You have only misinterpreted NT verses to support this claim.
"...though he were dead, yet shall he live." - Jesus
Not "spiritual" but "literal" death, contextually by the entire reason of their conversation: a 4 day dead dude.
Look, my point is impossible to miss, yet you've somehow managed to...please try and focus, OK?
Solomon says the guy "that not hath been" is to be praised more than the guy who yet lives or the guy who's passed - away because "he hath not seen the evil" of this world.
QUESTION:
Why the flip would Solomon say those who've never existed are better off than those who've died and presumably are "present with the Lord"?
ANSWER:
Because dead saints are not yet "present with the Lord" - they're naked/unclothed in the grave waiting for a resurrection body - which is why Paul said he'd rather be absent from the body and "clothed upon" with his resurrection body so he could be "present with the Lord" and skip the "naked/unclothed" part.
Jesuit Preterists have zero in common with me. The pope, however, would be confused as to why you guys aren't catholic.
Genesis 2:7 KJV defines a living Soul as the result of the union of the Body and the Breath of Life. It's not reasonable to argue that this living Soul continues to exist at the disunion of the two.
Now, what doesn't exist is a Scripture that says soul continues to exist when it soul dies. That's paganism.
His humanity ceased to exist - His divinity continued to exist as it's always existed, from everlasting to everlasting.
That's a false equivalence.
The opposite of "life" is "death" aka "no life". It's a shame I have to argue with such "intelligent people" that death is the opposite of life, not the continuation thereof.
Do you read the Bible with your eyes open?
Paul plainly says there is the "earthly house" and the "eternal house not made with hands" aka "immortal body".
The Bible declares the "Soul" is a "whole" comprised of its parts: Body and Breath of Life. You're claim that 1 Thessalonians 5:23 KJV refers to "three parts" denies this.
Sadly, the first casualties of the war on truth is always textual harmony/consistency.
My point exactly!
Spirits don't go to sheol - they "return to God Who gave it".
No texts teach that.
They absolutely cease to exist when the union of the Body and the Breath of Life is broken - because they come into existence at the union of the Body and Breath of Life (Genesis 2:7 KJV).
Saying "a soul leaves the body" is like saying "the car leaves the engine" or "
Moses was definitely in heaven with his immortal body along with Elijah and Enoch - the rest of us get our immortal bodies resurrection morning.
Yes
Going back to Adam and Eve and David, who's still waiting in his grave.
Let's be clear: "Some of you will not taste death UNTIL you see the Lord in glory" referred to Peter, James, and John in the Mount where they SAW the Lord Jesus glorified.
Claiming the dead know nothing is not a denial of the "born again" experience. Your problem is you keep misapplying verses which speak of "spiritual death" and "literal death".
How can one misinterpret: "It is finished"?
Death was defeated, but not removed from those in Adam's dead corruptible flesh.
The OT Covenant was fulfilled. The veil of the Temple removed. God no longer came once a year to the Holy of Holies, but each person was their own priest acting under the power of the Holy Spirit and the second birth.
So explain why death itself had no more power over those souls slain by God under the alter? They were covered by the Lamb of God. They were now in heavenly places as symbolized under that heavenly alter. They had a physical body in Paradise, because death had been swallowed up in life.
The soul dying means it is physically dead, no body, and spiritually dead, no spirit. But a literal dead soul is as pointless as calling the soul something the body has.
You keep saying if the body dies, the soul ceases to exist. No, that is the point the soul is physically dead, without a body. The body does not continue on, but ceases to exist as it turns to dust. The soul is you, and you will either suffer in sheol, or experience Paradise with a physical body. The only reason why the body does not enter sheol is because it returns to dust. It is pagan to preserve a body and hang on to that death. There is nothing pagan about a soul always existing.
This body is not changed, but literally destroyed back into the molecules of creation. Genesis 2:7 does not state the soul ceases to exist if the body is taken away by God. That is your personal imagination forced into the text.
No such thing as an immortal body. You cannot find that in Scripture, but pull that out of the same pagan imagination that told you the soul stops existing.
"But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God."
Luke 9 covers the mount of Transfiguration, but that is not how all accounts portray it. Yes, 3 disciples saw what it means to have the spirit as a covering over the body. So seeing the kingdom of God was showing them proof they would not taste death. You said until they see His glory. No the verse says until they see the kingdom of God. What part of the kingdom of God did they see on the mount of Transfiguration?
"Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom."
Matthew 16:27-28
“For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man according to his works.”
This was not about the mount of Transfiguration, even though it was within the same time frame of Luke, after the feeding of the 5,000. This may have applied to John and his being taken in the Spirit to the literal Day of the Lord, including the Second Coming. Yet John was allegedly boiled in hot oil, thus tasting death prior to being on Patmos. This verse claims some would not taste death until the Second Coming. That has not happened yet. Can you point to someone still alive today, who has not physically died?
"Then said the Jews unto him, Now we know that thou hast a devil. Abraham is dead, and the prophets; and thou sayest, If a man keep my saying, he shall never taste of death."
John 8:51-52
“Verily, verily, I say unto you, If a man keep my saying, he shall never see death.”
How can you spin this to mean the mount of Transfiguration? Jesus clearly explains that tasting death, is seeing death, and those who are born from above will never see death. Are you going to accuse these Jews of twisting Jesus' words? The chapter is Jesus going back and forth with the learned Jews what He was all about. Why do you seem to be on their side instead of seeing that those born from above of the heavenly kingdom of God will not see, nor taste death, period? Do you not think they could quote Solomon and Job just as easily as you can?
"And he said unto them, Verily I say unto you, That there be some of them that stand here, which shall not taste of death, till they have seen the kingdom of God come with power.
Mark 8:38
“Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”
While covering the same territory as Luke, Jesus still ties the thought in with the Second Coming. Then Jesus proceeded to show 3 disciples what they should expect at the Second Coming. Part of what to expect is never tasting death, because of the second birth.
None of these verses give one hint that the soul ever ceases to exist.