Afterlife

The Immortal Soul? Part 6: The Rich Man and Lazarus

Lazarus

One of the most well-known narratives in the New Testament is the story of the rich man and Lazarus found in Luke 16:19-31. Many Christians have understood this passage as offering a glimpse into the afterlife and the realms of the dead. However, upon closer examination, it appears that Jesus likely did not intend to reveal details about life after death by telling this story.

I have previously written about Jesus’s story of the Rich Man and Lazarus. I will provide an overview of my understanding of the story below. However, to get the broader background I recommend reading the original posts: 

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Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Afterlife, Immortality, Misconceptions

The Immortal Soul? Part 5: Prooftexts or Proof Missing?

Prooftexts

Many Christians believe the human soul is inherently immortal – that we have an undying, spiritual essence that consciously survives bodily death to live on eternally. This idea is so widely accepted that it’s rarely questioned. However, as we’ve explored in previous articles, the biblical concept of the “soul” encompasses the whole living being, not just an immaterial part that separates from the body after death. The soul is our entire self – our inseparable physical and spiritual nature as created by God. A number of prooftexts are often presented in which people see evidence of an immortal soul. Do these verses teach what people claim?

In examining what the Bible teaches about the soul and the afterlife, we must be careful not to let Platonic philosophical concepts, no matter how widely accepted, cloud our interpretation. Greek notions of an immortal, separable soul deeply infiltrated both Jewish and Christian thought in the centuries after the New Testament’s completion. But if we want to understand Scripture correctly, we need to diligently read it through the original Hebrew cultural lens, not the later imposed lens of Greek dualism.

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Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Afterlife, Immortality

The Immortal Soul? Part 4: The Spirit Returns to God

Spirit Returns

In this series of blog posts we have allowed the Bible to establish the meaning of the word “soul.” We have learned that we are a living soul composed of our bodies and the breath of life that God has given every living creature. The unbiblical, yet popular, concept of the soul is that it continues a conscious existence after the biological death of the body. However, the Bible communicates that the soul is an inseparable combination of mind and body and that one does not survive the other. In fact, both the Old and New Testaments portray death as sleep in which we rest, unconsciously, until the resurrection. What then, does Ecclesiastes 12:7 mean when it says, “the spirit returns to God?”

There are several passages in the Bible which are traditionally interpreted to teach the immortality of the soul and its conscious existence in the intermediate state between death and the resurrection. We will now turn our attention to these passages and see if they do indeed teach these things.

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Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Afterlife, Immortality, Misconceptions

The Immortal Soul? Part 3: Tradition is Dead Wrong

Souls

The Bible’s own language for death is sleep, not conscious existence in the period between death and resurrection (i.e., the intermediate state). That idea comes from Greek philosophy. In this article we’ll notice a sampling of verses which demonstrate how the Bible uses the word soul. As stated previously, our methodology in examining this topic is as follows.

First, we’ll examine the Bible’s description of the soul (previous blog post). Second, we’ll observe the usage of the term “soul” within the biblical context (this article). Third, we’ll analyze various passages often cited as evidence for the soul’s ability to exist independently from the body.

Although some of the passages we’ll examine in this article may revisit concepts from the previous article, it’s important to reinforce the idea that the soul is not a separate entity which inhabits our bodies. Instead, it is a biblical concept representing the inseparable combination of our body and immaterial inner being. In other words, the soul is not something we have; it is what we are. Said yet another way, the soul is the summation of one’s body and inner being.

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Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Afterlife, Immortality, Misconceptions

The Immortal Soul? Part 2: “Soul” Biblically Defined

biblically defined

In the previous article, we observed that the concept of an immortal soul, capable of existing independently from our physical bodies, did not originate from the Bible but rather from Greek philosophers. In this post, we will explore the biblical perspective on the soul. This preliminary study is essential before examining passages often misinterpreted to suggest that the Bible endorses the inherent immortality of the soul and its ability to exist apart from the body.

So, here is our methodology in this, and the following, articles. First, we’ll examine the Bible’s description of the soul. Second, we’ll observe the usage of the term “soul” within the biblical context. Third, we’ll analyze various passages often cited as evidence for the soul’s ability to exist independently from the body. The goal is to allow the Bible to speak for itself without imposing traditional Platonic ideas upon the text.

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Posted by Eddie Lawrence in Afterlife, Immortality, Misconceptions, Word Studies