The Bible is not perfectly clear as to the
nature of the human soul. But from studying the way the word soul is
used in Scripture, we can come to some conclusions. (1) Simply stated, the human
soul is the part of a person that is not physical. (2) It is the part of every
human being that lasts eternally after the body experiences death. Genesis
35:18. describes the death of Rachel, Jacob’s wife, saying she named her son
“as her soul was departing.” From this we know that the soul is different from
the body and that it continues to live after physical death.
The human soul is central to the personhood of
a human being. As George MacDonald said, “You don’t have a soul. You are a
Soul. You have a body.” In other words, personhood is not based on having a
body. A soul is what is required. Repeatedly in the Bible, people are referred
to as “souls” Exodus 31:14, Proverbs 11:30, especially in contexts that focus
on the value of human life and personhood or on the concept of a “whole being”
(Psalm 16:9-10, Ezekiel 18:4, Acts 2:41, Revelation 18:13.
The human soul is
distinct from the heart Deuteronomy 26:16, 30:6 and the spirit Thessalonians
5:23, Hebrews 4:12 and the mind (Matthew 22:37, Mark 12:30, Luke 10:27. The
human soul is created by God Jeremiah 38:16. It can be strong or unsteady (2 Peter
2:14); it can be lost or saved (James 1:21, Ezekiel 18:4. We know that the
human soul needs atonement (Leviticus 17:11) and is the part of us that is
purified and protected by the truth and the work of the Holy Spirit (1 Peter
1:22). Jesus is the great Shepherd of souls (1 Peter 2:25).
Matthew 11:29 tells us that we can turn to
Jesus Christ to find rest for our souls. Psalm 16:9-10 is a Messianic psalm
that allows us to see that Jesus also had a soul. David wrote, “Therefore my
heart is glad, and my whole being rejoices; my flesh also dwells secure. For
you will not abandon my soul to Sheol, or let your holy one see corruption.”
This cannot be speaking of David (as Paul points out in Acts 13:35-37 because
David’s body did see corruption and decay when he died. But Jesus Christ’s body
never saw corruption (He was resurrected), and His soul was not abandoned to
Sheol. Jesus, as the Son of Man, has a soul.
There is often confusion about the human spirit
vs. the human soul. In places, Scripture seems to use the terms
interchangeably, but there might be a subtle difference. Otherwise, how could
the Word of God penetrate “even to dividing soul and spirit” (Hebrews 4:12)?
When the Bible talks about man’s spirit, it is usually speaking of an inner
force which animates a person in one direction or another. It is repeatedly
shown as a mover, a dynamic force (e.g., Numbers 14:24).
It has been said that there are only two things
that last: the Word of God (Mark 13:3) and the souls of men. This is because,
like God’s Word, the soul is an imperishable thing. That thought should be both
sobering and awe-inspiring. Every person you meet is an eternal soul. Every
human being who has ever lived is a soul, and all of those souls are still in
existence somewhere. The question is, where? The souls that reject God’s love
are condemned to pay for their own sin, eternally, in hell (Romans 6:23). But
the souls who acknowledge their own sinfulness and accept God’s gracious gift
of forgiveness will live forever beside still waters with their Shepherd,
wanting for nothing (Psalm 23:2).
Thank you Got Questions here. I recommend them for any Bible related questions.
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