Chapter 1: What is the Greek perspective on the body and soul?
For the Greek anti-physical viewpoint, redemption ultimately is redemption from the body. Plato called the body the prison house of the soul. And so the highest hope for man would be the disintegration and destruction of the body so that the soul could be released to live in pure contemplation unencumbered by any influences of that which is physical.
Christianity teaches redemption of the body, that in heaven we will have glorified bodies, but we will still be creatures who are body and soul.
You and I are made in the image of God. It's why all people have dignity. But how does our body relate to the image of God? Are we suggesting that God has a body because we do, and we're made in His image? And how should we treat our bodies? You're listening to the Wednesday edition of Renewing Your Mind. I'm Nathan W. Bingham.
As we seek to answer the question, who am I, or what does it mean to be human, we must address the body and the relationship between the body and the soul. The world has gone to the extreme of thinking that through mutilating the body, they can change the answer to the question of one's identity. But many wrong views of the body and the soul have also crept into the church.
That's why this series, A Shattered Image, and R.C. Sproul's book, The Hunger for Significance, are needed today to help bring clarity. And you can request both this week when you give a donation in support of Renewing Your Mind at renewingyourmind.org. So what is the relationship between body and soul? And what is the biblical view of the body? Here's Dr. Sproul.
The last night of Jesus' life when He gathered with His friends in the upper room to celebrate the Passover, remember in the course of that discussion, Philip turned to Jesus and said, Show us the Father, and it sufficeth us. In other words, Jesus, if you'll just let us see who God is. then every yearning, every desire, every heartbeat of our lives will be satisfied. Just show us once.
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Chapter 2: How does Christianity view the redemption of the body?
Do you remember Jesus' response to that? If there was ever a time we could almost sense frustration in the words of Jesus to His friends, it's there. It's like He said, How long have I been with you and you didn't know me? He who has seen me, Jesus said, has seen the Father.
One of the most important aspects of the Christology of the New Testament is the motif that we see here and there through the Gospels and then developed more and more by the Apostle Paul of Jesus as being the new Adam. as Jesus fulfilling what it means. to be the perfect man, the perfect image of God.
Not only do we have to do with Jesus touching His deity, but the humanity of Christ shows us what the human race was supposed to be. This has restored mankind. This is the image of God in its fullest manifestation in the life and in the person of Jesus. So much so that even in his humanity, Jesus could be properly theologically correct to say, he who has seen me has seen the Father.
I don't mean to suggest that he's denying his humanity there or only speaking of his humanity there, but I'm saying that if Jesus' humanity is a perfect humanity and he is in the image of God in his fullest sense, then to look at that is to behold the glory of the Creator, because that's what an image does. It reflects. It mirrors.
Chapter 3: What does it mean to be made in the image of God?
It shows a likeness, a similitude of the original. Now I said in our last session that there is this theological dispute over whether or not the words image and likeness refer to one thing or two different things. And I said that historic Roman Catholicism is located in two aspects, and Protestantism tends to disagree, but Protestantism is still left with this difficult question.
As I mentioned earlier, are we still in the image of God, and if so, to what degree? And I went to Genesis 9 and showed that even fallen man in the days of Noah, as corrupt as the human race had become by then, is still considered creatures bearing the image of God.
So, historic Protestantism has made a distinction, we always make distinctions in theology, between the image of God in the narrow sense and the image of God in the wider sense. Some make this a distinction between the image in the formal sense and the image in the material sense, but those are words meaning basically the same thing.
To be the image of God in the wider sense simply means that after we have fallen, after sin has had its influence upon us, that we still retain our humanness. Your mind has been affected by sin. Your body has been affected by sin. We age. We grow ill. We die. Our faculties have been weakened.
We become addicted and enslaved by certain passions in a sense of bondage where we were made with a kind of volitional freedom originally that was not affected before the fall and so on. We still have those faculties, however. We can still think. We can still choose. We still have bodies. We're still alive. We're still human. With the loss of our innocence, we have not lost our humanity.
But what has been lost is what the theologians call conformitas. We have lost obedience. And as disobedient creatures,
we have besmirched and fogged the mirror that was made to reflect the holiness of God, so that now when the animals and the rest of nature looks at us, those of us who are still thinking, breathing, feeling images of God, they see people whose behavior does not conform to the character of God. And that's what has been lost. And that's what we call, in simplest terms, sin.
And that's what I'm going to deal with in the second half of this series is what this loss of conformity means. How seriously have we been affected by the fall? How deep does the sinful corruption of our humanity penetrate? We're going to look at that. But now I want to touch on one other thing and expand on it from what we talked about in our last session.
I just mentioned in passing that the Mormons believe that God has a physical body. In fact, in some of the crasser views of it, they believe that Jesus was born out of a result of a sexual union between God and Mary, a physical union.
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Chapter 4: How do modern views distort the relationship between body and soul?
And the argument being, as I say, that since we're made in the image of God and we're physical, that must mean that God is physical.
Now over against that idea, historic Christianity, Catholic and Protestant alike, has insisted that God does not have a body, that God is a spirit, and so we must locate for the most part those aspects that distinguish us as being in the image of God as a resemblance to God in terms of His spiritual qualities. Again, God can reflect, He can think, He can choose.
God is a moral being, and we are moral beings. God is an intelligent being, we are intelligent beings. God is a volitional being, we are volitional beings. However, as important as those non-physical dimensions are to our understanding of what it means to be in the image of God,
we would be platonic rather than Hebrew to assume that our bodies have nothing whatsoever to do with being made in the image of God. Because when God made us human, He didn't just make disembodied souls. He didn't just set loose some minds or wills or feelings, but He made creatures and fashioned them with bodies.
And if we look carefully at the biblical understanding of man from Genesis to Revelation, we see that the whole drama of redemption is not concerned in isolation simply with the soul. If you say the Apostles' Creed, for example, in your church, you know that there's a statement in the Apostles' Creed that goes like this, I believe in the resurrection of the body.
How many of you have that in your creeds? The old phrase was resurrectionis carnis. I believe in the resurrection of the body. That does not mean that we are saying I believe in the resurrection of the body of Jesus. That's also in the creed.
I mean, the church does believe in the physical resurrection of Jesus, but what that phrase, I believe in the resurrection of the body, points to is the church's confession that we believe that our bodies will be raised.
In other words, at the heart of Judeo-Christian theology is a notion that when God creates man, He creates him soul and body, and when He redeems man, He redeems him soul and body. There's a tremendous amount of literature in the Bible that is devoted to concerns to man's physical welfare.
Now I stress that because there's been enormous influence in the history of Christianity where alien strands of thought have invaded the church and have tried to communicate the idea that there's something evil about anything physical. and that it's somehow beneath the dignity of God or of Christian religion to be concerned about man's material welfare.
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Chapter 5: What is the biblical understanding of the body and soul relationship?
We do the works of obedience with our bodies as well as our souls. So in that dimension, the body is an integral part of what it means to be in the image of God. Now, what happens historically so often is that the physical suffers a severe devaluation among religious people.
One of the most ancient of heresies, which antedated Christianity, of course, came in through Manichaeism and through various forms of Oriental thought, Oriental dualism, and even Plato, Plato's concept of the Greeks. Plato, for example, developed a philosophy called the theory of ideas. is subsequently called an idealist.
And if you want to really get a sexedrin headache, Plato is also called a realist. That's really strange to our ears because in this day and age, we distinguish between idealists and realists, right? We say a realist is a person who doesn't have his head in the clouds. He's not entertaining fantasies or visions of grandeur, but he sees things the way they are. He's honest appraisal.
He's a realist. Whereas the idealist, he has these lovely, grandiose visions of what life can be, and it sort of looks at life through rose-colored glasses. But when we're talking in philosophy, we're not using those terms that way. Plato is called an idealist for this reason.
He's called an idealist because Plato believed that the highest order of reality is not physical, but here's the word, ideal. That is, ideas. The perfect man is found in the perfect idea of man. and that any specific human being is merely a cheap imitation of the perfect idea of God. There's a lot of heavy ideas in that context. I'm going to just walk over here.
I'm going to walk right out of the camera here for a second. Here's a chair. Is that a chair? Ma'am, do you recognize that as a chair? Would you stand up and let me see your chair for a second? Would you donate that for this cause here? Can you do that for just a second, please? If you don't mind sitting in your husband's lap or whoever, so you can let the camera take a look at these, thank you.
We have two objects up here, both of which this dear friend here has identified by a single word, chair. Now, can you see the difference between these objects? I mean, we see similarities. They have four legs. This one's metal. Listen to the sound of it. This is padded and wooden, beautiful, ornate, and yet they're both identified as chairs.
Now, how is it, in spite of the differences, that somebody could look at these two objects and use the same word for both of them? Well, Plato said that's because everybody has in their mind the perfect idea of chairness. This woman came to this lecture tonight with an eternal understanding of perfect chairness.
And so when I asked her to identify this, she could see the approximation of this imperfect copy of the ideal chair and put it in that category. She saw this as even more imperfect of the ideal chair because the ideal chair obviously is nicer than this. Right now, this is coming close to the ideal. You can have that.
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