The absolutely
supernatural gifts, which alone are the
supernatural properly so called, are summed up in the divine adoption of man to be the son and heir of
God. This expression, and the explanations given of it by the sacred writers, make it evident that the sonship is something far more than a relation founded upon the absence of
sin; it is of a thoroughly intimate character, raising the creature from its naturally
humble estate, and making it the object of a peculiar benevolence and complaisance on
God’s part, admitting it to filial
love, and enabling it to become
God’s heir, i.e. a partaker of
God’s own beatitude…
…
As a consequence of this Divine adoption and new birth we are made “partakers of the divine nature” (
theias koinonoi physeos,
2 Peter 1:4). The whole context of this passage and the passages already quoted show that this expression is to be taken as literally as possible not, indeed, as a generation from the substance of
God, b
ut as a communication of Divine life by the power of God, and a most intimate indwelling of His substance in the creature. Hence, too, the inheritance is not confined to natural goods. It embraces the possession and fruition of the good which is the natural inheritance of the
Son of God, viz., the
beatific vision.