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Only the Body Dies?
An
argument often used to distort the biblical truth about man is the
view that only the body dies at the withdrawal of man's breath;
the soul cannot. Yet Ezekiel 18:4 explicitly states that "the
soul that sins shall die." Those same words are repeated in
verse 20.
The
Messianic text in Isaiah 53 shows that Jesus as a human being went
the way of all flesh—He died. And when He died it was not just the
body which died but also His soul. Notice Isaiah 53:12, which predicted
that the Messiah would pour out "his soul to death."
See
also Psalm 89:48: "What man can live and never see death? Who
can deliver his soul from the power of Sheol [the grave—NKJV]?"
Matthew
10:28 is abundantly clear: "And do not fear those who kill
the body but cannot kill the soul; rather fear him who can destroy
both soul and body...." The soul can be destroyed! Why do we
refuse to believe the plain statements of Scripture?
Resurrection or Immortal
Soul?
The
title of the book of one noted theologian, Oscar Cullman, says it
all: Immortality of the Soul or Resurrection of the Dead?
It is an either-or issue. You cannot have both.
What
is the purpose of the resurrection if the saints are already in
heaven with Christ and the wicked in hell?
Nor
is there any evidence that there is some special place called "paradise"
where Christians stay in transit until the resurrection when they
join Christ in heaven.
The
uniform testimony of Scripture is that the dead remain in their
graves until the time of the resurrection.
John
5:28,29 says, "Do not marvel at this; for the hour is coming
when all who are in the tombs will hear His voice and come forth,
those who have done good, to the resurrection of life, and those
who have done evil, to the resurrection of judgment."
Daniel
12:2 says, "And many of those who sleep in the dust of the
earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and
everlasting contempt." I Corinthians 15:52 shows that it is
at the resurrection that the saved will gain immortality, and before
then the dead are asleep in their graves. "For the trumpet
will sound and the dead will be raised imperishable... For this
perishable nature must put on the imperishable and this mortal nature
must put on immortality. When the perishable puts on the imperishable,
and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the
saying that is written: 'Death is swallowed up in victory.' O death,
where is thy victory? O death, where is thy sting?"
I
Thessalonians 4:15 refers to the dead as being "asleep."
The text goes on to say that when the Lord returns "the dead
in Christ will rise first" (verse 16). Now if the dead go immediately
to be with the Lord at death, how can they only rise at the last
trump?
The
Scriptures show that at the resurrection it is the entire person
who is raised, not merely his body. "The dead in Christ"
are the persons who die in Christ, not just their bodies.
Look
at Job 14:12 to see unequivocally that it is the person himself,
not just a part of him, who rises when Christ returns: "So
man [his entire being] lies down and rises not again; till
the heavens are no more he will not awake; or be roused out of his
sleep."
This
takes us to the next point: that the Bible consistently refers to
death as a sleep.
The Sleep of the Dead
If
death does not indicate unconsciousness why would the analogy of
sleep be meaningful? The Psalmist refers to the "sleep of death"
(Psalm 13:3). Psalm 115:17 says, "The dead do not praise the
Lord, nor do any that go down into silence." Matthew 27:52
states that "the tombs also were opened, and many bodies of
the saints who had fallen asleep were raised." In Acts 7:60
we read of Stephen who "fell asleep." Second Peter 3:4
speaks of those who ask, "Where is the promise of His coming?
For ever since the fathers fell asleep, all things have continued..."
Other
equally clear texts show unmistakably that the dead are unconscious.
Psalm 146:4 says, "When his [man's] breath departs he returns
to his earth; on that very day his plans ["thoughts"-KJV]
perish." The Psalmist asks, "Dost thou work wonders for
the dead? Do the shades rise up to praise thee? …Are thy wonders
known in the darkness, or thy saving help in the land of forgetfulness?"
(Psalm 88:10,12).
The
idea that the saints are having a great time praising the Lord and
playing on harps finds no support in the Sacred Scriptures! The
dead are asleep; they are in silence, in the land of forgetfulness!
Psalm 6:5 says pointedly, "For in death there is no remembrance
of thee; in Sheol [the grave] who can give thee praise?"
Immortality to Be Sought
Immortality
is set forth in Scripture as something to be sought and attained
in the future. Romans 2:6,7 says that God "will render to every
man according to his works; to those who by patience in well-doing
seek for glory and honor and immortality, He will give eternal life."
Immortality
is a gift of God through Christ. It is not possessed inherently
by humans. Only the saved will be granted immortality. For proof
see 2 Timothy 1:10, which states that Jesus Christ "abolished
death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel."
What Is a Soul?
Let's
go to the very first book of the Bible to see God's revelation of
what man really is and what constitutes the soul. In Genesis 2:7
we read, significantly, that "God formed man of dust from the
ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man
became a living being [or soul—KJV]." Notice that man was not
given a soul; God did not breathe a soul within man. Man became
a living soul, a living being. Man IS the living soul.
The
Hebrew word for soul is nephesh, which is often translated
"person," meaning one's entire being, not some immaterial
part of him. The Hebrews had a holistic conception of human beings.
In
Genesis 12:5 we read of Abraham's gathering all the "persons"
(nephesh, rendered "souls" in the KJV) they had
gotten in Haran. Genesis 46:27 says that seventy "persons"
(nephesh) went into Egypt.
Leviticus
7:20 says that the "person" (nephesh) who touches
any unclean thing shall be cut off. The English translations use
"soul" and "person" interchangeably in a number
of texts. (The King James Version regularly uses "soul"
while the Revised Standard Version uses "person"it has
the same meaning and comes from the same Hebrew, nephesh.)
Leviticus 23:30 says, "And whoever does any work on this same
day, that person [soul] I will destroy from among his people."
The
problem is that many persons reading English translations might
not realize that a number of references to a "person"
(or "persons") dying are translated from the Hebrew nephesh,
which means soul. If they did, it would be patently clear that the
notion that the soul cannot die is a flagrant error.
Numbers
31:19, for example, says, "Encamp outside the camp seven days;
whoever of you has killed any person [nephesh]...."
See also Numbers 35:15, 30; Joshua 20:3, 9; Genesis 37:21; Deuteronomy
19:6, 11; and Jeremiah 40:14, 15 to see that souls (persons) die.
We
find in the very first revelation about man's creation that man
did not possess a soul but rather was a soul. So where did we get
the concept of an immaterial soul that constitutes the real person
and that could have an independent existence from the body? As Clark
Pinnock and other scholars have pointed out, this view in Christian
theology has come from Platonic thought.
What Is the Spirit in Man?
Saying
that man has no immaterial soul within is not to say that man is
not distinguished from the animal kingdom. Man is made in the image
of God; the animals and plants are not. Man has intelligence and
reasoning ability and shares a number of characteristics with his
Maker. Nothing must be done to take away from man's uniqueness in
the created order. However, we need not build myths to sustain our
uniqueness and supremacy in the earthly created order.
Some
believe that the spirit in man, which goes back to God upon death
of the body, can enable man to have conscious existence at that
time.
Ecclesiastes
12:7 says that "the dust returns to the earth as it was, and
the spirit [ruach] returns to God who gave it."
The
spirit is the life force which God breathed into man which
made him a living soul. It is the life principle, the life
energy, without which human life is not possible. As Job says,
"If he [God] should take back his spirit [ruach]
to himself, and gather to himself his breath [neshamah],
all flesh would perish together, and man would return to the
dust" (Job 34:14,15). The spirit animates human life.
It has no separate existence apart from the body.
The
breath of life which God breathed into man is equated with
the spirit in man. Notice the Hebrew parallelism in Job 27:3:
"[A]s long as my breath is in me, and the spirit of God
in my nostrils; my lips will not speak falsehood." Notice
this other parallelism (where the same thought is expressed
in two ways for emphasis) in Job 33:4: "The spirit [ruach]
of God has made me, and the breath [neshamah] of the
Almighty gives me life."
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Yet
another example of this parallelism is found in Isaiah 42:5: "Thus
says God, the Lord, who created the heavens and stretched them out...who
gives breath to the people upon it and spirit to those who walk
in it." The Scriptures are, indeed, abundantly clear that the
breath of life is equated with the spirit in man.
Those
who use Ecclesiastes 12:7, which says that "the spirit returns
to God who gave it," to prove that the spirit is equated with
the immortal soul have a very uncomfortable dilemma: They are forced
to teach that everyone who dies, not just the saved, goes to heaven
irrespective of whether he had a personal relationship with Jesus
Christ!
No,
the spirit in man is the breath of life which was given to man.
As Job 34:14,15 says, "If [God] he gather unto himself his
spirit and his breath; All flesh shall perish"—cease from existence.
(KJV)
Objection
after objection crumbles as we look at the scriptural teaching on
what man really is. Yet all the world's religions, all New Age philosophies,
all of Eastern mysticism, and almost all of the Christian-professing
world have accepted the very opposite of what the Bible teaches.
Some Major Objections Considered
We
now turn to some of the major objections raised against the view
that the soul is mortal. We will see in each instance that the objection
is not sustained.
Rachel's Departing Soul
Let's
begin with Genesis 35:18, which says of Rachel, "And as her
soul was departing (for she died), she called his name Benno´ni...."
Now does her soul's departing mean that it had a separate, conscious
existence?
Samuele
Bacchiocchi puts it well in his book Immortality or Resurrection?:
"The phrase 'her soul was departing' most likely means that
'her breath was stopping' or, as we might say, she was taking her
last sigh. It is important to note that the noun soul—nephesh
derives from the verb by the same root which means 'to breathe,'
'to respire,' 'to draw breath.' The inbreathing of the breath of
life resulted in man becoming a living soul, a breathing organism.
"The
departing of the breath of life results in a person becoming a dead
soul. Thus as Edmund Jacob explains, 'The departure of nephesh
is a metaphor for death; a dead man is one who has ceased to breathe.'"
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Another
text commonly misunderstood is 1 Kings 17:21,22, which says
of Elijah: "Then he stretched himself upon the child
three times, and cried to the Lord, 'O Lord, my God, let this
child's soul come into him again.'"
If
the soul is not a separate part of the person, how could Elijah
make this prayer? The Lord heard Elijah's prayer, "and
the soul of the child came into him again and he revived."
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Notice
first that in verse 17 it is said that "there was no breath
left in him," which harmonizes well with what we have covered,
showing that the departure of the breath of life results in death.
It was when God breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life
that man became a living soul. When the breath of life came back
into the widow's son mentioned here, his nephesh (or life-force)
came back and he became conscious again.
The
soul of the child coming back into him simply means that his life
returned! Nothing more, nothing less.
Lazarus and the Rich Man
But
the most popular of all the misunderstood texts is found in Luke
16, which records the parable of Lazarus and the Rich Man. For many
Christians, this is the single text which seals the issue.
First,
note that this was a parable. It was not a real historical event
or the reporting or recounting of an actual event. It was a parable,
a teaching, a pedagogical device designed to express truths in symbolic
or metaphorical terms.
It
is important, in looking at parables, to notice the contexts carefully,
to see what were the lessons which the storyteller wanted to convey.
Jesus
had been teaching on covetousness and stewardship (Luke 16:1 13).
Jesus usually selects an appropriate parable to illustrate his ethical
teachings. The parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus was a classic
one showing the rich's insensitivity to and exploitation of the
poor.
Many
theologians realize that Luke was the Gospel writer most concerned
about social and political issues and that his gospel focuses more
on the justice and equity issues. (Advocates of "Liberation
Theology" are particularly fond of Luke.)
This
parable highlights Luke's emphasis on concern for the poor and downtrodden
and God's judgment of the selfish and sinful rich. Even the distinguished
evangelical theologian Murray Harris, author of the book Raised
Immortal: Resurrection and Immortality in the New Testament,
admits that "the parable of the rich man and Lazarus was told
to illustrate the danger of wealth (Luke 6:24) and the necessity
of repentance (Luke 16:28 30), not to satisfy our natural curiosity
about man's anthropological condition after death." (See his
article, "The New Testament View of Life after Death"
in the January, 1986, issue of the scholarly journal, Themelios.)
Read
the entire parable again.
Jesus
is emphasizing the importance of the Pharisees and His hearers accepting
His message then while He walked among them, for He was the ultimate
revelation. For those hearers, that was their window of opportunity.
The punch line is in Luke 16:31: "He said to him, 'If they
do not hear Moses and the prophets, neither will they be convinced
if some one should rise from the dead.'"
Persons
who knowingly and deliberately reject the truth of the gospel now
would not accept it even if they were given another chance after
the resurrection. (Of course, every human being will be given one
chance and those who reject that one chance will forfeit salvation.
Millions of ignorant sinners, however, will get their first chance
for salvation after their resurrection. Write for our free brochure
entitled Does God Love the World Enough to Save It? for a
full discussion on this controversial topic.)
If
this parable were teaching us about the intermediate state, it would
be absolutely irrelevant to the context, as Murray Harris implies.
How one can construct a theology of the afterlife based on a parable
is beyond exegetical warrant.
An
interesting point to show that the rich man in the parable is not
suffering the pangs of hell, as described by the preachers, is that
the word translated "hell" in the passage is hades,
the equivalent of the Hebrew sheol which means simply the
grave—where everyone, including the righteous, go. Only in this
parable do we see hades used in any way to describe any kind
of activity other than dead silence!
Jesus
used literary license in this case, which was consistent with the
allegorical method He often used.
The Witch of Endor
Perhaps
the most challenging passage in the Old Testament for a group like
the Church of God International is found in 1 Samuel 28, concerning
the witch of Endor and her supposed bringing forth of the prophet
Samuel.
Saul
had been seeking a word from the Lord as to his encounter with the
Philistines, but the Lord had spoken not a word to him, either by
dream or through the prophets. In desperation he turned to a medium
and asked for Samuel to be brought up. Saul had to disguise himself
and go to the witch, for it was he who had abolished witchcraft
in Israel and punished the sorcerers.
But
let's read the troubling passages in 1 Samuel 28:11: "Then
the woman said, 'Whom shall I bring up for you?' He said, 'Bring
up Samuel for me.' When the woman saw Samuel, she cried out with
a loud voice; and the woman said to Saul, 'Why have you deceived
me? You are Saul....' The woman said to Saul, 'I see a god coming
up out of the earth.' He said to her, 'What is his appearance?'
And she said, 'An old man is coming up; and he is wrapped in a robe.'
And Saul knew that it was Samuel, and he bowed with his face to
the ground, and did obeisance" (verses 11 14). On the surface,
this appears to be a pretty devastating passage to our view. But
let's examine it more closely.
First,
look at the implications from within the doctrinal perspective of
the immortal soul defenders themselves. God, on a number of occasions
in the Old Testament, speaks against wizards, mediums, and the like,
and in the law pronounces the death penalty for witchcraft. It was
that serious (see Leviticus 19:31 and Isaiah 8:19, 20).
Notice,
too, that 1 Chronicles 10:13, 14, in reporting on Saul's death,
makes the rather striking commentary: "So Saul died for his
unfaithfulness; he was unfaithful to the Lord in that he did not
keep the command of the Lord, and also consulted a medium, seeking
guidance, and did not seek guidance from the Lord. Therefore the
Lord slew him, and turned the kingdom over to David the son of Jesse."
That
one act was sufficient to cause Saul to lose his kingdom. But notice
what the immortal soul defenders would be saying. They would be
asserting, in effect, that Yahweh, who outlawed witches and seers,
actually caused one of them to bring up one of His faithful servants,
Samuel!
Incidentally,
if Samuel was already in Abraham's bosom as a righteous man in heaven,
then how was he seen coming up out of the earth? Is that the abode
of the righteous? Some believe this, but the evidence against the
view that sheol had different compartments and was not the
common abode of the dead is so overwhelming that even some immortal
soul advocates reject that view. Bacchiocchi documents the case
against that view in his book, Immortality or Resurrection?,
quoting one theologian who defends the immortal soul as saying,
"Perhaps most interesting for traditional Christians to note
is the fact that it [sheol] is the resting place of the dead,
irrespective of their religion during life....There is no doubt
that believers and unbelievers all were thought to go to Sheol
when they die."
Desmond
Alexander, professor of Semitic studies, says in his article on
The Old Testament View of Life after Death in the January 1986
issue of Themelios that "while it is tempting to suggest,
especially in light of later Jewish thinking, that in Old Testament
times Sheol was perceived as consisting of different regions,
the biblical texts themselves do not support such a possibility."
But
let's get back to the Saul-Samuel story. Apart from the gross anomaly
of Samuel's coming up from the earth when he was supposed to be
in heaven, how do we explain the fact that the righteous man Samuel,
apparently by the power of the witch of Endor, cooperates with her
in her ungodly craft by actually coming up to see Saul?
Do
witches and mediums have the power to rouse the righteous from their
heavenly bliss, or from "paradise"? Obviously, this was
a satanic impersonation. The fact that the Bible writer says it
was Samuel is not meant to be taken on the surface. We have already
seen the inexplicable problems with accepting that it was really
Samuel. The writer obviously means to convey the point that a person
looking exactly like Samuel and representing himself like Samuel
was seen. As far as Saul was concerned, it was Samuel who was seen.
The narrator mentions a dialogue between Saul and Samuel to advance
his point of how Saul reacted to the person he thought was Samuel.
We can't impose our modern, precise standards of journalism and
reporting on the biblical text. The Holy Spirit inspired enough
passages to show where the dead really are—unless we are stating
flatly that the Bible contradicts itself. That is the only alternative
to the view that it was not actually Samuel.
To Die Is Gain
Philippians
1:21 is another misunderstood text: "For to me to live is Christ,
and to die is gain. If it is to be life in the flesh, that means
fruitful labour for me. Yet which I shall choose I cannot tell.
I am hard pressed between the two. My desire is to depart and be
with Christ, for that is far better" (verses 21 23).
So
did Paul really believe that he would be with Christ immediately
upon death? If that is so, then he would flatly contradict himself.
In
1 Timothy 4:7,8 Paul says, "I have fought the good fight, I
have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there
is laid up for me [kept] the crown of righteousness, which the Lord,
the righteous judge, will award to me on that Day, and not only
to me but also to those who have loved his appearing."
It
was the same Paul who wrote in 1 Corinthians 15 that the dead in
Christ would rise "at the last trumpet" (verse 52). He
knew when the dead would get their opportunity with the Lord. Was
he telling the Philippians one thing and the Corinthians another?
No,
Paul was simply telling the Philippians from this prison epistle
that with all the pressures and frustrations of his life, with all
his suffering, death would be gain to him, for he had the assurance
of salvation. He knew that at the next moment of consciousness,
he would be with his Lord. For him death would be gain"But
to remain in the flesh is more necessary on your account" (verse
24), for there was much more work to be done. As for him, he could
well die and take his rest. We must not read our biases into Scripture,
but must let the texts speak for themselves.
Away From the Body
Yet
another puzzling text to some is found in 2 Corinthians 5:8, which
says, "We are of good courage, and we would rather be away
from the body and at home with the Lord."
Here
again Paul writes painfully about his struggles and anguish. "Here
indeed we groan, and long to put on our heavenly dwelling... For
while we are still in this tent, we sigh with anxiety."
Paul
was longing to reach that stage where death would be swallowed up
into victory, when sorrow and pain would be no more; where our very
mortal, sin-wracked bodies would be changed into Christ's glorious
body (Philippians 3:21). He was looking forward to the time when
"this perishable [body] would put on the imperishable and this
mortal nature must put on immortality" (1 Corinthians 15:53).
At
the resurrection—not at death—what is now a "physical body"
will be raised as a "spiritual body" (1 Corinthians 15:44).
We are only absent from this body at the resurrection! If we read
into the biblical texts our Platonic, dualistic notions, then we
will come to the wrong conclusions. If we let Scripture interpret
itself, we will see that this meaning harmonizes with the rest of
the biblical revelation. Notice how Paul juxtaposes his statement
about being absent from the body with the resurrection: "For
we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each
may receive good or evil..." (2 Corinthians 5:10).
Thief on the Cross
Certainly
one of the most famous stories in all of the Bible is the story
of the "thief on the cross." Jesus promised that repentant
sinner, "Truly, I say to you, today you shall be with me in
Paradise" (Luke 23:43). If the thief went with Jesus to paradise
upon death, then certainly this might prove the immortality of the
soul.
But
where did Jesus Himself go that day? He went to sheol (Hebrew)
or hades (Greek)—the grave! Jesus was dead for three days
and three nights and there is nothing to suggest that His death
was different from other humans, with whom he shared a common nature,
as Hebrews tells us.
With
a simple punctuation mark the problem is solved. What Jesus actually
said, was "Truly, I say to you today, you shall [in the
future, when the Kingdom of God comes (see verse 42)] be with
me in Paradise."
The
original Greek has no punctuation so it is left up to the translators,
who naturally have their bias, to supply the punctuation marks.
We choose to punctuate it differently, for that is allowable in
the Greek and harmonizes with everything we have read so far.
Paradise
is not some place that Jesus went the day He died. Paradise is equated
in Scripture with the very presence of God (see 2 Corinthians 12:2,
3 and Revelation 2:7).
After
Jesus' resurrection on the third day, He told Mary, "Do not
hold me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father" (John 20:17).
Jesus was in the grave for three days before His resurrection, so
He could not have meant (when He spoke to the thief) that on the
day of His death the thief would join Him in a place where He Himself
would not be—heaven.
Clearly,
the translators have combined the punctuation with their prejudice!
The Worm That Won't Die
Samuelle
Bacchiocchi says Isaiah 66:24 is regarded by traditionalists as
the "clearest witness to eternal punishment in the Old Testament"
(Immortality of Resurrection?). The text says, "And
they shall go forth and look on the dead bodies of the men that
have rebelled against me for their worm shall not die, their fire
shall not be quenched..."
We
have already dealt with the concept of the unquenchable fire. But
what does it mean, "their worm will not die"? Is this
contradicting the overwhelming evidence we have seen that man's
soul is mortal? Edward Fudge, who, before deeper study, believed
man had an immortal soul, comments on this passage in his book,
The Fire That Consumes:
"Several
kinds of flies lay eggs in the flesh of carcasses. The maggots hatched
from them serve a beneficial purpose in hastening decomposition.
But they also are a symbol of ignominy precisely because they attack
only bodies deprived of burial."
Note
that point. It is particularly loathsome and contemptible that one's
body would be in the open without a proper burial. What better way
to portray the ignominy and disgrace of the eternal fate of the
wicked?
Keep
in mind also Daniel 12:2, which talks about some awakening (in the
resurrection) to "everlasting contempt." The same Hebrew
word translated "contempt" in Daniel 12:2 (deraon)
is translated "loathsome" in Isaiah 66:24.
As
Bacchiocchi says, "This means that the contempt is caused by
the decomposition of their bodies, and not by the never-ending suffering
of the wicked."
Notice
Jeremiah 25:33, which graphically portrays the disgrace of the fate
of the wicked: "And those slain by the Lord on that day shall
extend from one end of the earth to the other. They shall not be
lamented, or gathered, or buried; they shall be dung on the surface
of the ground." This is precisely the image of disgrace that
fellow-prophet Isaiah wanted to convey in Isaiah 66:24. Their bodies
will be left for the worms. "Such discarded corpses are fit
only for worms and fire," says Fudge in his book.
Souls Under the Altar
Revelation 6:9 11 is
another text used to defend the immortal soul. It speaks about the
souls under the altar asking, "O Sovereign Lord, holy and true,
how long before thou wilt judge and avenge our blood on those who
dwell upon the earth?"
Now anyone with the
slightest training in theology should realize the danger of using
an apocalyptic book, largely employing allegory and symbols, to
establish doctrine. If the blood of Abel could cry out from the
ground against the injustice of that righteous man's murder (Genesis
4:10), why can't the souls of the saints, as it were, cry out against
their martyrdom?
Besides, does anyone
really believe that all the saints of the Lord are literally located
under the altar? The altar in the Old Testament was where sacrifices
took place. The martyrs had sacrificed not the blood of bulls and
goats but their own on God's altar, symbolically. Let's not stretch
the Scripture to fit preconceived ideas.
Spirit, Soul, and Body
First
Thessalonians 5:23 states, "May the God of peace himself sanctify
you wholly; and may your spirit and soul and body be kept sound
and blameless...." This text, which seems to teach a tripartite
view of man—spirit, soul, and body—simply means that Paul hoped
the Thessalonians would be wholly, thoroughly prepared for the coming
of the Lord.
It
is similar to Jesus' saying for emphasis in Mark 12:30: "You
shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your
soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength."
This does not mean Jesus felt there were four distinct parts to
human nature. Soul is used in a variety of ways in Scripture. Paul
hoped that they would sanctify their bodies from the works of the
flesh, such as fornication; that they would keep their spirit in
tune with God's and purify their soul in terms of their consciousness.
Does It Make a Difference?
Winston
Churchill once said that some men occasionally stumble upon the
truth, but get up, brush themselves off, and go right on as though
nothing had happened. Could this describe you? How passionate are
you for the pursuit of the truth—the whole truth and nothing but
the truth?
Are
you like the Bereans who "received the word with all eagerness,
examining the scriptures daily to see if these things were so"
(Acts 17:11)? Are you doing your best to "present yourself
to God as one approved, a workman who has no need to be ashamed,
rightly handling [or dissecting] the word of truth" (2 Timothy
2:15)? Look over all the scriptures, and reason through them (see
Acts 17:2).
What
are the mathematical odds of your being in touch with a group of
people—out of the six billion in the world today—who reject the
doctrine of the immortality of the soul, a doctrine accepted by
every one of the major world religions and almost every one of the
over 26,000 Christian churches (yes, it's that many!)?
What
are the odds of your finding a group which can put together the
scriptures we have, showing the truth about what man is?
Well,
you have beaten the odds and here you are with the truth in your
hands. God has so designed it that you would get this truth. How
will you show your appreciation?
We
suggest that you write for other literature from us to see what
other surprises might be in store.
In
the meantime, remember the words quoted earlier in this article
from immortal-soul defender John Cooper in his book Body, Soul,
and Life Everlasting: "If what they [his opponents] are
saying is true, then two disturbing conclusions immediately follow.
"First,
a doctrine affirmed by most of the Christian churches since its
beginning is false. A second consequence is personal and existential—what
millions of Christians believe will happen when they die is also
a delusion."
Is
God the author of confusion and delusion? AG
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