My point has not been that all souls are living. But rather that Leviticus teaches us that all people are souls. There is a huge difference.
Well you have certainly said on at least a couple of instances that all souls are living. Now since you have changed your mind I guess. Can you show me where man is born with a dead soul?
The blood spoken of in Leviticus deals exclusively with a soul.
And yet all of the peolpe spoken of in Leviticus are already saved individuals . . . . hmmmmm . . . . that blows another hole into your theory. Why would blood be an atonement for a soul already saved. See your running into the same problem you did in James. You are trying to make a present situation into an "already done" event.
The shedding of blood is for an atonement for the soul.
I absolutely agree with that. Without blood there can be no salvation, either of the body, soul or spirit.
We are saved by the blood of Christ, the blood is the atonement for the soul. Therefore if you say you are saved then you can only be saying, at the very least, that your soul is saved.
See you are drawing conclusions again. You say this is true, so that must also be true.
Our spirits are saved the moment we believe. Our souls are then able to be saved after that. Our bodies will be saved at some point.
Salvation is about faith in the sacrificial death, burial and ressurrection of Jesus Christ.
The entirety of salvation is about those three things yes. The salvation of the spirit is soley based on faith in the sacrificial death and shed blood of Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God, Who died on my behalf a sinner.
The ressurection of Jesus has to do with the salvation of the soul.
Unfortunately Christendom has muddied the water when it comes to speaking about salvation and teaching about salvation these days.
God's words, not my opinion.
Ah but what you are doing is taking God's True words and then placing them into your "own" timeframe and context. That does make it your opinion. As soon as you lift something from context you are adding yourself into the mix. So while God's words are not your opinion how you combine them are when done improperly.
So this is not a flawed conclusion on this matter.
Actually it is quite flawed.
Your analysis of James 1:21 does not coinside with the blood of Christ atoning for the soul.
Sure it does. But now I'm getting sucked into explaining away your precepts like I said I wasn't going to do, because it wasn't going to make any difference to you. I know we have some lurkers on this thread, so for their sake I'm going to address this.
The Bible tells us that blood is necessary for the salvation of the soul. So to say otherwise makes no sense. But how does that jive with James 1:21. Well blood is applied by faith. But James tells us we can have all the faith in the world and if that does not produce works our faith is useless (dead) and will not save us.
(Just as a side not there's another hole in your theory - why is James telling saved folks that their dead faith won't save them if they are already saved . . . hmmmm)
The picture where this can be seen is in the OT sacrifice. The priest is a typical picture of the believer. By faith the priest takes the blood to the mercy seat, but what does the priest have to do before he enters the Holy of Holies? He has to stop and wash his hands and feet.
James 1:21 is talking about washing. Receiving the engrafted word - doing what you have been taught regarding Scripture is being washed with the word. Then and only then were they able to enter the Holy of Holies.
So we by faith must apply the blood, but if we don't allow ourselves to be washed by the word then it is of no effect.
The blood atonement of the soul was put into place for an already saved people. Their eternal destiny was already determined. So the atonement of their soul had to do with something post eternal salvation. And it is exactly the same for believers today.
It is our spirits that are saved at the moment we believe in the sacrificial death and shed blood. The reason being is that in order to understand the Bible (to be washed by the word) we have to be spiritually alive. We are all born spiritually dead and incapable of understanding any message other than grace through faith based on the death and shed blood of Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God.
At the moment we believe are spirits are made alive, passed from death unto life, and now we are in a position to have the Holy Spirit, that now indwells us, communicate His Truth to us Spirit to spirit. Now we can believe in the resurrection and Jesus as the High Priest. And we can understand what it means for His blood to still be on the mercy seat. And we can allow the Holy Spirit to teach us His Truth and then receive it as to be washed in the word.
So there is absolutely no conflict with James 1:21 and the blood. They work in complete harmony. These believers had the faith. They were applying the blood, they just weren't being washed by the word. They had not received the engrafted word which was able to save their souls.
The very next verse tells us they were hearers, but not doers. As such their souls were in jeopardy.
Bottom line once again is that James 1:21 says the soul is not saved yet. James is talking about a present reality not a past event. The simple language of the text must be allowed to speak if we are going to understand Scripture.