PeterZ wrote:n7axw wrote:
For me what matters is that Merlin and Nimue are people, persons who think, love, hate, are compssionate, laugh, mourn; in short, struggle with life like the rest of us.
The question of souls is difficult to dicuss since we all start out with our own notion of what a soul is and either accept or deny it on that basis. We're kinda like ships passing in the dark!
Don
Help me out here, Don. Isn't the bolded comments above an indication that such a being has a soul?
The illustration that best captures the distinction for me is Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel. It depicts Man as God's ultimate creation, above everything else. Above even the angels. It isn't man's physical being that transcends all the other created beings, but his soul. One might even wonder if angels have souls if man's soul surpasses even the angels. Certainly there is something lacking in angels that the fallen angels cannot be redeemed whereas fallen humanity can be.
So, I agree that those qualities are the important ones. So important that they reflect the Divine spark that is the soul. How am I wrong? Understand that I am not trying to pick a quarrel but am truly interested in your answer.
I am leaning toward the Hebrew understanding rather than the Greek. God breathes into man the breath of life and man becomes a living being---body, soul, and spirit. The term I am using for that unified package is person which, while I wouldn't be dogmatic about it, seems to me to commumicate this best to moderns.
The problem with the popular notion of soul is how the material, the body, is degraded. The Greeks believed that the body is lesser value, perhaps even evil. Thus rather than being something to be cherished is something to escape. Purity rested in the soul apart from the body. This sort of thinking penetrated the post-biblical church very quickly with influx of non-Jewish people into the church. So even in the present day you have the poplular notion of "dieing and going to heaven"(your disembodied soul, of course).
The Bible is much different. First of all in the Bible, ALL of creation is valued..."and God looked upon what he had made and saw that it was good." Without going into detail about the evolution of biblical belief, the New Testament seems to teach a two stage afterlife for believers. The first stage, perhaps borrowing from the Greeks somewhat, is "that to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord." The second and primary stage is the resurrection of the body. The vision offered here is that of the new heaven and the new earth, uncorrupted by sin and death where there will be no more crying and pain where the resurrected person will forever live in God's presense.
There! How about that for more explanation than you were looking for...we preachers are wordy!
Don