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  2. Nov 2, 2012 · How important for salvation the Eucharist is, we know from the words of Christ: “He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day” (John 6:54). In these many ways, according to Christ, Orthodox Christians throughout their lives receive salvation and renewal through faith, works, and the ...

    • What Does Deification Mean?
    • What It’S Not
    • What It Is
    • What If Someone Dies Rejecting God?
    • Conclusion

    Deification (Gr. theosis) is the process by which a Christian becomes more like God. Saint Peter speaks of this process when he writes, “As His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness . . . you may be partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1:3-4). But what does it mean to partake of the divine nature, and how to...

    Many people outside the Orthodox Church mistakenly believe that deification means we become literal gods. When the Church calls us to pursue godliness – to become more like God – this does not mean we then become like God in His essence or nature; this is impossible. We are human, always have been and always will be. Therefore, we cannot take on th...

    According to the Orthodox Church, deification is our becoming more like God through His grace or divine energies. In creation, humans were made in the image and likeness of God (Gen. 1:26) according to human nature. In other words, all of humanity by nature is an icon or image of God. From the beginning, we were meant to share in the Life of the Ho...

    Because theosis is a process, Orthodox theology affirms the continuation of progress in deification after a person’s death. However, theosis does not begin in eternity, but now. As the Scriptures say, “Now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2). Ultimately, God does what He wills, so there are many things we simply cannot know about the natur...

    Salvation to the Orthodox is the process of deification or becoming more like God. However, this does not mean we become God in His nature. Rather, we become like Him through His energies and can attain perfect union with Him just as Christ illustrated in His incarnation. This view of salvation was the belief of the early Church and continues to be...

  3. Salvation encompasses liberation from sin, death, and alienation from God, leading to communion with the Holy Trinity and the fulfillment of God's intended purpose for humanity. It is both a present reality and a future hope, realized through the Church and culminating in eternal life in the kingdom of God.

  4. Eastern Orthodoxy: How Should We Speak about Salvation? ⤒ 🔗. We have seen that Orthodox theology stresses the work of Christ as being one of victory over Death and Satan, and the salvation of sinners as one of thesis.

  5. Salvation as Theosis: The Teaching of Eastern Orthodoxy. By Donald Fairbairn. Probably the central idea of Eastern Orthodox theology is the concept of theosis, and Orthodox writers use this Greek word to refer both to humanity’s initial vocation (the task which God gave to Adam and Eve at creation) and to salvation.

  6. The Eastern Orthodox tradition speaks of salvation as deification, or theosis. Salvation begins with the incarnation, in which God became human. God incarnated as Jesus was both true God...

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