- Jan 14, 2015
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The majority of Christians believe it's possible for people to return to a place they've never departed. As irrational as it sounds, this belief is the foundation for a distortion of the truth of what happens when we die. A brief look at three texts which will explain the “before, during, and after” of man and will reveal why the “Blessed Hope” is so aptly name.
#1 BEFORE
“Wherefore I praised the dead which are already dead more than the living which are yet alive. Yea, better is he than both they, which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil work that is done under the sun.” (Ecclesiastes 4:2-3 KJV)
Here we see that before man begins, he simply doesn't exist, plain and simple. Please discard any ideas about “pre-existing souls that God injects into the bodies of His creatures to make them alive” to the trash bin of error. It simply isn't so.
#2 DURING
“The Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground (Body), and breathed into his nostrils the Breath of Life (Spirit), and man became a Living Soul. (Genesis 2:7 KJV)
Body + Spirit = Living Soul.
Here we see that man was not “given” a Soul, but that he IS a Soul. A Soul begins to exist at the moment the two components of it, which are the Spirit and the Body, are joined together. The human mind – the “I”, “Me”, “Ego”, “Self”, etc. – with its thoughts, emotions, memory, knowledge, wisdom, personality, intuition, and all other aspects of it, is properly identified with the Soul – not the Spirit – because the mind obviously did not exist apart from or prior to the existence of the Soul.
“Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the Spirit shall return unto God Who gave it.” (Ecclesiastes 12:7 KJV)
Body – Spirit = Dead Soul.
According to James 2:26 KJV, the body without the Spirit is dead. The Spirit returns to God, the Body returns to the earth. Since every aspect of our existence originated and existed solely down here and since at no time during our existence have we ever departed from the heavenly courts up there, how is it that it is claimed that "we" return to God at death? How can "we" return to a place from which we have never departed? Can "we" return to the Sun? Or to the Moon? (well, maybe if you're John Glenn or one of those guys) Then how can "we" return with the Spirit to God?
Again, it is through falsely identifying the human mind with the Spirit, which does indeed return to God at death, instead of properly identifying it with the Soul, which is utterly dependent on the union of the Body and the Spirit for it to exist. And since this union is broken at death, the undesired, unpopular, though unavoidable conclusion is that the Soul ceases to exist at death – aka Annihilation. Suddenly, all those verses in the Bible which point to death as a state of insensibility where there is not the existence of love, hatred, knowledge, wisdom, emotion, reasoning, and even praise and worship makes sense.
This is why Paul called the coming of Jesus and the resurrection He brings with Him the “Blessed Hope” and why he directs us to comfort the bereaving saints with words of that Blessed Hope, and not with words that our beloved dead are in the presence of God.
#1 BEFORE
“Wherefore I praised the dead which are already dead more than the living which are yet alive. Yea, better is he than both they, which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil work that is done under the sun.” (Ecclesiastes 4:2-3 KJV)
Here we see that before man begins, he simply doesn't exist, plain and simple. Please discard any ideas about “pre-existing souls that God injects into the bodies of His creatures to make them alive” to the trash bin of error. It simply isn't so.
#2 DURING
“The Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground (Body), and breathed into his nostrils the Breath of Life (Spirit), and man became a Living Soul. (Genesis 2:7 KJV)
Body + Spirit = Living Soul.
Here we see that man was not “given” a Soul, but that he IS a Soul. A Soul begins to exist at the moment the two components of it, which are the Spirit and the Body, are joined together. The human mind – the “I”, “Me”, “Ego”, “Self”, etc. – with its thoughts, emotions, memory, knowledge, wisdom, personality, intuition, and all other aspects of it, is properly identified with the Soul – not the Spirit – because the mind obviously did not exist apart from or prior to the existence of the Soul.
It is through FALSELY identifying these aspects of the human mind with the “Spirit” instead of the “Soul” that the distortion of the truth of the afterlife is accomplished, as revealed in # 3.
#3 AFTER“Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the Spirit shall return unto God Who gave it.” (Ecclesiastes 12:7 KJV)
Body – Spirit = Dead Soul.
According to James 2:26 KJV, the body without the Spirit is dead. The Spirit returns to God, the Body returns to the earth. Since every aspect of our existence originated and existed solely down here and since at no time during our existence have we ever departed from the heavenly courts up there, how is it that it is claimed that "we" return to God at death? How can "we" return to a place from which we have never departed? Can "we" return to the Sun? Or to the Moon? (well, maybe if you're John Glenn or one of those guys) Then how can "we" return with the Spirit to God?
Again, it is through falsely identifying the human mind with the Spirit, which does indeed return to God at death, instead of properly identifying it with the Soul, which is utterly dependent on the union of the Body and the Spirit for it to exist. And since this union is broken at death, the undesired, unpopular, though unavoidable conclusion is that the Soul ceases to exist at death – aka Annihilation. Suddenly, all those verses in the Bible which point to death as a state of insensibility where there is not the existence of love, hatred, knowledge, wisdom, emotion, reasoning, and even praise and worship makes sense.
This is why Paul called the coming of Jesus and the resurrection He brings with Him the “Blessed Hope” and why he directs us to comfort the bereaving saints with words of that Blessed Hope, and not with words that our beloved dead are in the presence of God.