Byblos wrote:What I'm showing you is that 'living soul' doesn't mean that the soul became living. It means the soul is now in a physical body that is living. It is the joining of the two mediums, the physical and the spiritual.
Could you show me where it says that? Could you show me where it says 'the soul was breathed into a living physical being and now became a 'living' soul'? How does something which is already 'living', become 'living'?
This idea is repeated throughout the Bible from the OT to the NT (particularly in Psalms): believe with all your heart and soul. Heart and soul (body and spirit), heart and soul (body and spirit). This concept is literally all over the place.
Firstly, you are ignoring the fact that I believe fully that man has a body and a spirit. Secondly, you are ignoring the meaning of the Hebrew idiom 'heart and soul'.
Allow me to show you what it means:
Deuteronomy 6:
5 You must love the Lord your God with your whole mind, your whole being [soul], and all your strength.
Now the footnote:
9tn Heb “soul”; “being.”
Contrary to Hellenistic ideas of a soul that is discrete and separate from the body and spirit, OT anthropology equated the “soul” (vp#n\) with the person himself.
It is therefore best in most cases to translate vp#n\ as “being” or the like. See H. W. Wolff, Anthropology of the Old Testament, 10-25; D. Fredericks, NIDOTTE 3:133-34.
Please understand that you are not actually reading the Bible in the context in which it was written. You are imposing modern theological ideas onto the text.
Please let's not start with the 'you are not reading my posts' again.
I'll say it every time it happens.
I may have missed it and if I did I apologize but I've never read anything from you remotely suggesting that we receive something from God and it goes back to him after death. Can you re-quote that for me, please? This is a rather major admission on your part (now or before). So you now appear to be saying after we die, that which God gave us is returned to him.
You did indeed miss it, because I posted it directly to you. Here it is again:
The breath of life which is in us is exactly the same breath of life which is in all living creatures:
Genesis 2:
7 The Lord God formed the man from the soil of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.
Genesis 7:
21 And all living things that moved on the earth died, including the birds, domestic animals, wild animals, all the creatures that swarm over the earth, and all mankind.
22 Everything on dry land that had the breath of life in its nostrils died.
Job 34:
14 If God were to set his heart on it, and gather in His spirit and His breath,
15 all flesh would perish together and human beings would return to dust.
Ecclesiastes 3:
19 For the fate of humans and the fate of animals are the same; as one dies, so dies the other. Both have the same breath; there is no advantage for humans over animals, for both are fleeting.
20 Both go to the same place, both come from the dust, and both return to dust.
I have placed it in italics. You can see it's the very same passage from Job to which you are referring.
This is not an 'admission', it has been part of the foundation of my argument right from the start. Yes, after we die that which God gave us (which is not 'us', it's something He gave us), returns to Him - whether we are good or evil.
Note that this thing which returns to Him is in both men and animals. It returns to Him whenever men or animals die. It is not an 'immortal soul', it is His power.
Now that thing we receive from God, since God is eternal, it should follow that whatever we did receive from him is also eternal. Would that be a fair statement? Would you agree with that (albeit insentient)?
Yes I agree totally, and it is certainly insentient.
He also revealed to us that there's evil in the world. Are you saying that's also a part of God's image?
No. I have no idea why you would say this.
Exactly. Angels are not in the form of humans. They appear in the form of humans so we can relate to them.
Scripture please.
The same way God sent his eternal Word in the form of a human so we can relate to him.
Scripture please.
God's image is not a human image it is a spiritual image.
I have no idea what you mean by this. God does not have a literal 'image', He has an image by which He chooses to make Himself understood to us. What He also has is a character, which He also makes known to us.
In any case, I'm interested in hearing your own description of God. What do you think He looks like? What is his essence?
In real terms, it is impossible to describe what God looks like, as Exodus 33-34 make entirely clear. Likewise it is meaningless to speak of His 'essence', since all Scripture says is that He is 'spirit'.
I have no idea what that is other than that it is like nothing in our experience.