Mor Ephrem wrote:Wow. This is the fundamentalist Protestant view on salvation and works... If one didn't/doesn't understand this, how (and not why, but how) could one leave Protestantism for the Church?
Well, then maybe I don't understand the Orthodox version of how one attains salvation. I know that we are always striving to be one with God, but are you saying that if we believe in Christ, ask for his forgiveness, live a Christian life, that that is still not enough?
Please point me to some on-line reading material that would help me understand what is wrong with my statement.
Cause remember - I am GOA - and the article on the GOA website states: "... yet acknowledges that salvation can be found outside Christianity."
http://www.goarch.org/en/ourfaith/artic ... le8089.asp
Mor Ephrem wrote:So when I prayed for my father to be healed of cancer, what could I have done to heal him that would've backed up my prayer?
The same thing that I did when my father was dying of cancer - take him to his treatments, provide emotional support, and during his last few months, administer his pain shots and his TPN's.
Mor Ephrem wrote:... or B) God, while being immutable in one sense, allows Himself to be influenced by us, as a father allows himself to be swayed by his children. In the end, it doesn't matter whether or not you understand immutability, IMO...are you a son (cf. Gal. 4.4-7)? That is the question.
I agree with B. BUT, God STILL has his plan and sometimes it cannot be changed for a single person if it is required to bring about the outcome of the plan.