Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Does The Soul Exist Separate From The Body?

Sorting Out the Confusion


And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. ⏤Genesis 2:7

     There are those who build a doctrine from Genesis 2:7 which would postulate that there is no soul separate from the body. The soul, they would say, is formed by the union of the "breath" of God with the physical body (soma). Therefore, upon death the "breath" (spirit) of God  returns to whence it came and the life, called the soul, is no more.

     Historical Christianity has read this text (Genesis 2:7) in a much different manner. The orthodox have said that there is a dualism to man. Two substances. A body of flesh and an immaterial substance called, alternately, soul, or spirit. A substance is made known by its actions. The idea of "substance" is one of the truths of reason. Universally, men are aware of their thoughts, feelings and volitions.  We also know that these thoughts, feelings and volitions are in constant flux, but that there is a something of which they are the manifestations. This "something" is an entity. A nonentity does not act and produce effects. 

     "Whatever acts is, and what is is an entity," (Charles Hodge).

     We follow Hodge's reasoning further to agree that we can know nothing of substance but by their phenomena. So, then, when we witness, in our reasoning, phenomena that is not only different but incompatible we conclude that it is produced by different substances. "To identify matter with mind, or mind with matter, it is necessary to pretend that sensation, thought, volition, are reducible, in the last analysis, to solidity, extension, figure,  divisibility, etc.; or that solidity, extension, figure, etc., are reducible to sensation, thought, will" (Cousin). It logically follows that matter and mind (such as the body and mind/soul) are two different substances.  
    
     Those who imagine that the soul is called spirit because it is but a breath, or energy, that has been divinely infused into the human body, that is, itself, void of essence, swim in gross error. It is sadly true that many persons are so attached to this world that they cannot imagine any part of their essence surviving the grave.

   "Were not the soul an essence separate from the body, holy Scripture would not teach that we dwell in houses of clay, and at death remove from a tabernacle of flesh; and we put off that which is corruptible, in order that, at the last day, we may finally receive according to the deeds done in the body. These, and similar passages which everywhere occur, not only clearly distinguish the soul from the body, but by giving it the name "man," intimate that it is the principle part. Again, when Paul exhorts believers to cleanse themselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, he shows that there are two parts in which the taint of sin resides. Peter, also, in calling Christ the shepherd and bishop of souls, would have spoken absurdly if there were no souls toward which he might discharge such an office. Nor would there be any ground for what he says concerning the eternal salvation of souls, or for his injunction to purify our souls, or for his assertion that fleshly lusts war against the soul; neither could the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews say, that pastors watch as those who must give an account for our souls, if souls were devoid of essence. To the same effect Paul calls God to witness upon his soul, which could not be brought to trial before God, if incapable of suffering punishment. This is still more clearly expressed by our Savior, when he bids us fear him who, after he has killed the body, is able to cast [the soul] into hell fire. Again, when the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews distinguished the fathers of our flesh from God, who alone is the Father of our spirits, he could not have asserted the essence of the soul in clearer terms. Moreover [if] the soul, when freed from the fetters of the body, [did not] continue to exist, our Savior would not have presented the soul of Lazarus as enjoying blessedness in Abraham's bosom, while, on the contrary, that of Dives was suffering dreadful torments. Paul assures us of the same thing when he says, that so long as we are present in the body, we are absent from the Lord. Not to dwell on the matter of which there is little obscurity, I will only add, that Luke mentions among the error of the Sadducees that they believe neither [in] angels nor spirits." ⏤John Calvin
Job 4:19;  2 Corinthians 5:4; 2 Peter 1:13-14; 2 Corinthians 5:10; 7:1; 1 Peter 2:25; 1:9; 2:11; Hebrews 13:17; 2 Corinthians 1:23; Matthew 10:28; Luke 12:5; Hebrews 12:9; Luke 16:22; 2 Corinthians 5:6,8; Acts 23:8.




Hello friends, my name is Jerry Hayes, I am a full time biblical researcher. I  rely on freewill love offerings (from those of you who benefit from my work) and book sales  for my support. Would you please consider leaving a small donation at the link provided here? Thank you for your support.

     

There is some confusion over the difference between the terms "soul" and "spirit" because they are sometimes used interchangeably by the sacred writers. In the OT the Hebrew is nephesh (soul), and ruach (spirit). In the NT the Greek is psyche (soul, or mind), and pneuma (spirit). The confusion exists because "soul" is used by sacred writers to denote the inner man (consisting of the will, emotions and intellect). and also to reference the complete human, material and immaterial combined. In like manner the term translated as "spirit" (that primarily means "life force," is ruach in the Hebrew, found 378 times in the OT, and literally meaning "breath," "wind," etc.; the corresponding Greek term is pneuma, occurring 379 times in the NT) is sometimes used interchangeably with the term translated as "soul" by sacred writers. "Spirit" can be used, by way of the figure of speech known as the synecdoche (where a part is named for the whole, or the whole for the part) for a person himself.  John wrote: "Beloved, believe not every spirit, but prove the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets are gone out into the world" (1 John 4:1, emphasis added). Note that the term "spirit" in this text has reference to the inner man of the "false prophets." In this manner "spirit" may reference the element of man (2 Corinthians 4:16) that is fashioned in God's image (Genesis 1:26-27), and thus, is a synonym of "soul." This is also true of Zechriah 12:1 "... saith the LORD, which ... formeth the spirit of man within him." This has lead some to suppose that there is no difference between the soul and spirit of man. This is a mistake in our opinion.

     "Soul" may signify merely an individual person: e.g. the prophet Ezekiel declared that the "soul" (i.e. the person) who sins will surely die (Ezekiel 18:20), or, as Peter would write centuries later, "eight souls" were saved by water in the days of Noah (1 Peter 3:20). See also Exodus 1:5. It is the eternal component of man that is fashioned in the very image of God (Genesis 1:26), and that can exist apart from the physical body (Matthew 10:28; 
Revelation 6:9). The term "soul," as with the word "spirit" may take on different senses, depending upon its contextual setting. 
Since "soul" and "spirit" are used interchangeable by sacred writers, one must consider the context of the Hebrew and Greek words to determine the proper understanding.

Apostolically Speaking
☩☩ JLH

Persons Referenced:
 Charles Hodge: Charles Hodge was a Presbyterian theologian and principal of Princeton Theological Seminary between 1851 and 1878. He was a leading exponent of the Princeton Theology, an orthodox Calvinist theological tradition in America during the 19th century.
Victor Cousin: (November 28, 1792 – January 1867) was a French philosopher. He was the founder of "eclecticism", a briefly influential school of French philosophy that combined elements of German idealism and Scottish Common Sense Realism. As the administrator of public instruction for over a decade, Cousin also had an important influence on French educational policy.

Scriptures Referenced:

Genesis 1:26-27 And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth. 27 So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.

Genesis 27:25 And he said, Bring it near to me, and I will eat of my son's venison, that my soul may bless thee. And he brought it near to him, and he did eat: and he brought him wine and he drank.

Exodus 1:5 And all the souls that came out of the loins of Jacob were seventy souls: for Joseph was in Egypt already.

Job 30:16 And now my soul is poured out upon (within) me; the days of affliction have taken hold upon me.

Matthew 10:28 And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.

2 Corinthians 4:16 For which cause we faint not; but though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day.

Revelation 6:9 And when he had opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for the testimony which they held:







Sunday, October 21, 2018

Philo of Alexandria and the Logos


(Excerpted from “Godhead Theology” by Bishop Jerry Hayes)



Plato (fourth century B.C.) taught that God the first principle was, Himself, too holy to personally come into contact with a universe of matter, so He brought into existence, as His first creation, god the second principle, whom Plato called the logos (translated in our English Bibles as “word”). God the first principle delegated creation of the physical universe to the logos (god the second principle). Once the universe was created by the logos, according to Plato, both god the first principle and god the second principle (logos) brought into existence a third entity whom Plato called the world spirit. 
This concept of the godhead was current in the pagan world in which Christ's church found itself. Contemporaneous to Christ was one Philo of Alexandria, Egypt: a Platonic Jewish philosopher. This Philo saw the Jewish Messiah pre-shadowed in Plato’s logos concept of god the second principle. It must be pointed out that Philo was a non-Christian, who had a profound effect upon later generations of Christians, who would become apostate from Biblical-Christology. 
The fact that Christianity was a new religion seemed to be impeding its progress; Christian apologists overcame this difficulty by showing that Christianity had common ground with Judaism and philosophy. In this task one cannot underestimate the influence of one Philo of Alexandria, Egypt. 
Philo, a contemporary of Christ and the apostles, was a Jewish philosopher of Alexandria who was a student of Plato and the Stoics. Greek philosophy had worked on the concept of God for several hundred years, and had transformed the ancient superstitions of half-animal and half-human gods to an homogenized form of ‘principles’ and ‘energies.’ It was theorized that there is only one God who is God in Himself (in this, it is suggested by Philo that the Greeks were influenced by Moses: i.e. the Shema, Deut 6:4), who could not touch or be touched by a created universe. This transcendent deity must, then, communicate through an intermediary that was called the logos. Philo … saw in the Greek logos the promised Hebrew Messiah. (The link between Plato's teachings and the Trinity as adopted by the Roman Catholic Church is so strong that Edward Gibbon, centuries later in his masterwork The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, referred to Plato as “the Athenian sage, who had thus marvelously anticipated one of the most surprising discoveries of the Christian revelationthe Trinity.”
Philo was a Jew, not a Christian; but a disciple of his by the name of Justin (called by Christians, Justin Martyr) embraced the thought of Philo concerning the logos and the Christ. Justin and other Christian apologists began to promote this logos-christology, of Philo and the Greeks, in their Christian circles. (Justin was a Platonic philosopher before he became a Christian and continued to wear his philosopher’s cloak as he preached his version of the Gospel. He saw Christianity as being the fruition of all true philosophies.) The doctrine of logos-christology is basically this: 
God Himself is too holy and pure to become involved in the created world of matter: so a secondary entity was brought into being and called the logos, who created all things in behalf of God the first principle; this logos was called the second principle. This “second god” (as Justin called Him) came to earth and was born of the virgin Mary and died for the sins of the world. 

The Alexandrian school was Platonic; from this theology of Mind, Word, and Spirit came a disciple of Plato’s by the name of Philo. Philo was a Jew of Alexandria who was a world-class philosopher in his own right. He live from 20 BC to A.D. 54— which means he was a contemporary to Jesus. Philo’s faith in God came from his Jewish faith, but his concept of God came from the philosophical speculations of Alexandria. The influence of Platonism and the Stoics on Philo cannot be overstated. In the Mind – Word – Spirit system of Plato, Philo conceived of the ‘Mind’ as the Hebrew God Yahweh; in Plato’s ‘Word’ Philo finds an identity with the Jewish Messiah; He (at times) called the Logos a separate person from God; the mediator between God and man (Encyclopedia Americana, volume 21, page 766 the 767; International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Vol. V, page 3021).
According to Emil Schurer (1844-1910 German theologian, best known for his study in Jewish customs in the time of Christ.),  Philo “agrees in the most essential points with the great teachers of the Greeks. Nay, Philo has so profoundly absorbed their doctrines and so peculiarly worked them up into a new whole, as himself to belong to the series of Greek philosophers. His system may, on the whole, be entitled an eclectic one: Platonic, Stoic, and Neo-Pythagorean doctrines being the most prominent. Just in proportion as now one now the other was embraced, has he been designated at one time Platonist, at another a Pythagorean. He might just as correctly be called a Stoic, for the influence of Stoicism was at least as strong upon him as that of Platonism or Neo-Pythagoreanism” (History of the Jewish People In the Time Of Christ, Schurer, Hendrickson Publishers, Vol III, page 364). 
Where Plato and the Stoics left off, Philo picked up. Plato took the crude, base gods of the heathen, stripped them of their trappings of superstitions, and dressed them up in much scientific rhetoric. Then enter Philo with his fantastic fantasy; he set forth his far-fetched (fetched from afar – Babylon) idea of Hebraizing Plato!?! Or, was he Hellenizing the Prophets? 



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Philo saw himself as having a dual mission. To make the Jew Greek and the Greek Jew. Through the means of his ‘allegorical interpretation’ of the Pentateuch he was able to see, there, all the things taught by Greek philosophy which he conceived as enlightened. Philo was convinced that the Greeks had acquired their wisdom from Moses, and saw himself as the bridge between his co-religionists and the philosophies. 
In Philo’s doctrine of God he begins at the point of fundamental dualism: that God and matter are not in communion (here is revealed his Gnostic tendencies: The Gnostics taught Spirit world good—material universe bad; this included the flesh of man.  God is totally good and perfect —the created universe, with man at the center, is imperfect and not good, in the sense of being incorruptible. “An acting, therefore, of God upon the world and in the world, is, according to Philo, only possible through the intervention of intermediate causes, of interposing powers who [that] establish an intercourse between God and the world” (Schurer). Philo’s intervening causes are Plato’s ideas, the Stoic’s active causes, the Jewish angels, and the Greek’s daemons. All these add up to Philo’s logos. If, according to this, they appear to be individual hypostases, or personal beings, Philo makes other assertions that forbids us to take them as such. It is expressly stated that they exist only in the Divine thought (De mundi opificio, i. 4, Mang. (Richter, 1): As the ideal city, whose plan the artist sketches, exists only in his mind, pon auton tropon oude ho ek tōn ideon chismos allon an echoi topon ē ton theion logon ton tanta diakosmēsanta.—Ibid. i. 5, Mang.: Ei détis ethelēseis gumnotépois chrēsasthai tois onomasin, ouden anheperon eipoi ton noēton einai kismon, ē theou logon ēdē kosmopoiountos.). The truth of the matter is this: Philo conceived of them both as independent hypostases and as immanent (1. remaining within; indwelling; inherent. 2. Philosophy. (of a mental act) taking place within the mind of the subject and having no effect outside of it. Compare transeunt. 3. Theology. (of the Deity) indwelling the universe, time, etc. Compare transcendent (def 3). )  determinations of the divine existence. According to Eduard Zeller, Philo’s system required the necessity of this contradiction: “He combines both definitions without observing their contradiction, nay, he is unable to observe it, because otherwise the intermediary rôle assigned to the divine powers would be forfeited, even that double nature, the reason of which they are on the one hand to be identical with God, that a participation in the Deity may by their means be possible to the finite, and on the other hand different from Him, ... notwithstanding this participation, they remain apart from all contact with the world” (Philosophie der Griechen, iii. 2, p. 365). 
As a help to arrive at an understanding of Philo’s doctrine of the Logos, we could do no better that Eduard Zeller ((1814-1908), German philosopher, was born at Kleinbottwar in Wurttemberg on the 22nd of January 1814, and educated at the university of Tubingen and under the influence of Hegel. In 1840 he was Privatdozent of theology at Tubingen, in 1847 professor of theology at Bern, in 1849 professor of theology at Marburg, migrating soon afterwards to the faculty of philosophy as the result of disputes with the Clerical party. He became professor of philosophy at Heidelberg in 1862, removed to Berlin in 1872, and retired in 1895. His great work is his Philosophie der Griechen (184452). This book he continued to amplify and improve in the light of further research; the last edition appeared in 1902. It has been translated into most of the European languages and became the recognized text-book of Greek philosophy. Encyclopedia Britannica, 1911).
“By the Logos, Philo understands the power of God or the active Divine intelligence in general; he designated it as the idea which comprises all other ideas, the power which comprises all itself, as the entirety of the supersensuous world or of the divine powers (Zeller iii. 2, p. 371).  Is the vicegerent and ambassador of God; neither created nor uncreated; the instrument by which God made the worlds. The logos is, thus, identified with the creative ‘word’ of God. Further, the logos, then, is the high priest of God to the world, and of the world to God. Making God known to the world, and the world known to God. “The definitions, which, according to the presuppositions of our thought, would require the personality of the logos, are crossed by Philo by such as make it impossible, and the peculiarity of his mode of conception consists in his not perceiving the contradiction involved in making the idea of the logos oscillate obscurely between personal and impersonal being. This peculiarity is equally misunderstood, when Philo’s logos is regarded absolutely as a person separate from God; and, when on the contrary, it is supposed that it only denotes God under a definite relation, according to the aspect of His activity. According to Philo’s opinion the logos is both, but for this very reason neither one nor the other exclusively; and he does not perceive, that it is impossible to combine these definitions into one notion” (Zeller iii. 2. p. 378) .
“But Philo cannot dispense with these definitions. With him the logos, like all the Divine powers, is only necessary because the supreme God Himself can enter into no direct contact with the finite; it must stand between the two and be the medium of their mutual relation; and how can it be this unless it were different from both, if it were only a certain Divine property? In this case we should have again that direct action of God upon finite things, which Philo declares is inadmissible. On the other hand the Logos must now, indeed, be, again, identical with each of the opposites which it was to reconcile, it must likewise be a property of God as a power operative in the world. Philo could not, without contradiction, succeed in combining the two” (Zeller iii. 2, p. 380) .  As remarkable as it may seem, however, this very thing is done in Modalism’s teaching of the Deity of Christ and His humanity—i.e. His dual nature. He is, indeed, identical with both elements He is reconciling, and yet a property of God operating in the world. 
The Greek word prototokos is translated in two passages of the King James Version by “first-begotten” (Heb 1:6 Rev 1:5), but in all other places in the KJV by “firstborn.” Prototokos is used metaphorically of Christ to express at once His relation to man and the universe, and His difference from them, as both He and they are related to God. The laws and customs of all nations show that to be “firstborn” means, not only priority in time, but, more importantly, to certain superiority in privilege and authority. For example, Israel is said to be Yahweh’s firstborn among the nations (Ex 4:22; cf Jer 31:9). The Messianic King is God’s firstborn (Septuagint—prototokos), “the highest of the kings of the earth” (Ps 89:27). Philo applies the word to the logos as the archetypal and governing idea of creation. 
Philo was, as it seems, the first to suggest that the Logos was the intermediate being between God and the world. The building blocks for his doctrine lay in both Jewish theology and Greek philosophy. Philo took from the Jewish theology the idea of the Spirit and Word of God; then from Greek philosophy he took chiefly the doctrine of the wisdom of God, utilizing for his purpose the Platonic doctrine of ideas and the world spirit, or soul. But it is the Stoic doctrine of the deity as the active reason of the world, which is the nearest to his. “We need only to strip off from this Stoic doctrine of the Logos, its pantheistic element by distinguishing the Logos from the Deity, and its materialistic element by distinguishing it from organized matter, to have the Philonean Logos complete” (Zeller iii. 2, 385) 
The logos concept of Plato required one more step to infect Christianity; this needed step was found in the early Christian Apologists, of whom Justin Martyr is a prime example. Justin (A.D. 100-165) was a Platonic philosopher who continued to wear the philosopher’s habit, as a Christian preacher. He was not representative of the Christianity of his time. According to his own testimony, he was not associated with any Christians other than those who sought him out as a philosopher.
Justin Martyr and Companions: Justin Martyr Is Questioned About Christian Meetings "Where do you assemble?" Rusticus proceeded. “Wherever we want to and are able to," Justin replied. "Do you imagine that we all meet in the same place? Not so! The God of the Christians is not limited to a location. He is invisible, and he fills heaven and earth. Therefore, he is worshipped and glorified everywhere by the faithful." Rusticus sighed. This was no angry prefect. He was not the least bit interested in Justin's speech. "Just tell me where you personally assemble. In other words, in what place do you, Justin, gather your followers?" "I live above a man named Martin, at the Timiotinian Bath." Justin paused, then, knowing what the next question would be, he continued, "During the entire time I've lived here, because I'm now living in Rome for the second time, I don't know about any other meetings. I've simply taught the truth to anyone willing to come to me.”

Justin Martyr (AD 100-165) and Philo
Space will not allow an exhaustive examination of the logos theology, however a few comments on the subject are necessary at this point. As stated, logos-christology sees the logos (Word) as a separate person (individual) from God the Father, and has come into Christianity from pagan thought, in point of fact: from Plato by way of Philo (first century Jewish Platonic philosopher) and the early Christian (so-called) Apologists (so-called) such as Justin Martyr. 
 Justin saw Christianity as the fruition of Platonism, and preached Christ (Messiah) according to the understanding of Philo. Justin called Jesus the “second god.” Through Justin Martyr, and others of his time and philosophy, logos-christology came to the fore in post- apostolic thought. 
Justin was profoundly influenced by Plato and Philo and their understanding of God. Christian historian G.P. Fisher tells us of the Godhead theology of Justin Martyr: “Yet we have presented prominently another conception, Platonic and Alexandrian Jewish, of God as a transcendent, ineffable One, too exalted to be the subject of finite predicates, the ordinary representations of Him being merely relative to our finite apprehension. It is only through an intermediate being that He is revealed. It is through the Logos or Word, that God is manifested.... Justin’s particular idea of the Logos is not consonant (in agreement or harmony…) with that of John (the Apostle), but corresponds to that of Plato and Philo. …” (Underlining mine.) “The Logos, impersonal in God from the beginning, becomes personal prior to the creation. Justin does not fully succeeded in taking Christ out of the category of creatures. He is begotten, or assumes a person, form of being, by an act of God’s will. He was generated from the Father ‘by His power and will.’ The Logos is another ‘in number,’ but not in ‘mind’ (or ‘will’). There is a personal distinction, but this is not eternal, and it springs from an act of God’s will, anterior to the creation of the world. To the Son, is assigned the second place in relation to the eternal God.... Justin speaks of the Spirit in conjunction with the Father, and Christ in such terms as to naturally imply that the Spirit is regarded as distinct from both, although subordinate to them.” 
The Apologists had found fertile soil in the heathen that had been converted to Christianity. Most religions of the ancient world had a trinity of some sort. This, along with the logos concept of Plato and Philo, made the message of the Apologists almost irresistible to the people that had a Greek, instead of a Hebrew, culture. 
Now that we have a little understanding of Philo’s contribution to our discussion, we will proceed to discover how he made an impact upon a segment of the Christian faith. Bible scholars John McClintock and James Strong explain: “Towards the end of the 1st century, and during the 2[n]d, many learned men came over both from Judaism and paganism to Christianity. These brought with them into the Christian schools of theology their Platonic ideas and phraseology” 
Out of this nest (Alexandria) of worldly philosophy grew a Christian church (of a sort). From this swamp of paganism arose the citadel to the “Logos Christology” of Plato and Philo. From this fortress marched forth the warriors of darkness proclaiming light—illuminating none—but blinding and binding all. The Trinitarians of all ages since can look to one Alexandrian bishop and proclaim, “O Captain, My captain;” this bishop is Clement of Alexandria. Not to be confused with the saint from Rome. 
When John wrote that all things were made by the Word, it was not the logos of Plato, nor of Plato’s student, Philo, that he had in mind. It is clear that John is writing to combat this false christology, for he opens his gospel with words that strike a fatal blow to this heresy. Plato, Philo, and one Cerinthus taught that the logos had a beginning as the first creation of God the first principle; but, John’s first salvo is “In the beginning was the Word (logos).” To John the logos did not have a beginning, the logos was eternal—had always been. Secondly, John was a Jew who knew and confessed the Shema. To him God was a radical one. When he wrote that the “logos was God,” one may be confident that he did not mean “a god” or “another god” or “also god.” To John there was but one God: namely, the Father. The logos was that God. 
The true disciple of Christ will permit the Bible to interpret itself. Whereas John, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, writes that all things were created by the Word, the Psalmist explains that it was by “the breath of his mouth.” The difference in the logos-christology of Justin (originating from Plato and Philo and showing up in the pluralism of the Arians and later Trinitarians), and the Hebraic-Christology of the bible, is this: In logos-christology the logos (Word) is the second person of the Godhead, while in Hebraic-Christology (which is held by Modalistic Monarchians) the logos (Word) is the speaking of God, i.e. “the breath of his mouth.” Truly, this is the narrative of Genesis where Yahweh created by saying; “Let there be!”
___________________________________
The above comments on Philo of Alexandria, Egypt are excerpts taken from the author’s book entitled “Godhead Theology.” “Godhead Theology” may be ordered from Amazon, or anywhere great books are sold.

Apostolically Speaking,


☩☩ Jerry L Hayes




Excerpted from the author's book entitled "Godhead Theology." Published by Seven Millennium Publications. Order your personal copy today: https://www.amazon.com/Godhead-Theology-Modalism-Original-Orthodoxy/dp/1516983521/ref=sr_1_fkmrnull_1?keywords=Godhead+theology%2C+Hayes&qid=1554054212&s=books&sr=1-1-fkmrnull


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☩☩ Jerry L Hayes
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Read other essays from the Bishop on the subject of the Godhead:

"The Dual Nature Of Jesus Of Nazareth"

"The Worlds, Made By The Son"

"Hebrews 13:8 vs 1 Corinthians 15:28"

"Glory With The Father"

"Philippians 2:6-8, Answering Trinitarian Objections"

"How Is God One?"

"Hebrew Monotheism"


"The Apostolic Creed"

"Jesus Is Father God"

"Homoousia And The Creed Of Nicaea"

"The Triquetra And Modalism"

"Modalism, Simultaneous Or Sequential?"

"Micah 5:2-4, An Exegesis"


"Elohim, the Plural form For God"

"Can the Deity of Jesus Be called The Son Of God?"

"Mathematical Equation For The Godhead"

"Hebrew Monotheism, Second Edition"

"Jesus, On God's Right Hand"

"The Name of the Deity" (The Tetragrammaton)

"Christology of the Apostolic Church Fathers"

"Christian Modalism challenged by the Greeks"

"The Apologists and the Logos Christology"

"Logos Christology"

"The Seven Spirits of God"

"Historical Numerical Superiority of the Monarchians"

"How Is God One?" Second Edition

"Creed of Nicæa (Creed of the 318) Affirmed"

"Another Comforter (Answering Objections to Modalism)"

"Echad vs Yachid (Answering Objections to Modalism)"

"The Godhead Teaching of Ignatius of Antioch"

"Hebrews 1:8, (Answering Objections to Modalism)"

"Godhead Theology of the Tabernacle of Moses"

"Proper Biblical Understanding of the Word 'Person'"

"Defense of Isaiah 9:6, Answering Objections to Modalism"

Thursday, October 18, 2018

The Economy of Man: Body, Soul and Spirit

  The Economy of Man: 
Body, Soul and Spirit

In Genesis1:26-27 Moses pulls back the curtain and permits the readers of holy Scripture to get a glimpse of the creation of mankind. He is made higher than the animals of earth and a little lower than the angels of heaven. Yet, in this mid-state man has been fashioned in the image of his Creator. Just what that means has been debated certainly from the time Moses wrote the words
While God is God and man is man, there is much, even most, about Him we cannot know until our glorification. Then we shall know Him even as we are known by Him (1 Cor. 13:12). In Yahweh’s mercy and grace, He has permitted us to be aware of a small portion of His nature through His self revelation in His Son and His Holy Spirit. We know, for instance, that God is a trinity of … somethings: Terullian said, “persons”; Augustine said: “three somewhats”; Anselm, “three I know not what”; Barth, “three ways of being” or “three modes”; Professor Stuart and Sabellius (before them all) said “distinctions.” It was John Calvin that articulated it clearly: “A threefold distinction in the Godhead.” 
Just as the signature of all great painters is found in the technique of their brush strokes, even so has the Creator God left His signature in all things He has made. Anyone with a cursory awareness of their surroundings must give witness to the three-ness found in all of God’s creation. Creation is made up of time, space, and matter (substance, mass).  The building blocks of all matter are atoms. Atoms have three principle parts: protons, neutrons, and electrons. All living things in God’s universe are made up of one or more cells. As atoms, cells also have three principle parts: membrane, a nucleus, and cytoplasm. In time there is present, past, and future; space possesses length, width, and height, as does matter. In that creation is made up of time, space,  and  matter, and further, in that time, space, and matter all have three parts, it is an undeniable conclusion that the Creator has left His brush strokes upon the canvas of His universe; because, we know from holy Scripture that the economy of the Godhead is divided into three parts. These three parts of God’s economy we know as the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Since this truth is undeniable, and since we know that man is made in the likeness of God, then we would expect the economy of man to also manifest three attributes. So then, just as God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit so is man: body, soul and spirit.

The Debate:
The elements of the human person have been much in debate. By this I mean there is great discussion among Christian thinkers as to whether or not the human being is bipartite, such as only body and soul, or three parts - such as body, soul and spirit. Those who would argue for a binary human would say that there is no difference between the soul and the spirit of man. But for others the distinction between soul and spirit, although difficult to ascertain, is clearly presented in holy Scripture.  
We can concur with Charles Hodge (and others) that man is a dualism of body and soul (sōma and psychê) as to his particular human-ness; but must contend, against Hodge, that there is an additional  element in man we term “spirit.” The “spirit” we would say, is the god-spark, or divine life force, the God consciousness in man. This god-spark does not belong to man, per se, but to God, and returns to God upon the death of the body (Ecc 12:7).  Human beings have a spirit, but we are not spirits. However, in Scripture, only believers are said to be spiritually alive (1 Cor. 2:11; Heb. 4:12; James 2:26), while unbelievers are spiritually dead (Eph. 2:1-5; Col. 2:13). In Paul’s writing, the spiritual is pivotal to the life of the believer (1 Cor. 2;14; 3:1; Eph. 1:3; 5:19; Col. 1:9; 3:16). The spirit is the element in humanity that gives us the ability to have an intimate relationship with God. The spirit, then,  refers to that immaterial part of humanity that “connects” with God, who Himself is spirit (John 4:23.
So, then, the bipartite man (sōma and psychê) infused by the “spirit” (pneuma), the “breath of God,” or god-spark, produced a three-ness in man. The Bible, then, presents the human person as having three elements: sōma (body), psychê (soul/mind) and pneuma (spirit, or breath of God, i.e. the god-spark). We call this the trichotomy of man. What we mean to say here is that the human being is a trifold creature made up of three separate and distinct elements: namely, body, soul and spirit. The following two passages from the Word of God should establish this point beyond further debate: 
1 Thessalonians 5:23 ... the very God of peace sanctify you wholly: and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.  


Hebrews 4:12 For the Word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, ...   
As is seen, the apostle Paul when writing to the Christians at Thessalonica made a sharp distinction between the three elements of man. Here, in this passage he speaks of the Christians being preserved in their spirits, souls and bodies. Furthermore, when the writer of Hebrews speaks on the subject of the discerning power of the Word of God, he has no problem in admitting (even if many cannot) that the Word of God can indeed find the dividing line between the soul and the spiriof man. From these two texts it should be clear to the disciple that man is indeed a three part being. So that we may conclude that the trichotomy of the human-being is proven by holy Scripture. 
By beginning with the premise that God exists in three modes without His substance being altered or changed (and this being demonstrated throughout creation), it becomes, then, a matter of course to move to the conclusion that man’s three elements of body, and soul and spirit are a mirrored image of his creator.  
Having established that man exists in three separate and distinct parts which we call body, soul and spirit, it remains for these parts to be identified and in some way defined. With this in mind the following definitions are offered:
  1. Body: The Greek word is "sōma," the physical element of a person. The body (sōma) is the material part of a human being that gathers information from its surrounding world through the five senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch and taste. Information enters these five "gates" and is transmited to the  "psychê" or mind, also termed "soul." 
  2. Soul: The Greek term is "psychê," the immaterial inner self, the mind; consisting of will, emotions, and intellect; i.e. the self consciousness. It is that element of the human being that was fashioned in the likeness and image of God in the act of creation and lives on after the body is dead. The soul assimilates information through the five soulish senses of  imagination, conscience,  memory, reason and affections. The soul who only acquires information through the five sense "gates" of the body (sōma) and only assimilates said information by the five soulish senses is said to be carnal, or fleshly.  
  3. Spirit: The Greek word is "pneuma," (many times translated as "breath" or "wind") the god-spark, or God nature that resides in all men; i.e. the God consciousness. This element of man governed his entire being pre-fall. The five sense faculties of the spirit are faith, hope, reverence, prayer and worship. The writer of Proverbs calls the spirit of man the "candle of the LORD" (KJV); Job identifies the spirit of man as the "breath of the Almighty" that gives man understanding. Man lost this divine light and understanding in the fall. This "breath of the Almighty" lies dormant in un-regenerated man, but is awakened to new life in one who has received the re-generating of the Holy Spirit. The person who is governed by the awakened spirit is said to be spiritual.

Sorting out the confusion:
There is some confusion over the difference between the terms “soul” and “spirit” because they are sometimes used interchangeably by the sacred writers. In the OT the Hebrew is nephesh (soul), and ruach (spirit). In the NT the Greek is psychê (soul, or mind), and pneuma (spirit). The confusion exists because “soul” is used by sacred writers to denote the inner man (consisting of the will, emotions, and intellect), and also to reference the complete human, material and immaterial combined. In like manner the term translated as “spirit” (that primarily means “life force,” is ruach in the Hebrew, found some 378 times in the OT, and literally meaning “breath,” “wind,” etc.; the corresponding Greek term is pneuma, occurring 379 times in the NT) is sometimes used interchangeably with the term translated as “soul” by sacred writers. “Spirit” can be used, by way of the figure of speech known as the synecdoche (part for the whole, or vice versa) for a person himself. John wrote: "Beloved, believe not every spirit, but prove the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets are gone out into the world” (1 John 4:1; emphasis added). Note that the term “spirits” in this text has reference to the inner man of the “false prophets.”  In this manner “spirit” may reference the element of man (2 Cor. 4:16) that is fashioned in God’s image (Gen. 1:26-27), and thus be a synonym of “soul.” This is also true of Zechariah 12:1 “… saith the LORD, …  formeth the spirit of man within him.” This has lead some to suppose that there is no difference between the soul and spirit of man.  This is a mistake in our opinion, because of the weight of 1 Thessalonians 5:3 and Hebrews 4:12 (introduced above) that demonstrate a marked difference between the soul and the spirit.


“Soul” may signify merely an individual person: e.g. the prophet Ezekiel declared that the “soul” (i.e., the person) who sins will surely die (Ezek. 18:20), or, as Peter would write centuries later, “eight souls” were saved by water in the days of Noah (1 Pet. 3:20). See also Exodus 1:5. Conversely, “soul” can have to do with that aspect of man that is characterized by the intellectual and emotional dimension (Gen. 27:25; Job 30:16). It is the eternal component of man that is fashioned in the very image of God (Gen. 1:26), and that can exist apart from the physical body (Mt. 10:28; Rev. 6:9). The term “soul,” as with the word “spirit” may take on different senses, depending upon its contextual setting. Since “soul” and “spirit” are used interchangeably by scared writers, one must consider the context of the Hebrew and Greek words to determine the proper understanding.

Apostolically Speaking
☩☩ JLH


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