If We Neglect So Great a Salvation

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III addresses the topic of salvation in the light of the Nativity of the Lord and His call that the birth of Christ be the beginning of the procession of salvation. The talk emphasizes that salvation is offered to the world but requires personal acceptance from each person; grace is available but human will is what accepts or rejects.
Main Points
- Basis of Salvation: Christ came to save the world; the Nativity proclaims the beginning of this salvation.
- Acceptance and Rejection: Not everyone accepted this salvation (such as Herod and the scribes and the people of Jerusalem); the presence of salvation does not automatically mean the salvation of all people.
- Free Will: God does not impose salvation by force, but presents the way and the grace and leaves to the person the freedom to accept or refuse.
- Obstacles to Acceptance: Love of sin, gradual distancing from God until sin becomes a habit or domination, indifference and lack of seriousness in spiritual life, loss of fear and hardening of the heart.
- Turning Knowledge into Life: A warning that spiritual things may turn into mere information without practical impact, leading to spiritual lethargy, coldness, and separation from prayer and true repentance.
- Personal and Practical Responsibility: The believer must take positive steps (closing the doors through which sin comes, a realistic spiritual program, serious repentance) and ask for God’s grace and cooperate with the Holy Spirit in the work.
Application from a Coptic Orthodox Faith Perspective
- Life of Repentance and Spiritual Renewal: The Nativity and the start of a new year are opportunities for repentance and reorganizing spiritual life; a call to a new beginning with firmness and prayer.
- Grace and Partnership with the Holy Spirit: The idea that divine grace is available and works with the person’s decision; when the person truly wills, he receives the help of the Holy Spirit and the heavenly powers.
- Sacraments and Church Life: Maintaining seriousness in the sacraments (such as the Eucharist and confession) as a path to purity and continued life with God.
Closing Invitation
A direct invitation to the reader to use the feasts of the Nativity and the new year as opportunities for personal salvation: to ask the Lord to deliver him from the love of sin, to set a practical and realistic spiritual program, and to ask God for the grace of perseverance and real change.
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