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Abba is the transliteration of the
Aramaic word for father. It occurs three times in the
New Testament. It is always used as a direct address to God
the Father. In Mark 14:36, Jesus uses it when He asks the
Father to take away his cup. In Romans 8:15 and Galatians
4:6, it is the cry of the Spirit of God in the believer.
Historically, this word would be used during New
Testament times by a child addressing his or her father. It would have
been akin to the modern use of papa. However, the New Testament
writers are careful to avoid too great a familiarity in addressing God.
Instead of translating Abba, they transliterate it, so that it takes on
special significance in reference to God. Then, Abba is used in
conjunction with the word Father – “Abba, Father.” Father is the
translation of Abba, but by putting the two together, the address to God
is both personalized and kept in the proper tone of respect. The double
title has both intimacy and dignity.
By His nature as the Son of God, Jesus had the
right to familiarly address His Father. The occasion where we see this
is in the Garden of Gethsemane when Jesus struggled with the cup He was
to drink. In His human spirit, He desired the cup to be removed. Yet, in
His obedience as the Son, He declared, “nevertheless not what I will,
but what thou wilt” (Mark 14:36). This incident provides a glance into
the intimate communion between the Father and the Son. The Son’s
faithfulness to obey the most difficult of acts, an act by which the
holy Son of God became sin for mankind, was proof of the depth of His
love for the Father (John 14:31).
By his union with Jesus Christ, the believer enters
into the same intimacy with the Father. Instead of the fear of bondage,
the believer receives “the Spirit of adoption” (Romans 8:15) and enters
into “the adoption of sons” (Galatians 4:5). By reason of this sonship,
“God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying,
Abba, Father” (Galatians 4:6). The legal relationship is created by
adoption; the intimacy is assured by the entrance of Jesus Christ into
our hearts. We then cry, “Abba, Father,” with the Spirit of the Son. As
stated in 1John 1:3, “truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with
his Son Jesus Christ.”