..............Works and Faith are both required for salvation. To deny works is to deny becoming a son of God, a Christ. You reject Christ's command to "go and be perfect". Be either hot or cold, it is the lukewarm he will spew from his mouth. Those who fervently claim faith, but have no fruit.
I almost gave your post an "agree" because I do agree with a great deal of what you say about emotion vs. thoughtful prayer and worship. But in the end I just had to settle on giving a "like" instead.
I totally agree that "salvation" in the total sense of the word includes being conformed to the image of God's Son. (Although I'd quibble a bit when it comes to saying we are becoming a "Christ". Likewise a bit with the idea of "becoming a son of God".)
Which is one reason I can't seem to agree with Orthodoxy even though it has much to offer. Most Orthodox Christians stress the concept of what Protestants call "sanctification" (becoming like Him) to the point where they ignore the fact that our saved status is usually presented in the past tense.
Actually salvation is presented in the scriptures in 3 tenses.
1. We have been saved (1 Cor. 6:11; Titus 3:4-5)
2. We are being saved (2Cor. 2:15; Phil. 2:12-13; Heb. 2:1-3; 2Peter 1:10;1Jn.1:7)
3. We shall be saved (Matt. 25:46;Rom. 5:9-10;Rom. 13:11;Eph. 1:14;1Thess. 5:8)
But I'm concentrating on the first one for now. This one seems to be the sticking point among Evangelicals and Orthodox (and some other groups).
In their zeal for holy change in the life of their people and differentiate themselves from those pushy evangelicals many church teachers seem to ignore or disbelieve the fact that there needs to be a starting point where one "is" saved and seal with God's Holy Spirit (Who only then continues to work in them to do His will).
"Beloved, we are God’s children
now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is." 1 John 3:2
"
made us alive with Christ, even when we were dead in our trespasses. It is by grace you have been saved! And God raised
us up with Christ and seated us with Him in heavenly realms in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming ages He might display the surpassing riches of His grace, demonstrated by His kindness to us in Christ Jesus.." Eph. 2:5-7
It is the teaching by so many of the Orthodox concerning "being saved" (by traditional church activities as well as good works) to the exclusion of or even disagreement with the idea of an appeal to believe the good news and have a once for all evangelical change of status before God by Grace through faith ---- that causes evangelicals to see the Orthodox as perhaps not being saved in the first place.
I.e. - they have gotten, as it were, the cart before the horse (at least in the eyes of some of the evangelicals they spar with in forums like this one). The charge then becomes that Orthodox (and Catholics and such) are trying to earn a justified status before God by their good works and church activities rather than through the finished work of Christ at Calvary.
And it isn't just an illusion on the part of evangelicals. I have seen that play out many times in the forum. E.g. - an Orthodox may say something like "I began to
cooperate with God and begin being saved in 1997" - giving the impression that he never had saving and justifying faith in Christ's work at Calvary in the 1st place.
Whereas an evangelical might say (more comprehensively and correctly IMO) something like, "I received Christ as my personal Savor in 1997 and was saved at that time. The Lord has been working mightily in my life ever since to conform me to the image of Christ. Some day soon I will be totally changed and glorified when I finally meet Him fact to face. I have His Holy Spirit as a sign and seal against that day."
Any way - there certainly are cases where evangelicals have assumed that Orthodox and the like are not saved - but the cause of those wrong assumptions lays in many cases with a faulty construct by the Orthodox as to the basic "mechanics of salvation".
And of course, there are the clear cut cases where an Orthodox, R.C. or what have you will say pretty much right out that no one is "saved" now but that they may be in the future if they tow the line.
Whether that kind of statement is said by works oriented Protestants (and there are as many of more of those preaching a works salvation in this forum as there are "traditional sacramental" types) or Orthodox or Catholics - it is wrong and it amounts to a false gospel when all is said and done.
People of that stripe may well find themselves pointing to their good religious life and works to recommend their salvation when they meet the Lord and find themselves on the receiving end of "I
never knew you".
I can't say for sure of course. I'm no one's final judge. I personally hope that everyone who names the name of Christ in any way will be saved in the end (even if their doctrine and or life hasn't been up to par like the so called cults). I have my doubts about that however because the scriptures seem to teach otherwise. In fact God Himself considers those who preach gospels of works such as adding the law to simple faith or changing their life to make the grade and enter Heaven "cursed".
That's a sobering thought when I consider just how many I've encountered here in the forum who do just that.
Some folks can't seem to understand why I or any other evangelical would want to preach the basic gospel to someone like a bishop or the pope. IMO it's probably that they haven't been paying attention or simply misunderstand the issues (or perhaps even have made the same fatefull mistake concerning the tenses of salvation that I have been talking about here).