WHAT IS THE
SOUL?
’And the
LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils
the breath of life; andman became a living soul.’— Ge 2:7
’The soul
that sinneth, it shall die.’— Eze 18:4
’The first
man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit.’— 1Co 15:45
’If a man
die, shall he live again?’—
Job 14:14
THE MAN WHO
does not care about the existence of God or the validity of the Bible may not
care about the question ‘What is the soul?’ But how could those who can see the
abundant testimony to God in his creation and their own experience not care
about the answer to a question that touches the most elemental aspect of their
lives? Nearly everyone acknowledges that death is a reality, and that the
physical body which carries us through this life also perishes. But the
Scriptures speak of souls; and man has taught that the soul is something which
lives on—indestructibly—the product of a God who cannot destroy that which he
has created.
Our powers of
reason tell us differently. Everywhere in the realm of human endeavor the
objects which man forms are subject to his own power to destroy them. The
creature, whether inanimate, animate, or robotic, is always subject to the will
of its creator.
Notice,
however, that nowhere do the Scriptures say that the ‘soul’ is immortal. It
makes no difference how many people may teach this idea. A person searching the
Scriptures—whether in translation or the original text—cannot find such a
statement. Prove it for yourself. Pick up any one of the concordances to the
Bible available at any library or religious book store. Try to find that
expression ‘immortal soul.’ You will quickly discover that no such expression
is found in the Scriptures. But quite to the reverse of your expectations, you
will easily find that the Scriptures say that ’God is able to destroy both
soul and body’; and again, ’the soul that sinneth, it shall die.’.{
Mt 10:28 Eze 18:4}
The dictionary
defines ‘immortal’ as meaning ‘not mortal; not liable or subject to death.’ A
creature which can be destroyed, therefore, is not immortal—’death-proof,’ as
the meaning of the word ‘immortality’ demands. This simple fact is proof that
neither ‘bodies’ nor ‘souls’ are immortal. Theologians may argue long and hard
to prove their points, but they cannot countermand these two simple statements.
But what is
the Soul?
Men have
struggled over this question for centuries because they have tried to prove,
using the Scriptures, an unscriptural idea. As a result their definitions of
what the ‘soul’ is have been undefined, vague, and elusive. It has been taught
that the soul is ‘something’ in us, but no one seems able to explain either
where or what it is. Theologians like to claim that this vague unknown entity
is the real intelligent being and that the body which ‘houses’ it is just some
sort of metaphysical tool. As science probes into the processes by which our
bodies operate, man is finding that we are little more than a rather extensive
chemical and electrical factory and that the workings of the physical affect
the function of the mental and emotional and vice versa. This seems directly at
odds with the way a Methodist Bishop of some years ago described the soul: ‘It
is without interior or exterior without body, shape or parts, and you could put
a million of them into a nutshell.’ This well meant attempt to describe the
soul seems to us rather a good definition of nothing! But our question remains
unanswered. Merely scoffing at false answers is no help because there remain
aspects of humanity which do defy description.
Destroyer of
Body and Soul
The body is not
the soul, as some affirm. This is proven by our Lord’s statement that ’God
is able to destroy both soul and body.’ And now, in view of the foregoing,
if our minds are freed from prejudice, we ought to be able to learn more about
this subject by turning to the inspired record of man’s creation. We read from
Genesis:
‘And the Lord
God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed [Hebrew: ‘blew’] into
his nostrils the breath [Hebrew: ‘wind’] of life [Hebrew: ‘lives’—plural, that
is such as was common to all living animals]; and man became a living soul [a
sentient being]’.{ Ge 2:7}
Lower
Animals Also Are Souls
We see why it
is that the Scriptures speak of ‘souls’ in connection with the animal creation.
They, as well as man, are sentient beings or creatures of intelligence, only of
a lower order. They can see, hear, feel, taste, and smell just as does man—up
to the standard of his own organism. This difference is not because man has a
different kind of life from that of the lower animals; all have similar vital
forces flowing from the same fountain or source, the same Creator. All
creatures sustain life by the same
process of consumption, digestion, elimination. They all produce blood, tissue,
bones, and muscle, according to their own nature. All propagate themselves
similarly, bestowing the life which originated with God upon the next
generation. As species they differ in shape and mental capacity, but they are
all alive.
Man’s Finer
Organism
Where is the
difference between man and beast? We have seen that it is not in the life which
animates both. Nor is it in the lack of soul-power which we also have seen they
both possess. Can it be that the sole difference is in their bodies? Yes; the
natural differences are physical. Notwithstanding the fact that God has planned
in advance for the future of man as expressed in his promises—while no such
plans or promises have been expressed with regard to the animals. But then, we
have no indication from the scientific study of animals that they have any
appreciation of metaphysics. All other things being equal, the size and weight
of the brain indicates capacity and intelligence. In this respect man has been
more highly endowed than the ‘lesser’ animals.
In this
discussion one can never discount the effect upon man of the fall into sin.
Man’s condition today is far from what it was in Eden, at which time God
pronounced his creation ‘very good.’ Sin has lead to the cultivation of many of
man’s lower capacities and the disuse of many of his higher intellectual
abilities. These capacities, however are still present, awaiting development.
But that is not the case among animals. However hard one attempts to train the
animal in the emotional and moral skills so easily learned by man, the animal
seems inherently unable to grasp the same lesson. Simply, the Creator has endowed
the human creature with a finer organism. We all breathe the same air, are made
of similar flesh and bones, possess some form of intelligence, but man
possesses a higher intelligence and is treated by his Creator as being on an
entirely different plane. Actually, it is the proportion to which sin degrades
a man and results in the emphasis of his meaner traits that men are said to be
‘brutish’ or ‘animalistic’—words meaning that such men more nearly resemble
animals than possessing the finer sensibilities of the human race.
To this the
Scriptures agree. We read, ’To you it shall be meat, and to every beast of
the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to everything that creepeth upon
the earth, wherein there is life [Hebrew: ‘nephesh chaiyah’—a living soul]’.{
Ge 1:30} Again, ’Let the waters bring forth the moving creature that hath
life [Hebrew: a living soul]’ (1:20—see marginal readings).
The
Scripture Teaching
The same
lesson—that the life principle in all creatures that take their breath through
nostrils is the same—is taught in the account of the Great Flood. { Ge 6:17
7:15,22} This fully agrees with King Solomon’s statement that man and beast all
have ‘one breath’ or ’ruach,’ the Hebrew word for “spirit’ or ‘kind’ of
life.’ He says further that both animal and man die similarly { Ec 3:19} .
Going a step further Solomon controverts early heathen theories about the
afterlife: ’Who knoweth the spirit of man that [it] goeth upward, and
the spirit of the beast that [it] goeth downward to the earth’?{ Ec
3:21} Even early men had begun to speculate on some after-life to which men
went at death. This wise man challenges any proof or knowledge to that effect.
This challenge to others to produce some proof of their theories or else to
admit that they have no certain knowledge on such subjects follows Solomon’s
statement of the truth on this subject in that third chapter of Ecclesiastes.
Who to
Believe—God or Satan?
There is a
direct conflict between modern human teachings and the inspired Word of God. The
Scriptures claim that the dead do not know anything. Theologians say that they
know everything. The Bible claims that the dead are really dead and have
really suffered the penalty for sin pronounced upon our race—’Dying thou
shalt die’( Ge 2:17, literal Hebrew). The opposers take up Satan’s deluding
statement to Mother Eve, saying ’You shall not surely die.’ They attempt
to prove that the dead are not dead; that God’s penalty against sin did not go into effect and that death, far from being the
sentence or curse upon our race, is a blessing, a step in a general process of
evolution. The two theories are as far apart as the poles, and the two teachers
of these theories are God, on the one hand, and Satan—’a liar from the
beginning’—on the other. Which shall we believe?
No wonder many
of Christianity’s ‘great’ theologians are leaving the doctrine of the
Atonement. Having been blinded by the Adversary, they are taking many of their
followers along with them. But the Bible declares that ’as by a man
[Adam] came death, so also by a man [the man Christ Jesus] comes the
resurrection of the dead; that as all in Adam die, even so all in Christ shall
be made alive’.{ 1Co 15:21,22}
Jesus Died,
the Just for the Unjust
While assuring
us of the justice of the Divine sentence of death, the Scriptures declare that
our Creator is a God of mercy and of pity. When there was no eye to pity and no
arm to deliver us, his Arm (the Lord Jesus) brought salvation to us. What did
he do for us? He laid down his life for us; ’he died for our sins’;‘ he died
the just for the unjust’;‘ he poured out his soul unto death’; he
’made his soul an offering for [our] sin,’ and ‘by his stripes we are
healed’.{ Ro 5:8 _ 1Pe 3:18 Isa
53:4,6,10}
Nothing is more
evident than that our Lord Jesus did not suffer an eternity of torment as the
price of our redemption. Hence, if the matter needed proof, we have it here.
Eternal torment was not the penalty for our sins. On the contrary, the fact
that our Lord Jesus died for our sins and that the heavenly Father
accepted that sacrifice of his life on our behalf proves that it was our lives that were forfeited by sin. The fullness of the divine penalty
against the human race was the deprivation of life. The
race, under sentence of death, has entered the prison house of death—the grave,
sheol, hades. So it was that our Redeemer when here linquished his life
for us, went also to sheol, hades, the grave. He took our place and suffered the penalty for our
sins.
But just as
Jesus’ death ransoms man from the sentence of death, he is able to promise that
’the hour cometh in which all that are in the graves shall hear the voice of
the Son of Man, and come forth’;‘ and they that hear [obey his voice then],
shall live.’ Thus, simply, he encourages us to trust and hope in the
resurrection of all our dear friends who go down into the prison of death. We
may extend our hopes beyond those who demonstrate the sanctifying power of the
spirit of God in their lives. These, as a rule, are but a few of earth’s
billions. But Jesus’ promise extends far beyond these to all humans. As the
apostle said, ’I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning
them which are asleep [our sleeping friends], that ye sorrow not even
as others, who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died [a ransom
for all] and rose again [that he might be Lord and life giver to all] even
so [let us truly believe that] those also which sleep in Jesus [whom
he purchases with his precious blood] will God bring by him [from the
prison house of death]’ (margin). The first resurrection is the resurrection of
the blessed and holy, of the sanctified in Christ Jesus, his body.
The work of
Christ and the church in bringing man back from the condition of death will
have many aspects. The first work, however, will be in awakening him to a
physical condition similar to that in which he died. Society will then be much
improved. Knowledge will have replaced ignorance. The reign of righteousness
and a law of love will have supplanted the selfishness and greed of this world.
Satan will then be bound, preventing him from deceiving the nations during
Christ’s kingdom. Under the favorable conditions of that mediatorial kingdom,
mankind will be required to progress in the knowledge of the Lord. They will
have to bring their ideas and lives into agreement with his law of love.
Whoever will refuse will be cut off from life—in the Second Death, { Ac
3:22,23} after what the prophet describes metaphorically as one hundred years
of trial. { Isa 65:20} Notice, however, that the prophet says that such a one,
under the changed conditions then in existence, will be considered a relative
‘lad.’
Judgment will
be upon all in that day, not just upon those who fail to make progress and are
cut off from further opportunity. Those who seek righteousness and apply it in
their lives—living in harmony with the laws of the kingdom—will be blessed
under that judgment. Year after year they will grow mentally, physically, and
morally stronger—toward the full standard of perfect manhood—the image and
likeness of the Creator as first presented in father Adam.
The Dead Are
Sleeping
God has
gradually revealed his plans for mankind through the inspired writings of the
prophets. They all address this unconscious interim between death and the
resurrection morning. And with one voice they describe a state in which the
sentient being is suspended, as if ‘asleep.’ The illustration is an excellent
one. Our Lord used it in speaking of Lazarus. He said that ’our friend
Lazarus sleepeth, I go that I may wake him out of sleep.’ Afterwards,
because the disciples were slow to understand his meaning, he explained more
clearly, ’Lazarus is dead’.{ Joh 11:11}
If men were
correct in their theories about consciousness in the death condition, it would
have been remarkable that Lazarus gave no account of his experiences during
those four days. As it is, however, no one will claim that he was in a ‘hell’
of torment, for our Lord calls him his ‘friend’; and if he had been in heaven,
would our Lord have called him back from such a superior state. What sort of
friendship would that have been? But our Lord expressed it simply, Lazarus was
sleeping. When Lazarus was revived our Lord awakened him to life, to
consciousness, to his sentient [feeling] state. This was evidently a favor that
Lazarus and his friends greatly appreciated.
The thought
pervades the Scriptures that we are now in the night of dying and sleeping. The
kingdom of Christ, the figure of speech used by the Scriptures, is a period of
‘awakening’ in the morning, of resurrection. ’Weeping may endure for a
night, but joy cometh in the morning’.{ Ps 30:5}
The apostles
also used this hopeful and peaceful figure of speech. Luke says Stephen the
martyr ‘fell asleep’.{ Ac 7:60} Paul, in his Antioch speech, used the same
expression when speaking of David. { Ac 13:36} Peter says much the same
concerning the ‘fathers’ that fell asleep. { 2Pe 3:4}
An
Illustration—a Candle
At the outset
we began by commenting on how poorly the soul has been explained by learned
scholars. Let’s use a simple illustration—a homily, just as Jesus might have
used—to describe the human and animal body, the soul and spirit. A common
unlighted wax candle can be used to illustrate the inanimate human body or
corpse. Touching a burning match to the wick the candle ignites. This is, in a
picture, much like the spark of life originally imparted by the Creator. The
flame or light given off by the candle corresponds to the sentient being—the
intelligence, or soul. The oxygenized atmosphere which unites with the carbon
of the candle in supporting the flame corresponds to the ‘breath of life’ or
‘spirit of life’ which unites with the physical organism in producing ‘soul’ or
‘intelligent existence.’ Should an accident occur which would destroy the
candle, the flame would cease. So also the human ‘life’ or ‘soul’ ceases when
the human body is destroyed—whether by consumption or accident.
Similarly, if the
supply of oxygen is cut off, the flame ceases just as if the candle were
destroyed. Whether an extinguisher is used or a snuffer, the results are the
same: the light is extinguished. If the breath of life is cut off from man, the
reaction is the same: the soul, life, existence ceases. So it is that the body
continues to exist, even though a person may die of drowning or asphyxiation.
The lighted candle might be used to ignite other candles, but once extinguished
the candle can neither re-ignite itself or be used to ignite other candles.
Again, this is very similar to the human life. Under God’s provision the human
can propagate its species so long as it lives. But as soon as the spark of life
is cut off the soul or being has ceased and all power to think, to feel, or to
propagate has ended. The Scriptures use this illustration in connection with
Jacob’s household: ’All the souls that came out of the loins of Jacob were
seventy souls’.{ Ex 1:5} Jacob received his life as well as his physical
body. The product of these two were his ‘soul’ or ‘intelligent being.’ It had
been passed on from Isaac, Abraham, and thence from Adam to whom alone God had
directly imparted life. Jacob passed the life, organism, and soul to his
posterity. So it has been with all mankind ever since.
Thou Sowest
Not That Body Which Shall Be
A candle may be
re-lit by anyone possessing a flame. But the human body wastes away, returns to
the dust from which it was taken, when it is deprived of the breath of life.
The human body cannot be rekindled except by divine power—a miracle. The
promise of resurrection, therefore, is a promise of rekindling the soul,
existence, the life. Since there can be no life without a suitable body, the
promise of a resurrection also implies new bodies: the former ones having
returned to the elements from which they were made. Furthermore, when we
consider that the resurrection of the dead will be much like awakening from
sleep, then the moment of reawakening will be—to the person being awakened—like
the very next moment after his death. ’For there is neither wisdom,
knowledge nor device in the grave’.{ Ec 9:10} The body in which a person
awakes will be practically the same as that in which he died (although not
composed of the same atoms of matter). In the hands of the Creator one atom of
dust is as good as another in this great work. Thus the apostle says, ’Thou
sowest not that body which shall be.’ The bodies of the world, as they
shall be when awakened, will be really new bodies, in
the sense that they will be different atoms of matter; but they will be old bodies, in the sense that they will be duplicates of those that
died and went to dust. We cannot wonder that the worldly mind, which does not
know God or his power, quails at the thought of a resurrection. It will be a
stupendous work, more wonderful by far than man’s original creation. It will be
witnessed by men and by angels as the grandest exhibition ever given of Divine
omnipotence.
Omnipotence
and Wisdom Displayed
The God that
formed man in his own image in the beginning has, as well, the power to form
him again: from the dust of the ground and rekindling the breath of life. More
than in the first instance, however, in the resurrection his omnipotence and
infinite wisdom will restore to each single human being his own brain—like that
which a man now possesses—with it’s own thoughts and emotions recorded. This is
not so unbelievable as it might at first seem. Men do the same today in
microcosm: the phonograph records, compact disks and computers of today record
billions and billions of individual bits of information. If man can conceive
the technology to record things which he counts
valuable enough to preserve, is God less than man? Ah, but only the Infinite
One could conceive of such a plan to reconstruct every thought ever had by
billions of humans. Should we be surprised at such all-excelling wisdom? The
Scriptures say that God knows the number of hairs upon each individual head. A
sparrow cannot fall to the earth without his taking notice. God alone can carry
out such an amazing plan. As we learn we gain confidence in his Word; through
faith we realize that such a stupendous miracle as he has promised will take place.