The
Incarnation and Salvation
To
the first Christian’s, who first appeared in the eastern providence’s
of
the Roman Empire, The Incarnation, the mystery which was in God’s Plan
from before the ages (Eph.1: 9-10 & Col.1: 26), was the central act
in this Divine Plan for mankind to become holy and made immortal
through
communion with the Incarnate Word of God, Jesus Christ.
Although
God knew that man would fall, He did not become flesh because some
actions
of the devil or of man made it necessary. He became flesh because it
was
the Divine Plan and mystery from before the ages to unite man with God
in Christ. Yet, corruptibility did come and stand in the way
(Gregory
the Theologian 4th century).
Through
Satan, the fallen angel, Adam and Eve the first humans were deceived
and
they and their descendants lost the potentiality to attain perfection
and
immortality. They brought themselves and their descendants, who are
guilt–free
of the “ancestral sin,” into a fallen world where they would receive
death,
would be susceptible to sin and would become alienated from God. His
creation,
wounded by Satan’s deception, was left spiritually and physically ill.
God’s image within man, although blurred was not, however, completely
obliterated.
A spark remained. Though the fallen world was not of God, because by
nature
He is altogether free of any responsibility for evil, He allowed the
Fall
to happen in order to protect His creation from eternal sin.
In
the late 11th century AD, after the doctrinal separation of East and
West,
Anselm, a bishop in the Western Church of Rome, initiated a legalistic
innovation for the payment of man’s sin in order to satisfy divine
justice
and make man right with a dishonored God. The majority of Western
Christians
(Roman Catholics, Protestants and others) accept this concept or
revised
versions of it. Many believe the reason the Son became flesh was to
remove
man’s sin against God by suffering humanity’s punishment on the Cross.
This allows man to be acquitted and released from his sin debt. This
was
not the understanding during the first 1000 years of Christianity and
it
is still not the understanding in 2000 year old Orthodox Eastern
Christianity.
In Orthodoxy, the Incarnation did not take place for the Crucifixion;
the
Crucifixion took place so that the Incarnation and the eternal
communion
of God and man could be fulfilled despite Satan, death or sin.
Therefore,
Christ willingly goes to the Cross and sacrifices Himself to death in
order
to win a victory over the evil that captured man. Through His
Crucifixion,
His descent into Hades and His Resurrection, He protects humanity for
the
“ultimate purpose” of the Incarnation, an intimate and eternal union
with
God. He mercifully forgives our sins and sets us free from the bondage
of Satan and the dark powers of death and sin, not through punishment,
but through liberation.
In
His Ascension, Christ returns to the main purpose of the Incarnation
and
completes man’s union with God by taking His human nature into Heaven
---
for a Man who is God now reigns in Heaven.
Even
though Christ was victorious, humanity’s sins will keep contaminating
this
fallen world until He comes again and terminates evil. Until that time,
anyone who wants to eternally reside in God’s Kingdom in Heaven, which
Christ promised to mankind, can receive Christ’s therapy to remove the
parasite of sin that was implanted in our flesh at the Fall. This
infection
is what causes us to sin. Therefore, a continuous struggle to remove
this
parasite is necessary for an eternal union with God.
With
God’s uncreated grace, the gift of His presence and action in His
creation,
we are offered anew the potential to reach perfection and immortality.
Through the mysteries, Christ deposited in His Church, which are
achieved
by the Holy Spirit, we can purify our self-centered hearts and illumine
our souls, where spiritual health is acquired, enabling us to see
everything
in a Christ-like manner. In a life-long process, our goal is to become
more and more like Him by emulating His humility and selfless love. The
early Greek-speaking Fathers of the Church called this process theosis.
In
Christ’s spiritual hospital, His Church, we are given the methods of
prayer,
fasting, charity, etc. as a means of helping us to restore our damaged
soul. These are not rewards, but rather therapeutic exercises to
prepare
us to receive Christ’s medicine for the disease of sin and heal our
spiritual
illness. The foremost work of the early Church was the curing of souls.
This is still true in Orthodoxy today. If our souls are cured, then
most
of our other problems are solved.
To
the Orthodox, the church is a local community of people living in a
intimate
relationship with Christ and one another. This is accomplished by
participating
together with Him and each other in His mysteries. Each local community
is within His whole Church (heaven and earth) and is not merely a part
of it. The Orthodox understanding of salvation is love in unity with
Christ
and others. It is not individualistic.
The
early Christian understanding of the way to God’s Kingdom was not the
result
of a sin debt acquittal that allowed man to gain salvation through
rewards
like “good works” (900 year old Roman Catholic concept) or “faith
alone”
(500 year old Protestant concept). It was about transforming oneself,
through
Christ, into His likeness and “partaking of the divine nature.”
Actually,
works and faith are both in vain without living in a loving
relationship
with Jesus Christ and others.
While
religious fads come and go and people seek their salvation in this or
that
new leader or idea, Orthodoxy has proclaimed the same message for
almost
2000 years. Each and every human person was created to live in an
intimate
union with God and one another, sharing in His eternal, divine life,
becoming
through participation what He is by nature.
By
George Kutulas +
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