The
Christian disciple is told to imitate God on several occasions.
Matthew 5:48 states, "Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly
Father is perfect."
Luke 6:36 states, "Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful." In
Ephesians 5, they are told by
Paul to "Be imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children". The believer is also advised to follow the ways of
Jesus, notably in
1 Corinthians 11:1: "Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ."
Catholicism and Eastern Christianity The Imitation of God is one of the core principles in
Catholicism and
Eastern Orthodoxy, as well as in
Oriental Orthodoxy (
Syriac Orthodoxy,
Coptic Orthodoxy,
Ethiopian Orthodoxy, and the
Armenian Apostolic faith). The Catholic Church fully endorses the concept of
Imitatio Dei/Christi. In Catholicism and Orthodoxy, it is integrally related to the concept of
Divinization/Theosis. The general understanding is that a person can become more similar to God over time, a process called
theosis in Greek. This doctrine derives from the biblical mandate to be holy as God is Holy (Lev 20.26). It can be achieved by purification (
katharsis) and
illumination (
theoria), the highest point in illumination is the
union with God. The best imitation of God is not only the man's effort, but it is mainly achieved by the
grace of God. Nevertheless, Eastern Orthodox theology does not usually understand this tri-partite ascent as an attempt to become like God, but as a way to unite with the one God. For most Orthodox theologians, imitatio Dei is not the way to salvation if it is understood as an individual, personal attempt to become god-like. In Roman Catholicism, the same concepts have been treated under different names (
Via purgativa,
via iluminativa and
via unitiva) by St.
John of the Cross and St.
Theresa of Avila.
Via purgativa is the Roman Catholic equivalent to
katharsis, and
theoria is subdivided between illumination and full mystical union. This three-step scheme is also found in the Eastern categories of prayer; ordinary prayer, prayer with mind and heart, and unceasing prayer.
Protestantism In Protestantism, the picture is different. In the Anglo-Saxon tradition
Imitatio dei is widely accepted, whereas the
Lutheran tradition prefers to talk of
conformitas (in German
Nachfolge) instead of
Nachahmung (imitation), because Jesus was singular and cannot and need not be imitated, but followed. ==Deism==