Derf,Hi Clete. I'm probably on ignore, so you might not see this, but I wanted to address it anyway. And normally I would go through it comment-by-comment--maybe I still will. But I think it's better that I explain again why I'm doing this thread. My transition to Open Theism brought me to this site. OT was an eye opener for me, that told me I had been fed a Christian mythology, of sorts, that was based more on people's preconceived notions about God than about what He was actually telling us in His word. I've been called a heretic for that transition, and it's somewhat freeing, I must say. This topic, about what death really means in scripture, is possibly a side issue. My position on it is not unique in Christian thought, or at least most is not. Maybe my wording is different. I think it would fit within the "pale of orthodoxy".
I'm not asking everyone to agree with me. In fact, I appreciate the comments, because it helps me think through it better to see if I'm off track. Your comments help me to see that I'm not expressing myself very well, so I hope, with your help, I can do better.
I apologize for my contentiousness. I definitely have a temper, and it shows sometimes. And I can be, um, caustic in my responses. I will try to tone that down, whether you return to the thread or not.
What I'm hoping to get some of my readers to do, if possible, is to clear out the pre-programming of how the Christian mythology describes death, and see if God actually describes something else in His Word. Perhaps we'll all just end up back with the same story, in which case, we will have learned to defend it better. But perhaps we will end up seeing a clearer picture of what God did for us in sacrificing His son to save us from death. I think that's possible, and if so, it should be attempted.
It's definitely talking about Adam's body...because that's all he was at the time. But if that was "Adam", then what is Adam when God's breath of life leaves him? Gen 3 tells us he went back to being dust:
[Gen 3:19 KJV] In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou [art], and unto dust shalt thou return.
I would suggest to you that it doesn't make sense BECAUSE you are only looking at it from your point of view. Maybe you can't do anything else, but try to see it from the POV I'm suggesting.
You missed some of this conversation with way2go, perhaps, but the phrase "IN THE DAY" doesn't mean the same thing as "on the day". Even in our vernacular, we don't use "in the day" to mean "within a single 24 hour period." For instance we say "back in the day", and mean during a past period of time that was longer than 24 hours. Genesis uses the same phrase "in the day" to mean "in six 24 hour periods" in the SAME chapter where God tells Adam he will die in the day he eats of the tree.
[Gen 2:4 KJV] These [are] the generations of the heavens and of the earth when they were created, in the day that the LORD God made the earth and the heavens,
Paul talks about death as being absent from the body, but there are actually 3 states of man that are expressed in this chapter.
1. At home in the body (alive in our physical bodies)
2. Naked/absent from the body (a condition we don't desire)
3. Alive in our eternal bodies
[2Co 5:1 KJV] For we know that if our earthly house of [this] tabernacle (#1) were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens (#3).
[2Co 5:2 KJV] For in this (#1) we groan, earnestly desiring to be clothed upon with our house which is from heaven (#3):
[2Co 5:3 KJV] If so be that being clothed (#3) we shall not be found naked (#2).
[2Co 5:4 KJV] For we that are in [this] tabernacle(#1) do groan, being burdened: not for that we would be unclothed (#2), but clothed upon (#3), that mortality might be swallowed up of life (#3).
[2Co 5:5 KJV] Now he that hath wrought us for the selfsame thing (#3) [is] God, who also hath given unto us the earnest of the Spirit.
[2Co 5:6 KJV] Therefore [we are] always confident, knowing that, whilst we are at home in the body (#1), we are absent from the Lord:
[2Co 5:7 KJV] (For we walk by faith, not by sight
[2Co 5:8 KJV] We are confident, [I say], and willing rather to be absent from the body (#2), and to be present with the Lord (#3).
[2Co 5:9 KJV] Wherefore we labour, that, whether present (#1--present in our earthly bodies) or absent (#2), we may be accepted of him. (in other words, whether we are alive or dead when Christ comes)
Why do we need to be accepted of Him?
[2Co 5:10 KJV] For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things [done] in [his] body, according to that he hath done, whether [it be] good or bad.
So, in vs 6, Paul is saying that we are willing to become absent from the body (naked) through persecution or trials, for instance, rather than remain alive in our physical bodies by denying Christ or in disobedience to Him. What it definitely is NOT saying, despite most Christians believing such, is that "absent from the body" EQUALS "present with the Lord". Maybe you could make that case from some other scripture, but not this one.
I'm actually trying to establish the equivalence. Calling it "conflating" is begging the question.
This is the key to the whole gospel! Resurrection is how we will go from being absent from our bodies to being present with the Lord. And I will admit that "nothing survives your death" is a poor wording on my part. Obviously something survives if we are resurrected. But if the body that dies is essentially the whole person (there's no spirit or soul remaining somewhere), then it's like nothing survives death. What I think is happening is that God remembers us and resurrects our decomposed bodies and gives us back our memories and personalities, etc. But I admit to a lack of understanding about how this works.
I propose that Paul means that we are all "dead" in that we will all die. Without the law, we think there's nothing wrong, but the commandments/law tell us the truth that we will die (because of sin). So we are made alive (right now) together with Him (remember how He was made alive by resurrection) in the hope of our own resurrection, because our trespasses have been forgiven.
We are crucified with Christ, dying the death required by the law, so that we will live forever--BY FAITH, meaning something that we haven't attained yet but are hoping for.
In the following passages, please note that they are all talking about something that is happening in our resurrected state. It doesn't say these things about our spirits, but about our bodies in which our spirits dwell (I've added my comments in red to your text):
Do you see what I mean? You're giving verse about resurrection and using them to say we don't ever fully die.
I know you do care, Clete, and that's why you end conversations like this.
Hopefully not forever.
Derf
I really am super short on time and, with my main computer down for the count, I'm going to intentionally respond with an extremely short response to your post as a whole rather than my usual point for point response....
My impression is that you can see intuitively how II Corinthians 5:6 undermines your position and have to strain to find some interpretation of not only that verse but every other problem text that anyone throws at you that clearly teaches that we do, in fact, survive our physical death. I also have noticed that you made no effort to answer my question about whether you believe that Jesus ceased to exist for three days and that the Creator recreated Himself in order rise from the dead.
In short, I see a whole lot of what I like to call theological hoop jumping in order to preserve the unfounded notion that we do not survive our physical death. You want me to see it from your point of view but have given me no reason to think that there any good cause to do so. Why not simply read the text and take it to mean what it seems to mean?
Clete