Hopefully this will help a bit too:
........Romans 8
........14 All who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.
........15 For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons by which
........we cry out, “Abba! Father!”
........16 The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God,
........17 and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him so that we may also be
........glorified with Him.
Paul’s description of the climax of salvation for which we are eagerly awaiting furthers this sense of eschatological tension. For the “adoption” that, in vv. 14–17, we were said already to possess is here made the object of our hope. Some seek to relieve the tension thus created by making only the “Spirit of adoption,” not the adoption itself, a present possession of the Christian, but Paul clearly goes further than that in vv. 14–17. Christians, at the moment of justification .. cf John 5:24, are adopted into God’s family; but this adoption is incomplete and partial until we are finally made like the Son of God himself (v. 29). This final element in our adoption is “the redemption of our bodies.”
“Redemption” shares with “adoption” and many other terms in Paul the “already-not yet” tension that pervades his theology, for the redemption can be pictured both as past and as future. As Paul has hinted in v. 10, it is not until the body has been transformed that redemption can be said to be complete; in this life, our bodies share in that “frustration” which characterizes this world as a whole (cf. 20) ~Moo, D. J. (1996). The Epistle to the Romans
~Deut