No, that "life foce" and "biologically human" idea is earthly materialism philosophy, and is not Biblical regarding the existence of God as "a Spirit".
That thinking is one of the problems some have with not properly understanding the Ecclesiastes 12:5-7 Scripture about our "spirit" that goes back to God when our flesh dies. The materialist thinks that "spirit" simply means like you said, a "life force" when it actually means one's spirit with soul attached.
There is no passage of scripture that even suggests what you just said.
Eccl 12 is a figurative account of the aging process which ultimately ends in death and.....
"Then the dust returns to the earth, just as it was, and the spirit returns to the true God who gave it."
This is also bringing in Genesis and the creation of man from the dust, as Adam was told he would return there when he died. The fact is, that Adam was animated by God's "breath of life" which indicates that this is the "spirit" that returns to God....the ability to breathe again rests entirely with God. The "soul" is destroyed in death because a body with breath is a soul according to the Bible's definition. The soul is never described as a disembodied spirit. A soul is a living, breathing creature....both man and animals are called "souls" in the Bible. When a human soul is resurrected, the spirit or breath of life is restored. The only one who can restore the breath of life to a resurrected soul, is God.
For in Matthew 10:28, Jesus said to not fear those who can kill our flesh but not our soul, which means our soul continues on after flesh death.
Quote the whole verse....
"And do not become fearful of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul; rather, fear him who can destroy both soul and body in Ge·henʹna."
Souls are "DESTROYED" in "Gehenna" which in the Bible is the symbol of eternal death, not "hell" as many suggest.
Also, because Jesus at His resurrection preached the Gospel to the "spirits in prison" reveals their 'spirit' means a lot more than simple animating life force that is in all living things.
Those "spirits in prison" were the demons who transgressed in Noah's day (2 Peter 2:4-6) by materializing human form and cohabiting with women, they produced a hybrid race of freakish humans known as the Nephilim. They were gigantic in size and violent and licentious in nature, which brought the world of that time into a very hazardous condition. The level of wickedness produced by this demonic influence, left God no choice but to wash the earth clean of their presence and influence. The demons were never said to materialize again, though faithful angels did in bringing God's messages to his human servants on earth.
The word "spirit" has more than one meaning. Look it up.
Davy said:
Bottom line is, that your statement shows you still do not properly understand the difference between the two dimensions of existence written of in God's Word, this earthly one we live in regarding the material universe, and the heavenly one which involves spirit.
The Bible quite clearly portrays the two realms without ambiguity...the material realm was created for material creatures, whilst the spirit real was created for spirit beings....angels are spirits and so is God. They occupy a realm that is unseen by human means.
Humans do not possess a soul, but are said to BE a soul which is animated by breathing. The "breath of life" is the "spirit" that keeps us alive. When the spirit departs from the body with our last breath, only God can bring that soul back to life. There is no conscious part of man that leaves the body at death. (Eccl 9:5, 10) That is the first lie told by the devil...
"you surely will not die"....and people are still falling for it. Death is the opposite of life, not a continuation of it in another form, in some other place.
Thus I would also warn brethren against men's doctrines of 'humanism' which tries to assign to Lord Jesus Christ as a flesh being only. And in case one doesn't know, believing Jesus was flesh only is gross error, the Matthew 1:23 Scripture that quotes from Isaiah that Jesus' name "Emmanuel" is said there to mean "God with us". That means GOD come in the flesh.
Again Jesus clearly states that he "came down from heaven to do the will of his Father". (John 6:38) So God cannot redeem mankind because God cannot die. Mere humans cannot kill God. So if Christ was God, he didn't really die the same death as Adam, which means that the ransom demanded was not paid, and mankind are still doomed to remain in their sins.
Jesus was a spirit in heaven "with" his Father and he "became flesh" to redeem mankind. He was "sent" on that mission by "the only true God". (John 17:3)
As for the name "Immanuel".....was Jesus called Immanuel? And does that name mean that God was physically present with mankind on earth?
Think about this.....no sinful human can come before our perfect God, which is why he appointed a Mediator...one who acts as a "go between" when two parties are at odds.....the mediator is a facilitator of communication between the two parties. We cannot communicate with God unless it is through the only means God provided for our prayers to be heard by God.
1 Tim 2:5-6..
"There is one God, and one mediator between God and men, a man Christ Jesus, who gave himself a ransom for all....”
How is God his own mediator?
A
"ransom" is the set price demanded for the release of captives. Jesus had to lay down a life that was sinless to pay for the sinless life that Adam took from his children.
So could GOD's Spirit ever die? No, of course not. But atheists and servants of the devil love to push that with their false Humanist philosophies. So don't buy into their humanist doctrines brethren in Christ. Stay alert.
Indeed, stay alert.....the lies are old and have been around so long that no one questions them. The devil has humans worshipping the wrong god.
God's spirit was on Jesus during the entire course of his ministry, directing his every step. He prayed to his Father in heaven when he was on earth....If we have "ONE God" and "one Mediator between God and man.....where did three come from......not scripture, I assure you.