The Roman Catholic teaching of created saving grace arises not only from an erroneous idea of redemption but also from heretical teachings about God. The Greek Fathers teach that there is a distinction without a void between the uncreated divine essence and the uncreated divine energies, and they believe that the worthy partake only of the uncreated energy of God because the divine essence is incommunicable. In the West, on the other hand, they generally identify the uncreated essence with the uncreated energy of God, stating that God is actus purus. For this reason, Roman Catholics do not believe in the true communion of the uncreated divine energies because this would mean the divine essence is communicable to creatures. Therefore, in order to avoid pantheism, i.e., true communion of the divine essence by creatures, they teach that the communicable, saving divine grace in the world is created. Despite this, the Latins teach that there is also a relative communion of the divine essence by the saved and that the Saints enjoy eudaemonia in a vision of the divine essence, a teaching unacceptable to the Greek Fathers. Since the Roman Catholics believe that in the sacraments they commune created graces for their salvation, the rejection of such concepts by the Protestants should not seem strange, since for them the kindness of God suffices for salvation.
The Ancestral Sin - Fr John Romanides












