Spirituality May 2015 (First Edition) | Page 10

Let's look at the topic of salvation and what the church says about this. Church considers as salvaged anyone who accepts and executes Christian teaching without being able to answer the question about how salvation is determined and what it actually represents. It is obvious that most people who regularly attend church (so-called laity) have not mastered the love of Christ fully and that should mean that they are partially salvaged. Psychologists have long ago proved that people need to be rescued from emotional and mental problems which are different for each person, therefore everyone needs salvation as per their individual needs. The only universal salvation, which we can talk about, is reaching a spiritual perfection, or end of evolution which saves one from all faults and imperfections. What distinguishes these one the Church has declared saints from ordinary laymen? Perhaps in their life, when they were declared saints, they walked most of the spiritual path, or maybe even all the way, passing through more suffering. If being a saint means to have reached a complete salvation, i.e. to perfection, what remains to most laymen who have not become saints? What if they need more lives to improve, isn’t God unable to provide this to them. And the Bible says that "with God all things are possible." Is it reasonable to think that it is impossible for God to save every soul just because He has given her afree will which she can use in its detriment. Did He not envisaged this, as well as any possible mistakes a person can make . Do we think that He has not enough power to rectify them. Nothing like that! What is abolished in the Bible has been repeatedly 10