Inside and Out

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Some continuing thoughts on salvation

One of the weaknesses of theology over the past number of centuries has been an occasional lapse into viewing the category of morality has simply a category of our actions. In that sense, moral has to do with behavior, not with existence. It is how we act, not what we are.

As I say, this is a problem, because it leads us into very problematic ways of seeing ourselves and our relationship with God – most especially it makes us tend to think that our problems are ultimately external and legal, rather than internal and existential (a matter of our very existence).

Stated more correctly – morality is a description of the symptoms of the disease of sin, not simply a laundry list of things done wrong. We do wrong things because there is something wrong with us.

Therefore the only ways of addressing the things we do wrong, is addressing ourselves, or what is wrong with us. Thus saving (or healing) a sinner, means not legally treating the actions which have been wrong, but healing the wrongness within us that has led to the actions.

In this we can say that Christ did not come to make bad men be good – but to make dead men live. St. Paul makes a very strong identification between sin and death (“the wages of sin is death” Romans 6:23). In Orthodox hymnography this is often spoken of as “corruption” this being a translation of the Greek word, “phthora.” What is at work in us (as we have broken our relationship with the God who is Life) is a process of corruption and decay, death working in us to our destruction before God.

It should not be in the least surprising that such death-at-work-in-us produces diseased actions. We hate, we blame, we curse, we kill (how long could the list be?) because we are spiritually dead, or at least have a process of spiritual death at work in us.

Thus our salvation can only take place as a change within us. We must become alive where we have been dead. It is in this manner that the Scriptures tell us that we are Baptized into Christ’s death and raised in the likeness of His resurrection. The language of union and communion that suffuses the Scriptures of the New Testament bear witness to this understanding.

The development of an “external” understanding of morality is a fairly late development within Christianity, associated more with the Enlightenment than with any particular Christian body or group. It has been the bane of Christian existence whenever it takes on strength. It was part of the poison that infected the Deism of many of the founders of the modern world (cf. the religion of Thomas Jefferson). Such externalized descriptions of human behavior have led to a wrong understanding of man, of God, and of human relationships. In some cases it has contributed to various utopian visions that have triggered schemes of mass murder (in the name of a “new” man).

The problem of me is not my actions – but the me who does the actions. I need to change, or something within me must change. Nothing less than the very Life of God, grafted within us can heal what is lacking and broken. This is the process of salvation that is given to us in our life in the Church.

I will conclude with this short thought: the new life that is given to us in Christ, is more than a greater quantity of the “life” with which we were born – it is more than what I have known as an individual. It is a “relationship” (it cannot be described in a manner that does not include persons other than myself), and it is not “of me.” It is partly in this sense that the new life that is ours in Christ must also be understood as life “within the Church.” When St. Cyprian once said that there is no salvation outside the Church, it can be understood to mean that there is no such salvation because salvation is what the Church looks like. More on that later….

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a priest of the Orthodox Church in America, Pastor Emeritus of St. Anne Orthodox Church in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He is also author of Everywhere Present and the Glory to God podcast series.



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8 responses to “Inside and Out”

  1. Benjamin Avatar

    St. Paul wrote that we are “by nature objects of wrath”, not by external actions. The nature must be changed. The tree must be made good before it can bear good fruit. Forgiveness, one could say, is external, for in forgiveness God says that he will not hold our bad fruit against us. But forgiveness alone is not our total salvation, rather new life and a renewed nature is the fullness of salvation. Though, of course, it wouldn’t be wise nor biblical to separate one from the other. Again, salvation is that “multi-faceted jewel”.

  2. fatherstephen Avatar

    Not to be picky, but the Greek reads, we were “by nture children of wrath,” and indeed we must be changed. I don’t make much if any distinction between forgiveness and the remaining inner work. Jesus said to us, “Which is easier, to say, `Your sins are forgiven you,’ or to say, `Rise and walk’?” (Luke 5:23). But I do agree, however we speak of it, salvation is indeed a multi-faceted jewel. Thank God that He plans to save the whole of who we are and to change us thoroughly into the likeness of His beloved Son.

  3. Benjamin Avatar

    Thanks for the correction. I pulled the verse out of my memory, and “children” is certainly a more suitable word than “objects”.

  4. Lucas Avatar
    Lucas

    Fr, bless-

    Please tell us about the photo; you know we’re on the edges of our seats here.

  5. Fatherstephen Avatar
    Fatherstephen

    The photo is of a home quite near to the property of the monastery of St. John the Baptist in Essex. It has, I think, some historical connection to the monastery. But it was the image of the open gate, as well as the untidiness of it all that suggested it as an image for this piece.

  6. Eusebios Avatar
    Eusebios

    Fr.Steven
    FAther Bless!
    Thank you once again for some thought provoking words, please pray for me, a sinner, that I might more fully realize the need to be healed of my “sin disease”
    The fear of death is indeed a powerful tool, and we find it at work everywhere in our modern society.

  7. […] His latest two entries “Are You Saved?” and “Inside and Out” focus on the doctrine of soteriology — that is: what is salvation? What does it mean to be saved? […]

  8. […] His latest two entries “Are You Saved?” and “Inside and Out” focus on the doctrine of soteriology — that is: what is salvation? What does it mean to be saved? […]

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