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Soul
● Gen 2:7 . .The Lord God formed the man from the dust of the ground and
breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living
soul.
The Hebrew word translated soul isn't unique to human life. Its first
appearance is at Gen 1:20-21 in reference to aqua creatures and winged
creatures; again at Gen 1:24 as terra creatures; viz: cattle, creepy crawlies,
and wild beasts; and again in Gen 2:7 as the human creature; and yet again
at Gen 9:10 to classify every living thing aboard Noah's ark.
NOTE: I have yet to discover a passage in the Bible saying God is a soul,
however I've run across several saying He has a soul. (Lev 26:11, Lev
26:30, Judg 10:16, Isa 42:1, Jer 32:41, Zech 11:8)
Soul is somewhat ambiguous. It can be said that creatures are souls and
also that they have souls. But here in the beginning, nephesh (neh'-fesh)
simply refers to consciousness. (It's sometimes a reference to one's heart,
e.g. Gen 34:3, and to the core of one's being, e.g. Gen 27:4)
All fauna life was created conscious in the book of Genesis. However, I've
yet to discover a passage in the Bible indicating that flora life was created
conscious, viz: vegetation has no soul.
So then it's safe to say Man is a person, and it's safe to say that parakeets
and meerkats are persons (in their own way) but it would likely be unwise to
posit that turnips, saguaro cactus, and kelp are persons because it's
necessary to be a soul and/or have a soul, in order to qualify as a person.
* According to Matt 10:28, the body and the soul are perishable. However;
though the body is perishable by most any means, the soul is perishable
only by divine means. The deaths of body and soul aren't necessarily
simultaneous, viz: the soul lives on until such a time as God decides to give
it either a thumb up or a thumb down.
_