Salvation according to the Protestants and the Plymouth Brethren

The lecture shows the stance of the Orthodox Church regarding some Protestants and the Plymouth Brethren who say “salvation is completed” and that self-declaration or faith alone suffices. The speaker affirms that Christ’s work on the cross is the source of salvation, but receiving this salvation requires means, procedures, and a practical spiritual path that is not nullified.
Elements to attain salvation (written and sacred means)
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The atoning blood of Christ is the basis of salvation, but it is obtained under conditions: faith, baptism, repentance, and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit by baptism and the holy sacrament (chrism).
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Baptism washes away original sin and prior sins if it is performed with repentance and active faith.
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The Holy Spirit is not given automatically at the moment of faith in all cases; He has scriptural procedures and manifestations (laying on of hands, the breath, anointing, etc.).
Scriptural and spiritual warnings
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The declaration of complete salvation is proclaimed by God on “the last day,” not by man himself; and there is a judgment of works before the throne of Christ.
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Pauline, Petrine, and Johannine texts call for fear, humility, and perseverance in spiritual struggle, because remaining in grace is a condition for perseverance in salvation.
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The concept “the believer does not perish” among some groups empties other texts that mention recompense and judgment of their meaning if taken in isolation.
The practical and militant dimension of salvation
Salvation is not a one-time event that ends; it is a life-long journey that includes spiritual battles, fruits of faith, good works, and patient endurance until the end. One must keep sacraments, confession, repentance, and living in the light so that communion with salvation continues and is perfected.
The Orthodox educational and spiritual perspective
The Orthodox approach does not deny the value of Christ’s work on the cross nor belittle faith — rather it links their value to the ecclesial family (the sacraments) and to continuous spiritual life: repentance, baptism, chrism, and works of love and conduct according to the Spirit. The call is to humility, godly fear, and spiritual diligence and not to rely on a single verse against the spirit of the whole Scripture.
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