Christian mortalism

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Christian mortalism incorporates the belief that the human soul is not naturally immortal;[1][2][3][4][5] and may include the belief that the soul is uncomprehending during the time between bodily death and Judgment Day resurrection,[6][7][8][9][10] known as the intermediate state. "Soul sleep" is an often pejorative term[11][lower-alpha 1][14] so the more neutral term "materialism" was also used in the nineteenth century,[15] and "Christian mortalism" since the 1970s.[16][17][18][19][20][21][22]

Historically the term psychopannychism was also used, despite problems with the etymology[lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3] and application.[24] The term thnetopsychism has also been used, for example Gordon Campbell (2008) identified Milton as believing in the latter[25] though in fact both De doctrina Christiana[lower-alpha 4] and Paradise Lost[lower-alpha 5] refers to death as "sleep" and the dead as being "raised from sleep". The difference is difficult to identify in practice.[26]

Related and contrasting viewpoints of life after death include universal reconciliation, where all souls are immortal (or are mortal, but universally given continuance) and eventually are reconciled, and special salvation, where a positive afterlife is exclusively held by just some souls. Christian mortalism has been taught by several theologians and church organizations throughout history while also facing opposition from aspects of Christian organized religion. The Roman Catholic Church condemned such thinking in the Fifth Council of the Lateran as "erroneous assertions". Supporters include the sixteenth-century religious figure Martin Luther and the eighteenth-century religious figure Henry Layton among many others.

Etymology and terminology

Since the phrases "soul sleep" or "soul death" does not occur either in the Bible or in early Anabaptist materials, an explanation is required for the origin of the term. Additionally several other terms have been introduced relating to the view. Modern theologians have used the term "Christian mortalism" and related wordings from the 21st century onwards.

Soul sleep

The phrase soul sleep appears to have been popularised by John Calvin in the subtitle to his Latin tract Psychopannychia (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.). The title of the booklet comes from Greek psyche (soul, mind) with pan-nychis (παν-νυχίς, all-night vigil, all-night banquet),[27][28] so Psychopannychia, originally, represents Calvin's view; that the soul was conscious, active.

The title and subtitle of the 1542 Strasbourg 1st edition read: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..[11]

The title and subtitle of the 1545 2nd Latin edition read: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..

The 1558 French edition was a translation of that of the 1545 2nd edition: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Other terms

  • "Psychopannychism" - In the Latin it is clearer that Psychopannychia is actually the refutation of, the opposite of, the idea of soul sleep. The version Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. may have caused the confusion that by -pannychis Calvin meant sleep (in Greek -hypnos not -pannychis, vigil).[29] The subtitle Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. was taken up as Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..[30] The tract first appeared in English as Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..

Luther's use of similar language (but this time defending the view) appears in print only a few years after Calvin:

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…so the soul after death enters its chamber and peace, and sleeping does not feel its sleep

— Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..[31]
  • "Hypnopsychism" - from hypno- + psyche ("sleep of soul") was a more correct coinage from Greek than that of Calvin's editor. Eustratios of Constantinople (after 582) denounced mortalism as a heresy using this term.
  • "Thnetopsychism" - A possibly contrasting phrase is thnetopsychism (from Greek thnetos [mortal] + psyche [soul, mind]).[32] The term has its origin in the descriptions of Eusebius of Caesarea and John of Damascus of mortalist views among Arab Christians,[33][34] In the 1600s also this phrase was applied also to the views of Tyndale, Luther and other mortalists, from awareness that Calvin's term Psychopannychia originally described his own belief, not the belief he was calling error.[35] The term is also used of the view of the Anabaptists. Their view is that the soul dies, with the body to be recalled to life at the resurrection of the dead, or that the soul is not separate from the body and so there is no "spiritual" self to survive bodily death. In both cases, the deceased does not begin to enjoy a reward or suffer a punishment until Judgment Day.

Mortalist arguments

Historically, Christian mortalists have advanced theological, lexical, and scientific arguments in support of their position.[36]

Theological arguments

Some early eastern Christians argued for mortalism on the basis of the identity of blood with life in Leviticus 17:11.[37] Theological arguments which contended that the continued existence of the soul was not taught in the Bible were made by mortalists such as Francis Blackburne,[38] Joseph Priestley,[39] and Samuel Bourne.[40] Mortalists such as Richard Overton advanced a combination of theological and philosophical arguments in favor of mortalism.[41] Thomas Hobbes likewise made extensive use of theological argumentation.[42] Some mortalists viewed their beliefs as a return to original Christian teaching.[43][44] Mortalist theological arguments were also used to contest the Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory and masses for the dead.[45][46][47]

Lexical arguments

In the late eighteenth century, the standard Hebrew lexicon and grammar of John Parkhurst[48] expressed the view that the traditional rendering of the Hebrew word nephesh as reference to an immortal soul, had no lexical support.[49] Mortalists in the nineteenth century used lexical arguments to deny the traditional doctrines of hell and the immortal soul.[50][51][page needed]

Scientific arguments

The eighteenth-century mortalist Henry Layton presented arguments based on physiology.[52] Scientific arguments became important to the nineteenth-century discussion of mortalism and natural immortality,[53] and mortalist Miles Grant cited extensively from a number of scientists who observed that the immortality of the soul was unsupported by scientific evidence.[51][page needed]

Historic proponents of the mortality of the soul

The mortality of the soul has been held throughout the history of both Judaism and Christianity.[54][55][56][57]

Judaism

Although in the Book of Genesis Jacob mentions he would descend into the Sheol where he thought his son Joseph already was and the Witch of Endor summons the ghost of the deceased prophet Samuel at the behest of King Saul, modern scholars believe the concept of an immortal soul going to bliss or torment after death entered mainstream Judaism after the exile[58] and existed throughout the Second Temple era, though both ‘soul sleep’ and ‘soul death’, were also held.[59][60][61]

Mortalism is present in certain Second Temple Period pseudepigraphal works,[62][63][64]Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[65][66][67] later rabbinical works,[68][69] and among medieval era rabbis such as Abraham Ibn Ezra (1092–1167),[70] Maimonides (1135–1204),[71] and Joseph Albo (1380–1444).[72]

Some authorities within Conservative Judaism, notably Neil Gillman, also support the notion that the souls of the dead are unconscious until the Resurrection.[73]

Traditional rabbinic Judaism, however, has always been of the opinion that belief in immortality of at least most souls, and punishment and reward after death, was a consistent belief back through the giving of the Torah at Mt. Sinai. Traditional Judaism reads the Torah accordingly. As an example, the punishment of kareth (excision) is understood to mean that soul is cut off from God in the Afterlife.[74][75]

Christian views

Second to eighth centuries

The most well known case of mortalism in the early church is that recorded by Eusebius of Caesarea:

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The Dissension of the Arabians. About the same time others arose in Arabia, putting forward a doctrine foreign to the truth. They said that during the present time the human soul dies and perishes with the body, but that at the time of the resurrection they will be renewed together. And at that time also a synod of considerable size assembled, and Origen, being again invited there, spoke publicly on the question with such effect that the opinions of those who had formerly fallen were changed.

— Ecclesiastical History VI,37

This synod in Arabia would have been during the reign of Emperor Philip the Arab (244–49).[76] Redepenning (1841)[77] was of the opinion that Eusebius' terminology here, "the human soul dies" was probably that of their critics rather than the Arabian Christians' own expression and they were more likely simply "psychopannychists", believers in "soul sleep".[78]

Some Syriac writers such as Aphrahat, Ephrem and Narsai believed in the dormition, or "sleep", of the soul, in which "…souls of the dead […] are largely inert, having lapsed into a state of sleep, in which they can only dream of their future reward or punishments."[79] John of Damascus denounced the ideas of some Arab Christians as thnetopsychism (‘soul death’). Eustratios of Constantinople (after 582) denounced this and what he called hypnopsychism (‘soul sleep’).[80] The issue was connected to that of the Intercession of saints. The writings of Christian ascetic Isaac of Nineveh (d.700), reflect several perspectives which include mortalism.[81]

Ninth to fifteenth centuries

Mortalism evidently persisted since various Byzantine writers had to defend the doctrine of the veneration of saints against those who said the saints sleep.[82][page needed] John the Deacon (eleventh century) attacked those who "dare to say that praying to the saints is like shouting in the ears of the deaf, as if they had drunk from the mythical waters of Oblivion."[83]

Pope John XXII inadvertently caused the beatific vision controversy (1331–34) by suggesting that the saved do not attain the Beatific Vision, or "see God" until Judgment Day (in Italian: Visione beatifica differita, "deferred beatific vision"), which was a view possibly consistent with soul sleep. The Sacred College of Cardinals held a consistory on the problem in January 1334, and Pope John conceded to the more orthodox understanding. His successor, in that same year, Pope Benedict XII, declared it ex cathedra doctrine that the righteous do see Heaven prior to the final judgement.

The Reformation

Mortalism emerged in Christianity when it was promoted by some Reformation leaders, and it survives today mostly among Restorationist sects, such as Jehovah's Witnesses.[5][84] Conti has argued that during the Reformation both psychosomnolence (the belief that the soul sleeps until the resurrection) and thnetopsychism (the belief that the body and soul both die and then both rise again) were quite common.[85]

William Tyndale (1494–1536) argued against Thomas More in favour of soul sleep:

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And ye, in putting them [the departed souls] in heaven, hell and purgatory, destroy the arguments wherewith Christ and Paul prove the resurrection... And again, if the souls be in heaven, tell me why they be not in as good a case as the angels be? And then what cause is there of the resurrection?[86][41]

Morey suggests that John Wycliffe (1320–84) and Tyndale taught the doctrine of soul sleep "as the answer to the Catholic teachings of purgatory and masses for the dead."[87]

Many Anabaptists in this period, such as Michael Sattler (1490–1527),[88][89] were Christian mortalists.[90]

However, the best known advocate of soul sleep was Martin Luther (1483–1546).[46] In writing on Ecclesiastes, Luther says

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Salomon judgeth that the dead are a sleepe, and feele nothing at all. For the dead lye there accompting neyther dayes nor yeares, but when they are awoken, they shall seeme to have slept scarce one minute.[91]

Elsewhere Luther states that

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As soon as thy eyes have closed shalt thou be woken, a thousand years shall be as if thou hadst slept but a little half hour. Just as at night we hear the clock strike and know not how long we have slept, so too, and how much more, are in death a thousand years soon past. Before a man should turn round, he is already a fair angel.[92]

Jürgen Moltmann (2000) concludes from this that "Luther conceived the state of the dead as a deep, dreamless sleep, removed from time and space, without consciousness and without feeling."[93] That Luther believed in soul sleep is also the view of Watts 1985.[41] Some writers have claimed that Luther changed his view later in life.[94][95][96]

Gottfried Fritschel (1867) argued that quotations from Luther's Latin works had occasionally been misread in Latin or in German translation to contradict or qualify specific statements and Luther's overall teaching, namely that the sleep of the dead was unconscious:[97] These readings can still be found in some English sources.[96][98][99]

The two most frequently cited passages are:

  • "It is certain that to this day Abraham is serving God, just as Abel, Noah are serving God. And this we should carefully note; for it is divine truth that Abraham is living, serving God, and ruling with Him. But what sort of life that may be, whether he is asleep or awake, is another question. How the soul is resting we are not to know, but it is certain that it is living."[100]
  • "A man tired with his daily labour... sleeps. But his soul does not sleep (Anima autem non sic dormit) but is awake (sed vigilat). It experiences visions and the discourses of the angels and of God. Therefore the sleep in the future life is deeper than it is in this life. Nevertheless, the soul lives to God. This is the likeness to the sleep of life."[101][102]

Others included Camillo Renato (1540),[103] Mátyás Dévai Bíró (1500–45),[104] Michael Servetus (1511–53),[105] Laelio Sozzini (1562),[106] Fausto Sozzini (1563),[107] the Polish Brethren (1565 onwards),[108] Dirk Philips (1504–68),[109] Gregory Paul of Brzezin (1568),[110] the Socinians (1570–1800),[111] John Frith (1573),[112] George Schomann (1574)[113] and Simon Budny (1576).[107]

Seventeenth to eighteenth centuries

Soul sleep was a significant minority view from the eighth to the seventeenth centuries,[114] and soul death became increasingly common from the Reformation onwards.[5]

Soul sleep has been called a "major current of seventeenth century protestant ideology."[115] John Milton wrote in his unpublished De Doctrina Christiana,

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Inasmuch then as the whole man is uniformly said to consist of body, and soul (whatever may be the distinct provinces assigned to these divisions), I will show, that in death, first, the whole man, and secondly, each component part, suffers privation of life.[116]

Gordon Campbell (2008) identifies Milton's views as "thnetopsychism", a belief that the soul dies with the body but is resurrected at the last judgment.[117] however Milton speaks also of the dead as "asleep".[118]

Those holding this view include: 1600s: Sussex Baptists[119] d. 1612: Edward Wightman[120] 1627: Samuel Gardner[121] 1628: Samuel Przypkowski[122] 1636: George Wither[123] 1637: Joachim Stegmann[124] 1624: Richard Overton[41] 1654: John Biddle (Unitarian)[125] 1655: Matthew Caffyn[126] 1658: Samuel Richardson[127] 1608–74: John Milton[128][page needed][129] 1588–1670: Thomas Hobbes[111] 1605–82: Thomas Browne[130] 1622–1705: Henry Layton[52] 1702: William Coward[52] 1632–1704: John Locke[131] 1643–1727: Isaac Newton[132] 1676–1748: Pietro Giannone[133] 1751: William Kenrick[134] 1755: Edmund Law[135] 1759: Samuel Bourn[136] 1723–91: Richard Price[137] 1718–97: Peter Peckard[138] 1733–1804: Joseph Priestley[139] Francis Blackburne (1765).[140]

Nineteenth to twentieth centuries

Belief in conditional immortality and the annihilation of the unsaved became increasingly common during the nineteenth century,[141][142][143] entering mainstream Christianity in the twentieth century.[144][145] From this point it is possible to speak in terms of entire groups holding the belief, and only the most prominent individual nineteenth-century advocates of the doctrine will be mentioned here.

Others include: Millerites (from 1833),[lower-alpha 6] Edward White (1846),[146] Christadelphians (from 1848),[147] Thomas Thayer (1855),[148] François Gaussen (d. 1863),[149] Henry Constable (1873),[150] Louis Burnier (Waldensian, d. 1878),[151] the Baptist Conditionalist Association (1878),[152] Cameron Mann (1888),[153] Emmanuel Pétavel-Olliff (1891), Miles Grant (1895)[51][page needed], George Gabriel Stokes (1897).[146]

Modern Christian groups

Present-day defenders of mortalism include Nicky Gumbel,[154] some Lutherans, the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Advent Christian Church, the Afterlife group,[155] Christadelphians, the Church of God (Seventh Day), Church of God (7th day) – Salem Conference, the Church of God Abrahamic Faith, and various other Church of God organizations and related denominations which adhered to the older teachings of Herbert W. Armstrong's Worldwide Church of God and the Bible Student movement.

Jehovah's Witnesses also teach a form of mortalism[156] but represent a special case. They believe that 144,000 believers began to be raised from the dead a short time after October 1914 (possibly, in the spring of 1918) to receive immortality in heaven,[157] but all other believers will be raised from the dead on Judgment Day to receive eternal life on earth.[158]

Opponents

Immortality of the soul

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The orthodox Christian belief about the Intermediate State between death and Judgment Day is immortality of the soul followed immediately after death of the body by Particular Judgment. Most Protestants believe the soul is judged to go to Heaven or Hell immediately after death. In Catholicism most souls temporarily stay in Purgatory to be purified for Heaven (as described in the Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church, 1030–32). In Eastern Orthodoxy, the soul waits in the Abode of the Dead, specifically Hades, until the Resurrection of the Dead, the saved resting in light and the damned suffering in darkness.[159] According to James Tabor this Eastern Orthodox picture of Particular Judgment is similar to the first-century Jewish and possibly Early Christian[160] concept that the dead either "Rest in Peace" in the Bosom of Abraham (mentioned in the Gospel of Luke) or suffer in Hades. This view was also promoted by John Calvin, though Calvin taught that immortality was not in the nature of the soul but was imparted by God.[161] Nineteenth-century Reformed theologians such as A.A. Hodge, W.G.T. Shedd, and Louis Berkhof also taught the immortality of the soul, but some later Reformed theologians such as Herman Bavinck and G. C. Berkouwer rejected the idea as unscriptural.[162]

Opponents of Psychopannychism and Thnetopsychism include the Roman Catholic Church, most mainline Protestant denominations, and most conservative Protestants, Evangelicals, and Fundamentalists.

Believers in the opposing concept of universal reconciliation, arguing that salvation will eventually be received by all of humanity, have also referred to various books of the New Testament that seem to describe grace given to immortal souls such as the First Epistle to the Corinthians. The sections of 1 Corinthians 15:22, "As all die in Adam, so all will be made alive in Christ", and 1 Corinthians 15:28, "God will be all in all", are cited.[163] Verses that seem to contradict the tradition of complete damnation and come up in arguments also include Lamentations 3:31-33 (NIV), "For no one is cast off by the Lord forever. Though he brings grief, he will show compassion, so great is his unfailing love",[164] and 1 Timothy 4:10 (NIV), "We have put our hope in the living God, who is the Savior of all people, and especially of those who believe."[165]

As well, the Epistle to the Colossians receives attention, with Colossians 1:17-20 reading:

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"He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together. And He is the head of the body, the church; He is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything He might have the supremacy. For God was pleased to have all His fullness dwell in Him, and through Him to reconcile to Himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through His blood, shed on the cross."[166]

Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church has called "soul mortality" a serious heresy.

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Whereas some have dared to assert concerning the nature of the reasonable soul that it is mortal, we, with the approbation of the sacred council do condemn and reprobate all those who assert that the intellectual soul is mortal, seeing, according to the canon of Pope Clement V, that the soul is [...] immortal [...] and we decree that all who adhere to like erroneous assertions shall be shunned and punished as heretics.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

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The idea that the spirit continues as a conscious, active, and independent agent after mortal death is a fundamental teaching of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Latter-Day Saint canon provides strong and clear support for pre- and post-mortal existence and consciousness of the spirit.

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29 Man was also in the beginning with God. Intelligence, or the light of truth, was not created or made, neither indeed can be.
30 All truth is independent in that sphere in which God has placed it, to act for itself, as all intelligence also; otherwise there is no existence.
...
33 For man is spirit. The elements are eternal, and spirit and element, inseparably connected, receive a fulness of joy

34 And when separated, man cannot receive a fulness of joy. (Doctrine and Covenants (D&C) 93:29-34)

In this cosmology, "intelligence", or consciousness, is co-eternal with God, while the "spirit" that it animates is a material (D&C 131:7-8) entity created by God at some time long before it was associated with a physical mortal body. Verse 34 gives a reason behind Paul's longing to be resurrected, which is further supported by Joseph F. Smith's statement that "the dead had looked upon the long absence of their spirits from their bodies as a bondage." (D&C 138:50)

Latter-Day Saint scripture even gives a definition of "soul" as the combined entity of the spirit and the body:

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14 Now, verily I say unto you, that through the redemption which is made for you is brought to pass the resurrection from the dead.
15 And the spirit and the body are the soul of man.
16 And the resurrection from the dead is the redemption of the soul.

17 And the redemption of the soul is through him that quickeneth all things... (D&C 88:14-17)

The Book of Mormon prophet Alma inquired diligently concerning the state of the spirit between death and the resurrection, and received a clear, but incomplete, answer described in Alma 40. A more complete and detailed description of the afterlife of the spirit is published in section 138 of the Doctrine and Covenants. Joseph F. Smith's vision of the redemption of the dead casts a bright light on this otherwise mysterious subject.

Modern scholarship

As early as 1917 Harvey W. Scott wrote "That there is no definite affirmation, in the Old Testament of the doctrine of a future life, or personal immortality, is the general consensus of Biblical scholarship."[167] The modern scholarly consensus is that the canonical teaching of the Old Testament made no reference to an "immortal soul" independent of the body.[168][169][170][171] This view is represented consistently in a wide range of scholarly reference works.[172][173][174][175][176]

According to Donelley, "Twentieth century biblical scholarship largely agrees that the ancient Jews had little explicit notion of a personal afterlife until very late in the Old Testament period," and "only the latest stratum of the Old Testament asserts even the resurrection of the body."[168] Scholars have noted that the notion of the "disembodied existence of a soul in bliss" is not in accordance with a Hebrew world view:[172] "While Hebrew thought world distinguished soul from body (as material basis of life), there was no question of two separate, independent entities."[177] Gillman argues that

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In contrast to the two enigmatic references to Enoch and Elijah, there are ample references to the fact that death is the ultimate destiny for all human beings, that God has no contact with or power over the dead, and that the dead do not have any relationship with God (see, inter alia, Ps. 6:6, 30:9–10, 39:13–14, 49:6–13, 115:16–18, 146:2–4). If there is a conceivable setting for the introduction of a doctrine of the afterlife, it would be in Job, since Job, although righteous, is harmed by God in the present life. But Job 10:20–22 and 14:1–10 affirm the opposite.[175]

However, N. T. Wright suggests that "the Bible offers a spectrum of belief about life after death."[178] While Goldingay suggests that Qohelet points out that there is no evidence that "human beings would enjoy a positive afterlife,"[179] Philip Johnston argues that a few Psalms, such as Psalm 16, Psalm 49 and Psalm 73, "affirm a continued communion with God after death," but "give no elaboration of how, when or where this communion will take place."[180]

Neyrey suggests that, "for a Hebrew, ‘soul’ indicated the unity of a human person," and "this Hebrew field of meaning is breached in the Wisdom of Solomon by explicit introduction of Greek ideas of soul.[181] Avery-Peck argues that

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Scripture does not present even a rudimentarily developed theology of the soul. The creation narrative is clear that all life originates with God. Yet the Hebrew Scripture offers no specific understanding of the origin of individual souls, of when and how they become attached to specific bodies, or of their potential existence, apart from the body, after death. The reason for this is that, as we noted at the beginning, the Hebrew Bible does not present a theory of the soul developed much beyond the simple concept of a force associated with respiration, hence, a life-force.[182]

Regardless of the character of the soul's existence in the intermediate state, biblical scholarship affirms that a disembodied soul is unnatural and at best transitional. Bromiley argues that "the soul and the body belong together, so that without either the one or the other there is no true man. Disembodied existence in Sheol is unreal. Paul does not seek a life outside the body, but wants to be clothed with a new and spiritual body (1 Cor. 15; 2 Cor. 5)."[183]

The mortalist disbelief in the existence of a naturally immortal soul,[1][5] is affirmed as biblical teaching by a range of standard scholarly Jewish and Christian sources. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Modern Christian Thought (1995) says, "There is no concept of an immortal soul in the Old Testament, nor does the New Testament ever call the human soul immortal."[184] Harper's Bible Dictionary (1st ed. 1985) says that "For a Hebrew, ‘soul’ indicated the unity of a human person; Hebrews were living bodies, they did not have bodies".[185] Cressey 1996 says, "But to the Bible man is not a soul in a body but a body/soul unity".[186] Avery-Peck 2000 says, "Scripture does not present even a rudimentarily developed theology of the soul"[182] and "The notion of the soul as an independent force that animates human life but that can exist apart from the human body—either prior to conception and birth or subsequent to life and death—is the product only of later Judaism".[182] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says that the Septuagint translated the Hebrew word nefesh by the Greek word psyche, but the latter does not have the same sense in Greek thought.[187] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says, "Far from referring simply to one aspect of a person, “soul” refers to the whole person".[188] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says, "Possibly Jn. 6:33 also includes an allusion to the general life-giving function. This teaching rules out all ideas of an emanation of the soul."[183] and "The soul and the body belong together, so that without either the one or the other there is no true man".[183] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says, "Indeed, the salvation of the “immortal soul” has sometimes been a commonplace in preaching, but it is fundamentally unbiblical."[172] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says "The Hebrew Bible does not present the human soul (nepeš) or spirit (rûah) as an immortal substance, and for the most part it envisions the dead as ghosts in Sheol, the dark, sleepy underworld".[189] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says, "there is practically no specific teaching on the subject in the Bible beyond an underlying assumption of some form of afterlife (see immortality)".[190] The Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says "It is this essential soul-body oneness that provides the uniqueness of the biblical concept of the resurrection of the body as distinguished from the Greek idea of the immortality of the soul".[191]

The mortalist disbelief in the existence of a naturally immortal soul[1][5] is also affirmed as biblical teaching by various modern theologians,[192][193][194][lower-alpha 7][195][196][197] and Hebblethwaite observes the doctrine is "not popular amongst Christian theologians or among Christian philosophers today".[198][199]

Notes

  1. The term is also common in the works of the Trinitarian Christian countercult movement.[12][13]
  2. Pannychis (παννυχὶς) in Greek means an all night party.[23]
  3. The term pannychis is used correctly in the classical Greek sense in Calvin's original Latin publication Psychopannychia.
  4. Citing 1 Thess 4:17 etc.
  5. "Such a peal shall rouse their sleep".
  6. The original group following the teachings of William Miller, who began preaching his distinctive beliefs in 1833; Miller himself did not believe in conditional immortality, but it was one of a number of beliefs held among the group.
  7. Fudge admits that belief in the immortality of the soul is the main current in church history. He, however, favors another view: “Crisscrossing all of this flows the stream of Christian mortalism.… This understanding appears as the sparkling water of pristine Christianity.” He defines mortalism as "the belief that according to divine revelation the soul does not exist as an independent substance after the death of the body."[9]

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
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  4. Kries 1997, p. 97: ‘In Leviathan, soul and body are one; there are no "separated essenses" [sic]; death means complete death – the soul, merely another word for life, or breath, ceases at the death of the body. This view of the soul is known as Christian mortalism – a heterodox view held, indeed, by some sincere believers and not unique to Hobbes.’
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Brandon 2007, p. 65: ‘Mortalism, the idea that the soul is not immortal by nature’ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEBrandon200765" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEBrandon200765" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEBrandon200765" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEBrandon200765" defined multiple times with different content
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  9. 9.0 9.1 Fudge & Peterson 2000, p. 173: ‘the belief that according to divine revelation the soul does not exist as an independent substance after the death of the body’ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEFudgePeterson2000173" defined multiple times with different content
  10. Almond 1994, p. 38: …‘mortalist views – particularly of the sort which affirmed that the soul slept or died – were widespread in the Reformation period. George Williams has shown how prevalent mortalism was among the Reformation radicals.’
  11. 11.0 11.1 de Greef 2008, p. 152: “In the foreword of 1534, Calvin says that at the insistence of friends he had given in to the request to dispute the ‘heresy of soul sleep.’” Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEde_Greef2008152" defined multiple times with different content
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  20. Kries 1997: ‘Christian mortalism is thus a convenient "middle ground," which, by not departing wholly from possibly genuine... The advantage Hobbes's change to Christian mortalism appears to bring to his teaching is that it attenuates the cord that...’
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  24. Williams 1962, p. 581: “It will be recalled that we have allowed the etymologically ambiguous word ‘psychopannychism’ to serve as the generic term for the two variants ‘soul sleep’...”
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  31. Luther 1830, v. 5, 6 p. 120: ‘…sic anima post mortem intrat suum cubiculum et pacem et dormiens non sentit suum somnum’
  32. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., 320 pp.
  33. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. says that the Thnetopsychists hold that the human soul is like that of the beasts, for it is destroyed with the body.
  34. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  35. Williams 1962, p. 582: ‘to designate both the doctrine of the death of the soul (thnetopsychism, mortalism) and the unconscious sleep of the soul’
  36. Blackburne 1765, p. 70: ‘In the year 1702, Dr. William Coward a Physician, under the fictitious name of Estibius Psychalethes, published a book entitled, Second Thoughts concerning human soul, demonstrating the notion of human soul, as believed to be a spiritual, immortal substance united to human body, to be a plain heathenish invention, and not consonant to the principles of philosophy, reason, or religion.’
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  38. Blackburne 1765, p. 68–69: ‘The doctrine of the New Testament is, that men shall become immortal by the way of a resurrection of the dead, a restoration of the whole man to life; and the NT is so far from acknowledging any intermediate consciousness in man, between death and the resurrection, that' if always speaks of that interval as a sleep which implies a suspension of the thinking faculty, a rest from those labours, which require thought, memory, consciousness, &c. during which those faculties are useless.’
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  40. Ball 2008, p. 167: “Hence the doctrine of eternal torment, the object of Bourn's attack, is unbiblical, ‘void of all foundation in the holy Scriptures.’ Death is the final end of the wicked, not continuing life in torment. It is here that Bourn appeals to reason as well as to Scripture. ‘To imagine that by the term death is meant an eternal life, tho’ in a condition of extreme misery’, Bourn says, ‘seems to [confound] all propriety and meaning of words”.
  41. 41.0 41.1 41.2 41.3 Watts 1985, p. 119: “In 1644 he published a notorious tract, Mans Mortalitie, wherein he sought to prove ‘both theologically and philosophically, that whole man (as a rational creature) is a compound wholly mortal, contrary to that common distinction of soul and body: and that the present going of the soul into heaven or hell is a mere fiction: and that at the resurrection is the beginning of our immortality, and then actual condemnation, and salvation, and not before.’ Overton's treatise provided the heresy hunters of the 1640s with further evidence of the need to restrain liberty of speculation in matters of religion, but it is wrong to regard his work, as some writers have done, as presaging modern materialism.” Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEWatts1985119" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEWatts1985119" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEWatts1985119" defined multiple times with different content
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  46. 46.0 46.1 Froom 1966, p. 74: “Archdeacon Blackburne's incisive summation of Luther's position was this: ‘Luther espoused the doctrine of the sleep of the soul, upon a Scripture foundation, and then he made use of it as a confutation of purgatory and Saint worship, and continued in that belief to the last moment of his life.” Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEFroom196674" defined multiple times with different content
  47. Almond 1994, p. 67: …‘The Socinian mortalist Joseph Stegmann argued that any notion of an intermediate state between death and the day of judgement opened the door for Catholic abuses.’
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  51. 51.0 51.1 51.2 Grant 1895: “Dr. JH M'Culloh says: ‘There is no word in the Hebrew language that signifies either soul or spirit, in the technical sense in which we use the term as implying something distinct from the body’. § 55. R. B. Girdlestone, in his Synonyms of the Old Testament, says: ‘The soul is, properly speaking, the animating principle of the body; and is the common property of man and beast. …In other words, it is the life, whether of man or beast.’ When every passage in the Bible that speaks of the soul of man has been carefully examined, it will be found that these statements of these eminent Hebrew scholars and lexicographers, and many others, are strictly correct, and therefore should be fully believed by all who love the truth.” Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEGrant1895" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEGrant1895" defined multiple times with different content
  52. 52.0 52.1 52.2 Almond 1994, p. 62: …‘Between 1692 and 1706, Henry Layton had produced a series of pamphlets which, while endorsing the notion of a general resurrection on the last day, had asserted the mortality of the soul primarily on physiological grounds though with the aid of Scripture.’ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEAlmond199462" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEAlmond199462" defined multiple times with different content
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  57. Pool 1998, p. 133: ‘Various concepts of conditional immortality or annihilationism have appeared earlier in Baptist history as well. Several examples illustrate this claim. General as well as particular Baptists developed versions of annihilationism or conditional immortality.’
  58. Gillman 2000, p. 200: ‘A second doctrine of the afterlife enters Judaism not in the Bible itself but in the intertestamental period, i.e., the first century BCE to first century CE. This doctrine teaches that every human being is a composite of two entities, a material body and a non-material soul; that the soul pre-exists the body and departs from the body at death; that, though the body disintegrates in the grave, the soul, by its very nature, is indestructible; and that it continues to exist for eternity. Not even a hint of this dualistic view of the human being appears in the Bible.’
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  61. Gillman 2000, p. 196: ‘Two independent doctrines of the afterlife for the individual emerged in Judaism, probably during the last two centuries BCE: the doctrine of the resurrection of bodies and that of the immortality of souls. In time (probably the first century CE), these two doctrines became conflated so as to yield the theory that, at the end of days, God will resurrect dead bodies, rejoin them with their souls, which never died, and the individual human being, reconstituted as he or she existed on earth, will come before God in judgment.’
  62. Fudge & Petersen 2000, p. 210: ‘However, Strack and Billerbeck, noted authorities on Rabbinic literature, suggest that the pseudepigraphal references to eternal punishment simply denote everlasting annihilation. See Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..’
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  71. Rudavsky 2010, p. 105: ‘Maimonides claims that since the greatest punishment would be to lose one's immortal soul, the souls of the wicked are destroyed along with their bodies.’
  72. Rudavsky 2010, p. 206: ‘Maimonides’ views are reasserted by Joseph Albo (1380–1444) in his Book of Principles.’
  73. Gillman, Neil. The Death of Death: Resurrection and Immortality in Jewish Thought. Jewish Lights, 1997.
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  79. Constas 2001, p. 94.
  80. Constas 2011, p. 111.
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  82. Constas 2011.
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  84. Marshall 2002, p. 47: ‘The status of the dead was among the most divisive issues of the early Reformation; it was also arguably the theological terrain over which in the reign of Henry VIII official reform travelled furthest and fastest.’
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  90. Finger 2004, p. 42.
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  96. 96.0 96.1 Ellingsen 1999, p. 64: ‘Luther's more characteristic view, however, was to conceive of death as sleep — as a kind of ‘soul sleep’ (Letter to Hans Luther, in LW 49:270). The Reformer tried to take into account those New Testament texts suggesting that the dead have an active life with God (Luke 16:22ff.; Rev. 4–5); consequently, he claimed that in the sleep of death the soul experiences visions and the discourses of God. It sleeps in the bosom of Christ, as a mother brings an infant into a crib. The time flies in this sleep, just as an evening passes in an instant as we sleep soundly (Lectures on Genesis, in LW 4:313).’ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEEllingsen199964" defined multiple times with different content
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  101. Luther 1830, p. 120: ‘Differunt tamen somnus sive quies hujus vitae et futurae. Homo enim in hac vita defatigatus diurno labore, sub noctem intrat in cubiculum suum tanquam in pace, ut ibi dormiat, et ea nocte fruitur quiete, neque quicquam scit de ullo malo sive incendii, sive caedis. Anima autem non sic dormit, sed vigilat, et patitur visiones loquelas Angelorum et Dei. Ideo somnus in futura vita profundior est quam in hac vita et tamen anima coram Deo vivit. Hac similitudine, quam habeo a somno viventia.’
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  104. Vauchez 1966, pp. 198–99.
  105. Vauchez 1966, p. 115.
  106. Ball 2008, p. 36.
  107. 107.0 107.1 Ball 2008, p. 37.
  108. Snobelen 1993, p. 46.
  109. Finger 2004, p. 536.
  110. Williams 1962, p. 739.
  111. 111.0 111.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
  112. Marshall 2002, p. 223.
  113. Snobelen 1993, p. 34.
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  118. De Doctrina Christiana citing 1Thess 4:17, Daniel 12:2 etc.
  119. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
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  121. Marshall 2002, p. 213.
  122. Snobelen 1993, p. 54.
  123. Ball 2008, p. 7.
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  126. Froom 1966, p. 144.
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  128. Milton 1825: ‘Inasmuch then as the whole man is uniformly said to consist of body, and soul (whatever may be the distinct provinces assigned to these divisions), I will show, that in death, first, the whole man, and secondly, each component part, suffers privation of life... The grave is the common guardian of all till the day of judgment.’
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  130. Brandon 2007, p. 66.
  131. Nuvo (ed.), ‘John Locke: Writings on Religion’, p. xxxiii (2002)
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  140. Blackburne 1765.
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  142. Larsen 2001, pp. 255–6: ‘Yet many abandonments of the traditional view are to be noted, including F. W. Newman (the Cardinal’s brother who took refuge in Unitarianism), ST Coleridge, Thomas Erskine of Linlathen, FW Robertson of Brighton, FD Maurice, Bishop Colenso of Natal, TR Birks of the Evangelical Alliance, Andrew Jukes, Samuel Cox, and others who took up the cudgel for conditional immortality like the redoubtable RW Dale of Birmingham and FJ Delitzsch of Leipzig. Dale himself indicated he was drawn to Moody because of Moody’s great compassion for the lost, but ultimately he came to deny everlasting punishment. The defections were on the other side of the Atlantic also and included such a household name as the Quaker writer and preacher, Hannah Whitall Smith, whose The Christian’s Secret of a Happy Life was so popular.’
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  145. Larsen 2001, p. 257: ‘RA Torrey, HA Ironside, Paul Rood, John R Rice, Robert G Lee and many others preached on heaven and hell, but they were a vanishing breed.’
  146. 146.0 146.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
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  148. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.; no relation to Joseph Henry Thayer lexicographer.
  149. Vauchez 1996, pp. 199–200.
  150. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
  151. Vauchez 1966, p. 199.
  152. Pool 1998, p. 134: ‘In 1878, some English Baptists formed the Conditionalist Association. George A. Brown, an English Baptist pastor, hosted this conference and later edited the journal of this association, titled Bible Standard. Other Baptist ministers from this period held this view as well.’
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  161. Hoekema 1994, p. 88.
  162. Hoekema 1994, p. 89.
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  164. https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Lamentations+3%3A31-33&version=NIV
  165. https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Timothy+4%3A10&version=NIV
  166. https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Colossians+1:17-20
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  168. 168.0 168.1 Donelley 1976, p. 99: ‘Twentieth century biblical scholarship largely agrees that the ancient Jews had little explicit notion of a personal afterlife until very late in the Old Testament period. Immortality of the soul was a typically Greek philosophical notion quite foreign to the thought of ancient Semitic peoples. Only the latest stratum of the Old Testament asserts even the resurrection of the body, a view more congenial to Semites.’ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEDonelley197699" defined multiple times with different content
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  174. Wright 2003, p. 92, 129: ‘Barr is surely right to stress that the Genesis story as it now stands indicates that humans were not created immortal, but had (and lost) the chance to gain unending life.’; [but Wright himself actually interprets some passages of Scripture as indicating alternative beliefs,] ‘The Bible offers a spectrum of belief about life after death.’
  175. 175.0 175.1 Gillman 2000, p. 176: ‘In contrast to the two enigmatic references to Enoch and Elijah, there are ample references to the fact that death is the ultimate destiny for all human beings, that God has no contact with or power over the dead, and that the dead do not have any relationship with God (see, inter alia, Ps. 6:6, 30:9–10, 39:13–14, 49:6–13, 115:16–18, 146:2–4). If there is a conceivable setting for the introduction of a doctrine of the afterlife, it would be in Job, since Job, although righteous, is harmed by God in the present life. But Job 10:20–22 and 14:1–10 affirm the opposite.’ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEGillman2000176" defined multiple times with different content
  176. Goldingay 2006, p. 640, 644: ‘The life of a human being came more directly from God, and it is also evident that when someone dies, the breath (rûaḥ, e.g., Ps 104:29) or the life (nepeš, e.g., Gen 35:18) disappears and returns to the God who is rûaḥ. And whereas the living may hope that the absence of God may give way again to God’s presence, the dead are forever cut off from God’s presence. Death means an end to fellowship with God and to fellowship with other people. It means an end to the activity of God and the activity of other people. Even more obviously, it means an end to my own activity. It means an end to awareness. […] “Who knows whether the breath of human beings rises up and the breath of an animal sinks down to the earth?” (Eccles 3:21). In Qohelet’s day there were perhaps people who were speculating that human beings would enjoy a positive afterlife, as animals would not. Qohelet points out that there is no evidence for this.’
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  178. Wright 2003, p. 129.
  179. Goldingay 2006, p. 644.
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  181. Neyrey 1985, pp. 982–83.
  182. 182.0 182.1 182.2 Avery-Peck 2000, p. 1343. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEAvery-Peck20001343" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEAvery-Peck20001343" defined multiple times with different content
  183. 183.0 183.1 183.2 Bromiley 2002, p. 1045. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "FOOTNOTEBromiley20021045" defined multiple times with different content
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  185. Neyrey 1985, pp. 982–3: ‘This Hebrew field of meaning is breached in the Wisdom of Solomon by explicit introduction of Greek ideas of soul. A dualism of soul and body is present: ‘a perishable body weighs down the soul’ (9:15). This perishable body is opposed by an immortal soul (3:1–3). Such dualism might imply that soul is superior to body. In the nt, ‘soul’ retains its basic Hebrew field of meaning. Soul refers to one’s life: Herod sought Jesus’ soul (Matt. 2:20); one might save a soul or take it (Mark 3:4). Death occurs when God ‘requires your soul’ (Luke 12:20). ‘Soul’ may refer to the whole person, the self: ‘three thousand souls’ were converted in Acts 2:41 (see Acts 3:23). Although the Greek idea of an immortal soul different in kind from the mortal body is not evident, ‘soul’ denotes the existence of a person after death (see Luke 9:25; 12:4; 21:19); yet Greek influence may be found in 1 Peter’s remark about ‘the salvation of souls’ (1:9). A moderate dualism exists in the contrast of spirit with body and even soul, where ‘soul’ means life that is not yet caught up in grace. See also Flesh and Spirit; Human Being.’
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  191. Lake 2009, pp. 586–97: ‘The English translation of nepeš by the term “soul” has too often been misunderstood as teaching a bipartite (soul and body—dichotomy) or tripartite (body, soul, and spirit—trichotomy) anthropology. Equally misleading is the interpretation that too radically separates soul from body as in the Greek view of human nature. See body; spirit. N. Porteous (in IDB, 4:428) states it well when he says, “The Hebrew could not conceive of a disembodied nepeš, though he could use nepeš with or without the adjective ‘dead,’ for corpse (e.g., Lev. 19:28; Num. 6:6).” Or as R. B. Laurin has suggested, “To the Hebrew, man was not a ‘body’ and a ‘soul,’ but rather a ‘body-soul,’ a unit of vital power” (BDT, 492). In this connection, the most significant text is Gen. 2:7, “the Lord God formed the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life [nišmat hayyîm], and the man became a living being [nepeš hayyâ]” (the KJV rendering “living soul” is misleading). …The Bible speaks of the nepeš as departing and/or returning (Gen. 35:18; 1 Ki. 17:21–22). However, the crucial series of texts are those in which the OT writers indicate a fear of death and a fear of the loss of the self or soul through the experience of death (cf. Job 33:18–30; Ps. 16:10; 30:3; 116:8; Isa. 38:15–17). What is essential to understanding the Hebrew mind is the recognition that the human being is a unit: body-soul! The soul is not, therefore, unaffected by the experience of death. OT eschatology does indeed contain seminal elements of hope implying the more positive teaching of the NT, as can be seen in the OT phrase, “rested with his fathers” (1 Ki. 2:10 et al.), in David’s confident attitude toward the death of his child (2 Sam. 12:12–23), and in Job’s hope for a resurrection (Job 19:20–29). It is this essential soul-body oneness that provides the uniqueness of the biblical concept of the resurrection of the body as distinguished from the Greek idea of the immortality of the soul.’
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  194. Moody 1990, p. 182: ‘Berkouwer has a long chapter on the meaning of the soul called ‘The Whole Man.’ Here he denounces the theory of a ‘substantial dichotomy’ between an immortal soul and a mortal body. […] Berkouwer's critique of belief in the natural immortality of the soul is as significant as it is Scriptural. At times he argues that ‘creedal caution’ is better than dogmatic theology, but his main thrust is against the theory of belief in an immortal soul independent of God. Only God is by nature immortal, and man's immortality is a gift received in dependence upon the immortal God.’
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Bibliography

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Further reading

  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (English translation Theology of the New Testament 2 vols, London: SCM, 1952, 1955). The leading scholarly reference supporting a holistic anthropology (similar to soul sleep)
  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Covers all major strands of psychopannychism and thnetopsychism in English Reformation and Revolution.
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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (English translation Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.).
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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., 349 pp. Comprehensive volume covering a multitude of texts for and against the doctrine of soul sleep.
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