14Jul2026
  • Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo
  • [email protected]
TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySoundcloud
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية

Type To Search

Contact Us
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
logotype

Type To Search

logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
The Spiritual Priest Cares for Everyone in Order to Save Him
Home All Categories Encyclopedias Encyclopedia of Pastoral Theology Priestly Service The Spiritual Priest Cares for Everyone in Order to Save Him
Priestly Service
By t.keraya28 October 19940 Comments

The Spiritual Priest Cares for Everyone in Order to Save Him

مجلة الكرازة
تحميل
📄 تحميل PDF 📝 تحميل Word 📚 تحميل ePub

The Spiritual Priest Cares for Everyone in Order to Save Him

The priest should be spiritual, because the work of the shepherd is summarized in the following phrase mentioned in the Didascalia: “Let the bishop care for everyone in order to save him.” And the bishop works through his priests, and the priests work through their deacons. Therefore, the work of the bishop, the priest, and the deacon is to care for everyone in order to save him. As long as the work is salvific, its bearer must be a spiritual person.

And the phrase “everyone” means all people: the old and the young. It includes those who attend church and those who do not, the religious and the non-religious. The priest is mistaken who thinks that his own people are only those who attend church. And the Sunday School teacher is mistaken who thinks that his own people are only those whose names are on the list. Rather, he should care for everyone: for the young men who enter amusement places. The priest cares for his enemy and his friend in order to save him; he cares for the committee members who trouble him in order to save them.

And the phrase everyone does not mean only the Orthodox, but all denominations, because they are his flock.

The work of pastoral care has an evangelistic aspect, namely preaching to non-believers so that they may believe. He cares for everyone. Our apostolic fathers used to go to pagan regions (to work in them), and they used to ordain bishops over lands in which there was not a single Christian person.

You enter into what you have not labored for. You enter into an established church and present believers to serve them. But the apostles used to go to lands with no churches, no faith, and no Christian people, and they felt that those pagans were their flock.

And if the bishop seeks the salvation of everyone, he must first know who they are.

What are their names, and where do they live? Thus there must be a complete survey of the area in which he works in order to know his flock. For the Lord Jesus says that He knows His sheep and calls them by their names (John 10). And we do not mean only to know their names, but also their circumstances and their problems, and the obstacles that stand between them and cleaving to God.

How beautiful it is for the shepherd to have a strong memory.

Many people feel that they have been lost in the midst of the crowd, and that their names have been forgotten among the multitude of names, and that each one of them finds no place in the memory of the priest to lay his head. Thus he feels lack of care from the priest. And if it happens that one of these strays and is taken by another religion or another denomination, perhaps then the priest remembers that this person was his son.

How often pastors protest against the intervention of strangers, while they themselves do nothing. And how often they blame others while they themselves do nothing.

Thus the priest must know the flock and study their condition. And if he cannot—and often cannot—let him use with him many helpers. How many unused energies exist in the church that find no one to utilize them! Then the devil uses them, or the denominations use them, or other types of worldly activities use them.

To save him:

Many pastors care for people, but not for the salvation of their souls. Some of them care about secondary matters, such as solving material or social or family problems, and they limit themselves to this situation without thinking about the salvation of these people’s souls.

Exactly like parents who care for their children: how the children go to school, how they learn, how their bodies grow and their health improves, how they eat and drink and dress… while they do not care at all for the salvation of their souls. The father becomes inflamed if his son becomes sick, but does not care whether his son walks in the way of God or not. The mother cares for the elegance of her daughter, and does not care whether she enters the Kingdom or not!

The salvation of the soul is the most important thing. It is the cornerstone of the shepherd’s work. All other works are merely means to reach this goal.

Perhaps the pastor cares greatly that people attend church, but this attendance is only a means for the salvation of the soul. For a person may attend church and his soul may not be saved! And many pastors care about the outward appearances of Christian life without entering into the depths of the heart and the extent of its union with God.

And unfortunately, some pastors think that the word “salvation” is limited to the Associations of Soul-Saving! And if one of the servants speaks about it, they accuse him with the severest accusations. And if they could, they would delete from the Scripture the verse: “Receiving the end of your faith—the salvation of your souls” (1 Pet. 1:9)… And rarely does one of them preach about the saying of Paul the Apostle to Timothy: “Take heed to yourself and to the doctrine. Continue in them, for in doing this you will save both yourself and those who hear you” (1 Tim. 4:16). Salvation is the most important, first, and deepest thing we seek. And we seek it more than the Associations of Soul-Saving, which believe that their people have been saved and the matter is finished.

And the shepherd must do all these things with a kind of care—not merely as a duty or a job, but with a heart burning with zeal, as Paul the Apostle said: “Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is made to stumble, and I do not burn?” (2 Cor. 11:29). And as it was said of him when he entered Athens: “His spirit was provoked within him when he saw that the city was given over to idols” (Acts 17:16). And as the Scripture said: “Zeal for Your house has consumed me” (Ps. 69:9). And also: “Horror has taken hold of me because of the wicked who forsake Your law” (Ps. 119:53).

We need shepherds who care. We feel that their pastoral work is mixed with emotion, strength, and concern. Their hearts burn from within for the sake of their flock.

They weep before God day and night for the repentance of their children. They strive and labor and seek. They give no sleep to their eyes nor slumber to their eyelids until they find a place for the Lord in the heart of everyone. And we feel in them care for visitation, care for preaching, and care for service in general, for the salvation of people’s souls.

They are not swept away by the routine of service, nor are they occupied by liturgical duties, but the salvation of the soul is everything to them.

Care, for the priest and the shepherd, carries the meaning of emotion in service, exertion, visitation, and not covering up shortcomings with excuses. There is a difference between the hired man and the son in service. The son works with his heart from his depths. But the hired man works formally and can excuse himself with excuses. The servant who cares in service does not despair quickly from the hardest of souls in stubbornness and distance from religion.

He cares for everyone in order to save him. And the one who cares for the salvation of a person’s soul does not rest until he sees him saved, exerting all means for that goal. As we say to the Lord in the Divine Liturgy: “You have bound me with all the remedies leading to life.” And people can distinguish between the spirit of care and mere formalities.

For better translation support, please contact the center.

Al Keraza Magazine pastoral care Priesthood Salvation
The Goal and the Means

The Goal and the Means

28 October 1994

The Qualities of a Priest: Wisdom

31 October 1994
The Qualities of a Priest: Wisdom

منشورات ذات صلة

مجلة الكرازة
Priestly Service
9 May 1997

The Priest and the Spirituality of the Rites

By t.keraya
Priestly Service
11 December 1995

The priest is a man of prayer

By Mounir Malak

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive by Date
الاقسام
Related Topics
  • Seminar with Canadian and American priests in Boston – The shepherd must care for everyone in order to save them
    28 August 2007
  • The shepherd must care for everyone, that they may be saved
    The shepherd must care for everyone, that they may be saved
    28 August 2007
  • The Priest’s House
    The Priest’s House
    10 December 2006
Tags
Al-Ahram Newspaper Al Keraza Magazine Audio Section Baptism Church Creation Discernment Divinity Doctrine Education Eternity Faith Forgiveness giving Grace Holiness Hope Humility Incarnation Knowledge Love Marriage Mercy Monasticism Obedience Peace Prayer Preaching priest Priesthood Purity Redemption Repentance Responsibility Resurrection Salvation Service Sin spirituality Steadfastness Teaching Unity Video Section Watani Newspaper Wisdom
Categories
  • All Categories(63)
  • Atheism(4)
  • Attributes of God(82)
  • Beginning of the New Year(4)
  • Calmness(1)
  • Canons of the Ecumenical Councils(4)
  • Canons of the Fathers (Apostles and Patriarchs)(7)
  • Christian Concepts(10)
  • Christian Conduct(7)
  • Christianity in Egypt(1)
  • Church Occasions(3)
  • Church Organizations(29)
  • Church Penalties(17)
  • Commentary on the New Testament(106)
  • Commentary on the Old Testament(40)
  • Concepts(114)
  • Deacons and Deaconesses(13)
  • Differences with the Catholics(28)
  • Differences with the Protestants(42)
  • Doctrinal Issues(8)
  • E-books(1)
  • Encyclopedia of Ascetic Theology(7)
  • Encyclopedia of Barthology(27)
  • Encyclopedia of Canon Law (Legislative Theology)(43)
  • Encyclopedia of Church History(58)
  • Encyclopedia of Comparative Theology(179)
  • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(17)
  • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(88)
  • Encyclopedia of Eschatology(36)
  • Encyclopedia of Feasts and Occasions(132)
  • Encyclopedia of Liturgical Theology(34)
  • Encyclopedia of Moral Theology(115)
  • Encyclopedia of Pastoral Theology(115)
  • Encyclopedia of Spiritual Theology(397)
  • Encyclopedia of the Holy Bible(157)
  • Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives(103)
  • Faith(2)
  • Famous Christians in the Islamic Eras(1)
  • Famous Fathers in the Early Centuries(5)
  • Feast of the Epiphany(11)
  • Feast of the Nativity(17)
  • Feast of the Resurrection(7)
  • Feasts of the Saints(3)
  • General Introduction to Church History(1)
  • God’s Providence(35)
  • Historical Verification(2)
  • History of Heresies and Schisms in the Early Centuries(5)
  • History of the Coptic Church and Its Martyrs(3)
  • Hope(1)
  • Ibn al-‘Assal’s Canonical Collection(6)
  • Jehovah’s Witnesses(12)
  • Judgment(2)
  • Life Experiences(2)
  • Life of Saint Mark the Apostle(3)
  • Life of Stillness(3)
  • Liturgies(5)
  • Lives of the Anchorite Fathers(15)
  • Lives of the Martyrs and Confessors(6)
  • Love(5)
  • Meekness and Humility(5)
  • Milestones of the Spiritual Journey(10)
  • Modern Heresies(42)
  • Monasticism(8)
  • Monasticism(6)
  • New Testament(7)
  • Old Testament(24)
  • Others, Miscellaneous and Various Topics(109)
  • Our Apostolic Fathers(7)
  • Pelagianism and Original Sin(2)
  • Personal Status(35)
  • Persons of the New Testament(6)
  • Persons of the Old Testament(63)
  • Poems, Hymns, and Songs(96)
  • Priestly Service(207)
  • Questions(31)
  • Questions and Answers(21)
  • Redemption(5)
  • Repentance – Self-Examination(1)
  • Saints of Virginity and Monasticism(4)
  • Salvation(1)
  • Seventh-day Adventists(11)
  • Some Categories of Pastoral Care(161)
  • Some Fields of Pastoral Care(55)
  • Spiritual Theology – Virtues(21)
  • Spiritual Topics – New Testament(10)
  • Spiritual Topics – Old Testament(2)
  • Spiritual Warfare(23)
  • The Altar(2)
  • The Angels(6)
  • The Armenians(1)
  • The Beginning of the Christian Church(2)
  • The Church(27)
  • The Church after Chalcedon(1)
  • The Church after the Schism – The Middle Ages(2)
  • The Church before the Schism(5)
  • The Church in the Diaspora(1)
  • The Church of Alexandria and Its Patriarchs(7)
  • The Conscience and the Influencing Factors(7)
  • The Early Church(6)
  • The Fourth Century and Its Importance(7)
  • The Holy Trinity(14)
  • The Human(11)
  • The Incarnation(5)
  • The Self(2)
  • The Spiritual Man(12)
  • The Theology of the Holy Spirit(4)
  • The Virgin Mary, Mother of God(19)
  • Video(1)
  • Virtues (Moral Theology)(2)
  • Wars of Thought(1)
Gallery
caption
caption
caption

caption
caption
caption

Featured image: The Spiritual Priest Cares for Everyone in Order to Save Him

Make Kids Happy

GET IN TOUGHT