence.
Who the Child Is
The Spirit of adoption transfers identity from function to relationship.
The child is defined by who their father is, not by what they have done today.
Romans 8:16 follows immediately: the Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God.
The witness is internal, given by the Spirit, and prior to any performance.
It is not earned by sufficient godliness.
It is testified to by the one who enacted the adoption.
The adopted child can fail and still be the father’s child.
They can return and be received because the relationship is not contingent on the quality of last week.
Dimension Six: Inheritance
The Slave’s Portion
A slave, no matter how faithful, does not inherit.
They may work in the master’s house for a lifetime and leave with nothing.
Their labor enriches the household without ever becoming their own.
The Heir’s Portion
Romans 8:17 completes the logic immediately after verse 15: “and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ.”
The adoption that gives access to God as Father also gives inheritance alongside the eternal Son.
This is not a metaphor for spiritual feelings.
Paul means it as a legal and eternal reality.
Everything the Father has designated for Christ is designated for those who are in Christ.
The contrast between slavery and adoption is therefore not just about how a believer feels when they pray.
It is about who they will be forever.
A Prayer for the Child Who Still Lives Like a Slave
Father, Abba.
I know what I have been given. I know what the Spirit has declared over me. But I do not always live like someone who believes it.
I approach You like someone who is not sure of their welcome. I confess my failures like someone who suspects each one might be the last straw. I keep a certain distance, as though nearness must be earned before it is enjoyed.
Let the Spirit of adoption do what You sent him to do. Cast out the fear. Remind me of the name You gave me. Let the cry “Abba” form in me before the carefully composed petition does.
In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions About Romans 8:15
What does “spirit of adoption” mean in Romans 8:15?
It refers to the Holy Spirit, whose indwelling presence changes a believer’s status before God from servant to child. The adoption is legal and permanent: Paul draws on Roman adoption law, where adoption cancelled all prior debts and made the adopted person a full heir with irrevocable standing.
What does “Abba Father” mean in Romans 8:15?
Abba is the Aramaic word a Jewish child used for their father, conveying warmth and intimacy. Paul pairs it with the Greek word for father to show that Jewish and Gentile believers alike have the same intimate access to God that Jesus himself used when he prayed.
Why does Paul contrast adoption with slavery in Romans 8:15?
Because both are legal statuses that shape emotional and relational postures. Slavery produces fear of punishment; adoption produces the confidence of a child with secure standing. The Spirit has changed the believer’s legal status, which changes everything about how they approach God.
How does Romans 8:15 relate to Romans 8:16?
The two verses work together. Verse 15 names the Spirit as the one by whom believers cry “Abba, Father.” Verse 16 adds that the same Spirit personally testifies that they are children of God. Both the cry and the inner witness are the work of the one Spirit of adoption.
Does Romans 8:15 mean Christians should have no fear of God at all?
No. The fear Paul dismisses is the slave’s dread of punishment and uncertain standing. Scripture commends the reverent awe of a child who honors their father. Romans 8:15 removes the terror of one who might be cast out; it does not remove the reverence of a child before a holy Father.
Commentary and Reflection Sources
Schreiner, Thomas R. Romans. Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament. Baker Academic, 1998.
Murray, John. The Epistle to the Romans. New International Commentary on the New Testament. Eerdmans, 1968.
What Is the Spirit of Adoption? GotQuestions.org.
What Does Romans 8:15 Mean? BibleRef.com.
Abba Father: The Wonderful Implications. Bible Study Tools.
Romans 8:15 and the Spirit of Adoption. Crosswalk.
The Spirit of Sonship. The Gospel Coalition.
Understanding Romans 8:15. Christianity.com.
Abba Father in Romans 8:15. Open Bible Blog.
Piper, John. What Is Saving Faith? Crossway, 2022.
