Therefore, what consensus is there for any evidence for a soul(s)? As the existence of the soul is very central to any belief or religion.
(my first post
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At no point ever does the bible say We live on beyond the grave in it. You will find those six words nowhere in the bible, they are YOUR words, not Gods. Yes Paul speaks of a resurrection, and yes he speaks (for certain) as being given spirit bodies. And yes, the bible does speak of people coming out of the "the grave" sheol; back to life (after having been dead). Jesus himself demonstrated this by resurrecting Lazarus and others, but at no point does the bible ever imply that that being DEAD one continues to be alive as in the whole person continues his conscious existence while at the same time being "in" the grave or being dead.hoghead1 wrote: [Replying to post 277 by JehovahsWitness]
What I mean is simply what the Bible has to say on the subject: We live on beyond the grave. It's that simple. Unfortunately, the Bible doesn't give much detail on what life in the hereafter will be like for us. Paul sys we'll have a superdooper body. Other passages speak of some sort of terrible torment for others. Either way, the Bible makes it clear the grave is not the end for us.
The bible never says this. You are mistaken, possibly projecting.hoghead1 wrote: Yes, correct. On one hand, we never cease to exist, as the Bible emphasizes.
So you concede that the words "we never cease to exist" and "We live on beyond the grave" are not actually to be found in the bible, they are just your intretation of what the bible says.hoghead1 wrote: [Replying to post 282 by JehovahsWitness]
Look, I have already been through all this with you. According to the Bible, even the shades in Sheol are alive, though barely. Lk. 15 and also LK. 23 also make it very clear that when you die, yes, you do live on in Paradise or in Hades. Death, in the Bible, is snot the end, it is the beginning of a whole new existence.
There is indeed a hope for the dead, but your belief is that for all intents and purposes death doesn't actually exist since the dead continue to live. This is not a bible teaching.hoghead1 wrote: Death, in the Bible, is not the end, it is the beginning of a whole new existence.
Could it be that a person dies (ceases to exist) and then (after a period of time of not existing which we will call "being DEAD" rather than being alive in a transformed state) is later recreated (resurrected) in another body whether physical (flesh and blood) or be given another kind of body (spirit body)?hoghead1 wrote: The idea I have in mind, which I see as supported by Scripture, is that we continue on in another kind of body.
Technically it does exist in scripture however the one that says it is a known liar.JehovahsWitness wrote:The bible never says this. You are mistaken, possibly projecting.hoghead1 wrote: Yes, correct. On one hand, we never cease to exist, as the Bible emphasizes.
JW
The conflicting pictures reflect problems we have in reading what is there, and in interpreting what we conclude is there.hoghead1 wrote: [Replying to JehovahsWitness]
Yes, the Bible dos give conflicting pictures of the after line. There is certainly no doubt about that. However, the Bible does have many passages that clearly claim we do live on after death. For example, the Bible, in accounts of Sheol, clearly indicate we live on, though as trembling shades, as we find in Isa. 14, for example. and elsewhere. As IU mentioned earlier, Paul seems to equate our resurrection with the end of the world. However, Christ himself, in Lk. 16 and also 23, makes it plain we go immediately to Heaven or Hell. How to reconcile Christ with Paul? Some believe that there are two judgments, a preliminary immediately when you die, then a later, more final one. I am not particularly happy with that solution. But that is another story. Either way, the point is we do survive the grave, one way or the other, whether immediately or whether we have to wait for the end of teh world.