Atonement said:
No one believe guibox... I have asked this man repeatedly to tell me what program they are using to prove this. I have ran this through three different programs, and my Greek Bible, and guibox is wrong about this Scripture.. Yes 'nephesh' does mean life and yes 'pneuma' does mean spirit but neither one is used here.. The word used is ψυχή, and that is a big difference in their meanings..
guibox, I'm calling you out (sorta speak) prove me wrong.. Again I say, what program are you using?? Share it with us here. I want to cross reference it with my programs and my Greek Bible.. This is all I ask. If I'm wrong, I'm man enough to stand here and say I'm wrong.
Nephesh definitions:
'Nephesh' has such a variety of senses that we must make a careful definition in each particular case. Meanings overlap and are used side by side. It is easy to end up with contradictory statements about 'nephesh'. Here are some of the central statements about 'nephesh':-
• it is that vital life which is shared by both humans and animals [Gen 2:19].
• it is life that is bound up with the body, blood is the vehicle of nephesh [Dt 12:23], at death it dies [Nu 23:10] draining away with the blood, with resuscitation it 'returns'; not that it has gone anywhere.
• it can denote 'the living individual themselves' [Gen 14:21], and can replace the personal pronoun to create special emphasis [Ps 42:6], God uses it of himself [Am 6:8].
• it is strongly instinctive [animal] activity; desire, vital urge, feeling, emotion, mood [Dt 14:26].
• it is feelings and emotions of a spiritual kind; grief, pain, joy, peace, love [Ezk 27:31]; its highest expression is longing for God [Ps 25:1].
The New Testament uses the Greek 'psyche' with the sense of the Hebrew 'nephesh'. Paul's writings are significant for how rarely he uses it. The Synoptics are interesting in that one third of their usage refers to life beyond death [Mt 10:28,39; 16:25-26; Mk 8:35-37; Lk 9:24; 21:19], due to the overlap of present and future in the Kingdom of God; revolutionary in terms of its Hebrew roots.
This 'nephesh' is primarily the life of the whole person in terms of strongly instinctive [animal] activity. It reflects the glory and richness of God's gift of life to him though susceptible to death. It is not an independent substance which, as many have argued, survives death. It is, as we shall see a highly complex image very easy to misinterpret.
Taken from Workshop course notes
[url="http://www.workshop.org.uk/"]http://www.workshop.org.uk/[/url]