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Sorry Bob, I meant #249BobRyan said:This is post 247
Are you asking me to respond to "my own post"???
Post the link to the post you want me to answer .
in Christ,
Bob
http://www.baptistboard.com/showpost.php?p=1019124&postcount=249More doctrinal error. Sleep, when connected to death, always refers to the physcial body and never the soul.But we do find that the person is in a sleeping state during the first death - where the person's body is dust and the soul is dormant or the spirit has gone back to God who gave it - it is in a dormant state waiting to be once again united to a body.--Bob
1Cor. 11:30--"and many of you sleep." Many of them were dead--physically dead. That was God's judgement upon them. God did not send their souls to purgatory as Bob would have us to believe. He reads into Scripture things that are not there. There is no mention of purgatory, just as there is no mention of soul sleep. We must take the Scripture at face value. It says sleep--physical, death, just as the other judgements were physical: weakly, sick--These do not involve the soul but only the body. "Some of you sleep." Some of you are dead; not the soul, but the body.
John 11--Jesus said Lazarus is dead. Jesus said Lazarus sleeps. He said both. He did not say a word about his soul. He was speaking of his physcial death. Sleep means physical death. Martha knew he was speaking of physical death when she replied "I know that he (his body) shall rise again in the last day." It wasn't his soul she was referring to, but his body. Lazarus slept. He was dead physically. That is what the term sleep refers to.
Now consider what it means in 1Cor.15:
1 Corinthians 15:51-54 Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
52 In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.
53 For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.
54 So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory.
This entire passage is speaking of the resurrection. But the resurrection always refers to the body (not the soul), unless you don't believe in the resurrection, like the J.W.'s and simply call it a "spirit resurrection." Was it a bodily resurrection or a spirit resurrection that happened with Jesus? There is no such thing as a "spirit resurrection." The concept doesn't even make sense. It is a plain denial of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
But here it refers to our resurrection, and our resurrection bodies. We shall all be changed. What will the change be? The change will be in our bodies, of course. Our spirits are already alive, living, and immortal. At the last trump the dead (bodies) shall be raised and mortality shall put on immortality. Our immortal spirit will final receive its immortal body, which was before that time mortal. That mortal body will now become immortal as our spirit. We are immortal beings, only now clothed in an earthly mortal body (see 2Cor.5:1-8).
The resurrection always refers to the body. It never refers to the soul or spirit.
Quote:
Originally Posted by BobRyan
There is no text saying we have an immortal soul or spirit -- and I think we all agree.
DHK said
No we don't all agree. Most of us agree that you fail to believe the Bible on this point. Christ promises us eternal life, not eternal, and then lose eternal by putting us into a dormant state, and then once again give us eternal life. What foolishness is this! What a denial of Scripture is this! It denies the very words of Christ "eternal life," and makes Christ a liar, saying that he gives us only temporary life and not eternal. Eternal means forever and ever, not just temporary. I suggest you look the word up in the dictionary.
Bob said -- Quote:
But we do find that the person is in a sleeping state during the first death - where the person's body is dust and the soul is dormant or the spirit has gone back to God who gave it - it is in a dormant state waiting to be once again united to a body.--Bob
DHK said
More doctrinal error. Sleep, when connected to death, always refers to the physcial body and never the soul.
DHK said
1Cor. 11:30--"and many of you sleep." Many of them were dead--physically dead. That was God's judgement upon them.
God did not send their souls to purgatory as Bob would have us to believe. He reads into Scripture things that are not there.
There is no mention of purgatory, just as there is no mention of soul sleep. We must take the Scripture at face value. It says sleep--physical, death, just as the other judgements were physical: weakly, sick--These do not involve the soul but only the body. "Some of you sleep." Some of you are dead; not the soul, but the body.
DHK said
John 11--Jesus said Lazarus is dead.
Jesus said Lazarus sleeps. He said both.
Now consider what it means in 1Cor.15:
1 Corinthians 15:51-54 Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
52 In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.
53 For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.
54 So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory.
This entire passage is speaking of the resurrection.
Yes, it was his body that was dead. The spirit never dies. The people were gathered around a tomb, where a body, wrapped in grave clothes was lain. The body was there. Jesus referred to the body as sleeping. He referred to the body as dead. Read the Scripture in its context.BobRyan said:John 11 Christ said "LAZARUs sleeps I go that I may wake HIM".
You are playing a game of semantics and losing it. The body of Lazarus lay in the grave. The spirit never dies. If the spirit died; then there would be no salvation, and God would be dead. Would God be able to wake himself from an unconscious soul sleep? The spirit of Christ never died. Neither does the spirit of man. We are immortal creatures. We are made as spirit beings, clothed now with temporal houses awaiting our celestial houses (bodies). Jesus referred to the body of Lazarus, not his spirit. His body was dead--sleeping. Jesus went to waken it--the body. He didn't have to waken a spirit that was already alive.Jesus does not say "Lazarus DOES NOT sleep just his body does -- I go that I may wake IT".
You are very confused. Jesus spoke of the body of Lazarus when it was in the grave. He went to raise him from the dead. It was his body, now decaying (as Martha said). "Lord, it stinketh." It was not a soul or the spirit that was giving off foul airs, but rather the decaying rot from the body of Lazarus. Jesus revived that body from the dead. He gave it life. He awoke it. It has nothing to do with the soul or spirit. You cannot wake someithing already alive and awake. The spirit was not dead and/or sleeping. Sleep = death. Lazarus is sleeping. Lazarus is dead. Christ makes both statements. If both statements were also applied to Christ, then today God would be dead, according to SDA theology. But they don't think their theology through.Jesus consistently speaks of Lazarus THE PERSON never "IT" the body of Lazarus - and THAT is always how the SOUL is stated in scripture.
Lazarus' body sleeps = Lazarus's body is dead. That is what Christ said.Again - devastating to your own argument since this is not "Lazarus' BODY sleeps but Lazarus remains even MORE awake then before".
You pretend to be quite the psychologist reading into the minds of Mary and Martha. How do you know what they were thinking? Did you ask them? That must have been quite a trick! Neither Jesus, Mary, or Martha said "Lazarus the person" is dead. You are putting words into the Scripture, adding your words. Lazarus was dead. What does the body say about that:In all cases with both Jesus AND Mary AND Martha it is "Lazarus the PERSON" that has died that is to be raised etc. They NEVER say "I know that HIS BODY will be raised some day but HE is now awake and alive and NOT dead".
No probllem. There are some beliefs that are similar especially when you take away the man-made doctrines such as purgatory. We agree that when a person dies his spirit lives on for eternity. I believe that now and was taught that as a Catholic as well. SDA's on the other hand believe that the "soul" sleeps in a state of unconsciousness until the resurrection.Briony-Gloriana said:Uh thank you DHK....I was going to say the body may be dead but the soul is immortal and therefore is seperate from the physical matter.....I do not know what the SDA believe here as unfortunately the writings of Bob are like a stun grenade......way too long for this blond butterfly:tonofbricks:
Briony-Gloriana said:Uh thank you DHK....I was going to say the body may be dead but the soul is immortal and therefore is seperate from the physical matter.....I do not know what the SDA believe here as unfortunately the writings of Bob are like a stun grenade......way too long for this blond butterfly:tonofbricks:
Yes, IT was his body that was dead.
The body of Lazarus lay in the grave. The spirit never dies.
...
Yes, it was his body that was dead. The spirit never dies.
DHK adds
The people were gathered around a tomb, where a body, wrapped in grave clothes was lain.
Quote:
DHK said
More doctrinal error. Sleep, when connected to death, always refers to the physcial body and never the soul.
Lazarus is sleeping. Lazarus is dead. Christ makes both statements. If both statements were also applied to Christ, then today God would be dead, according to SDA theology. But they don't think their theology through.
You pretend to be quite the psychologist reading into the minds of Mary and Martha. How do you know what they were thinking?
DHK
IT was his body, now decaying (as Martha said). "Lord, it stinketh." IT was not a soul or the spirit that was giving off foul airs, but rather the decaying rot from the body
Quote:
DHK said
No we don't all agree. Most of us agree that you fail to believe the Bible on this point. Christ promises us eternal life, not eternal, and then lose eternal by putting us into a dormant state, and then once again give us eternal life. What foolishness is this! What a denial of Scripture is this! It denies the very words of Christ "eternal life," and makes Christ a liar, saying that he gives us only temporary life and not eternal. Eternal means forever and ever, not just temporary. I suggest you look the word up in the dictionary.
DHK said:Bob your emphasis on personal pronouns, just to defend your position is ridiculous,
and any reader can see that. Some of my relatives have died and are dead. I myself have conducted funerals of others. When referring to the deceased, the one lying in the coffin at the front, I refer to him by name. Personal pronouns are always used. I never refer to the body as "it."
I don't know of any person who doesn't refer to their loved one who has passed away as "it."
You mean you can't help your own theology except to further defeat yourself. No one calls their deceased loved ones with impersonal pronouns such as "it." Almost all of them are referring to the body in the grave at the funeral. When referring to the person in heaven they are referring to the spirit, which is eternal. You are the loner on this one, and your theology is greatly flawed. In the above posts you have defeated your own logic.BobRyan said:How can you use that as an argument against MY SUPPORT of that Bible view??? You are simply exposing the weakness in your OWN argument sir and then "blaming it on me". I really can't help you there.
in Christ,
Bob