Aethor wrote:I wouldn't say that someone >>has a<< soul, it would be more correct to say that someone >>is a<< soul, and has a body for that soul, much like he has clothes for that body.
As for the archbishop Maikel, he chose to believe that Merlin is actually Nimue (as in, the same soul, that in ages past used to be Nimue) simply because he wanted to believe that, and/or because it was easier for Merlin, and Maikel wanted to make it easier for Merlin.
But The good archbishop didn't have any proof for it, of either religious or scientific nature, he simply decided to believe what he liked to be truth. And he didn't hide that fact, he didn't say that he has any sort of God-given knowledge.
So, archbishop Maikel's opinion cannot be taken as a proof of anything...
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Aethor's concept here is really more akin to the old Hebrew concept of nefesh. Nefesh refered to life in its entirety. In Genesis God breathes into man the breath of life and man becomes a living being. The Greeks were a bit different. They regarded the material to be unreal or even evil and thus purity becomes escaping the body. This is where the concept of the soul (in Greek psyche) comes from. Think about Plato's allegory of the cave. If you are unfamiliar with that google it. The New Testament although written in Greek is prmarily Hebrew philosophically. In the early centuries of the church, Greek thought became very dominate. In fact an excellent case can be made that most of the early heresies happen as a result of reading the Bible through a Greek lens.
I think that words like soul don't really translate well in modern thought. As a pastor, I used the word person in the Hebrew sense of nefesh, usually to stress the inter-relatedness of the person with other persons and the world that surrounds and sustains us.
Don