But before I do that, let me be clear that I think the physically body is very important, and I think many Christians do have a tendency to overemphasize and prioritize the soul or the spiritual above the physical as though the two were competing with each other and I don't think that's quite right. Christians absolutely should recognize the importance of physical reality. After all, we believe in the physical, bodily resurrection of Jesus. And we believe that God created this physical world, and He declared it good! So I think if Christians are to be properly concerned with issues of social justice, ecology, and gender/sexuality, we have to affirm the importance of the physical and bodily.
That being said let me offer four reasons for why I believe in a soul.
1.
Throughout history, the vast majority of people in the
world have believed in the existence of the soul. As Dean Zimmerman has pointed
out, it’s not just that Christians have historically believed in the soul, it’s
that almost everybody has. The idea that the soul or the mind is identical with
the brain is a relatively new idea. And if you asked the average person if he
or she believed in a soul, most of them would intuitively say yes. And I think
there’s something to that.
2.
It seems that if human beings are not more than physical
matter, our consciousness would be no more than our brains. But then our actions
and choices and feelings would simply be the processes of physical chemistry
and neurons firing back and forth. In essence, we would be determined by our
physical brain, genetic structure, and environmental inputs, and this would
seem to take away human freedom and responsibility. After all, I can’t think of
any purely material object that can exercise libertarian agency, so it seems
like human beings would have to be more than just a material object.
3.
Third, it’s possible for me to talk about myself in
ways in which I am not identical with my body. So for example, I had a
conversation with a friend where we were discussing the possibilities of
switching bodies, but if it’s even possible that I exist apart from my body then it must mean that I’m not identical with my body. Because if I
were identical with my body then whatever would be true of my body would also
be true of me, but that’s not the case.
4.
There are just too many Scripture passages that
point to a distinction between the soul and the body, and to an intermediate
state in which the soul survives after death. In Matthew 10:28, Jesus says, “Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.” In Luke 23:43, to the dying thief on the cross Jesus says, “Today
you will be with me in paradise.” Finally
in 1 Corinthians 12, Paul says, “I know a man in Christ
who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven. Whether it was in the body or out of the body I do not
know—God knows.” This is just to mention a very few passages of course, but
I think these passages make far more sense if they are seen through a dualistic
framework.
Faith Colloquium : A Blog about Theology, Philosophy, Church, and Culture
Philosophy of Religion, Theological Anthropology, Dualism, Substance Dualism, Anthropological Dualism, Evangelical Philosophy, Mind-Body Dualism, Alvin Plantinga, Richard Swinburne, Dean Zimmerman
Philosophy of Religion, Theological Anthropology, Dualism, Substance Dualism, Anthropological Dualism, Evangelical Philosophy, Mind-Body Dualism, Alvin Plantinga, Richard Swinburne, Dean Zimmerman
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