Protestants and particularly evangelicals take a "minimalist"
approach to salvation. They focus on salvation as
justification, "I can go to heaven rather than hell."
Plenty of people recognize that being a Christian is
more than just a matter of "fire insurance," but it is
easy to be fooled by one's own sales pitch--Just accept
Jesus as your savior. Plenty of people think that is all
there is to it.
Furthermore, the "saved by faith" emphasis is a
strong filter on one's Bible reading. In Romans 10, St.
Paul writes: if you will confess with your mouth,
Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised
him from the dead, you will be saved (v 9). My
evangelical training led me automatically to think in
terms of a "punctilious" confession. It is not good to
argue whether this particular passage refers to a one-time
action or a recurring one.
But in his sermon the Orthodox priest in Orthodox
fashion, of "confessing with our mouth" each time we
receive Holy Communion. The Orthodox approach to
salvation is "maximalist": "How can I be most
saved?" . One gets a sense of this teaching from St.
John Chrysostom's "Baptismal Instructions," Talking to
the newly baptized, he says (3d Instruction):
Let us say again: Blessed be God, who alone does
wonderful things, who does all things and transforms
them. Before yesterday you were captives, but now you
are free and citizens of the Church; lately you lived in
the shame of your sins, but now you live in freedom and
justice. You are not only free, but also holy; not only
holy, but also just; not only just, but also sons; not
only sons, but also heirs; not only heirs, but also
brothers of Christ; not only brothers of Christ, but
also joint heirs; not only joint heirs, but also
members; not only members, but also the temple; not only
the temple, but also instruments of the Spirit.
Blessed be God, who alone does wonderful things!. You
have seen how numerous are the gifts of baptism.
Although many men think that the only gift it confers is
the remission of sins, we have counted its honors to the
number of ten. It is on this account that we baptize
even infants, although they are sinless, that they may
be given the further gifts of sanctification, justice,
filial adoption, and inheritance, that they may be
brothers and members of Christ, and become dwelling
places for the Spirit." [Ancient Christian Writers, p.
57]
St. John uses other descriptions of baptism:
marriage, enrollment in the army, putting [on] a white
robe (which they literally did). He goes on to urge his
listeners to keep their robes spotless:
Knowing, therefore, that after the grace of God
everything depends on us and on our zeal, let us be
grateful gifts which have already been given, so that we
may make ourselves worthy of still greater gifts. [24]
Therefore, I exhort you who have just deserved the
divine gift to keep careful watch and to guard the
spiritual garment bestowed on you, keeping it clean and
spotless. Let those of us who received this gift in the
past show a far-reaching change in our lives. It is
possible, if we are willing, it is possible for us to
return and go back to our former beauty and luster, if
only we will do our fair share . . . . The soul which
was once sullied and became disfigured and disgraced by
the multitude of its sins can quickly return to its
former beauty, if we give evidence of ample and exact
repentance." (circa ad 390) [pp. 90-91]
I think one can construct from the Church Fathers a
"normal" Christian life: instruction, baptism, on-going
participation in the life of the Church: repentance,
confession, receiving the Eucharist. But it is rare that
you will find them attempting to answer the question "What
can I get by with and still be saved?" or "How
far can one be from this 'norm' and still be saved?"
They did have to deal with the question of "how
necessary is baptism?" during the persecutions. What of
the catechumens who were martyred before baptism? It was
in this context that the belief in 'martyrs being
baptized with their own blood' arose.
At the other end of the Christian life, many saints (as
recognized later by the Church) died with a profound
sense of their own sinfulness and unworthiness before a
Holy God. I have found the Orthodox approach to
Scriptures, especially on matters of salvation, to be
very "integrative." Christ's incarnation, ministry,
death, descent into hades, resurrection, ascension; our
sinfulness, repentance, baptism, carrying our cross, 'doing
to the least of these', running the race, confidence in
God's love and mercy, fear of falling away, putting on
the new nature, . . . . There is no tendency to pick one
aspect of salvation "to reinterpret everything else to
fit." The parable of the goats and the sheep is taken as
seriously as Ephesians 2:8-9.
Orthodoxy often insists that the whole truth lies in
holding on to two (or more) apparently contradictory
concepts: God is both One God, and Three Persons; Christ
is one person, two natures. The same applies to our
salvation. On many points where a Protestant wants and
either/or answer, an Orthodox will insist on
both/and.
My most merciful and all-merciful God, O
Lord Jesus Christ! In Thy great love, Thou didst come
down and become flesh in order to save all. Again, I
pray Thee, save me by Grace! If Thou shouldst save me
because of my deeds, it would not be a gift, but merely
a duty. Truly, Thou aboundest in graciousness and art
inexpressibly merciful! Thou hast said, O my Christ: "He
who believes in me shall live and never see death". If
faith in Thee saves the desperate, behold: I believe!
Save me, for Thou art my God and my Maker. May my faith
replace my deeds, O my God, for Thou wilt find no deeds
to justify me. May my faith be sufficient for all. May
it answer for me; may it justify me; may it make me a
partaker of Thine eternal glory; and may Satan not seize
me, O Word, and boast that He has torn me from Thy hand
and fold. O Christ my Savior: save me whether I want it
or not! Come quickly, hurry, for I perish! Thou art my
God from my mother's womb. Grant, O Lord, that I may now
love Thee as once I loved sin, and that I may labor for
Thee without laziness as once I labored for Satan the
deceiver. Even more, I will labor for Thee, my Lord and
God Jesus Christ, all the days of my life, now and ever
and unto ages of ages. Amen