The Archeology of the Kingdom of God: Diving a Bit Deeper into a Baha'i Approach to Metaphysics

Well, I shouldn't imply he has abandoned Pauline Christianity completely. It's just not a full-fledged version. The same goes for any modern Catholic saying the ascension was only figurative or that Christ physically ascended and dissolved into another dimension.
Almighty G-d knows best where ALL the deceased reside .. It is not a case of "full-fledged version",
imo.
The same goes for evidence of evolution .. it is not a case of "either/or".

Is there just "one version" of Bahai, in this regard? Do all Bahai's either endorse evolution
or deny it?
 
Almighty G-d knows best where ALL the deceased reside .. It is not a case of "full-fledged version",
imo.
The same goes for evidence of evolution .. it is not a case of "either/or".

Is there just "one version" of Bahai, in this regard? Do all Bahai's either endorse evolution
or deny it?

Oh, normally I would not say something like that. But these Catholics keep saying many distort or manipulate their scripture, so I am all but delighted to point out when they distort their own scripture.
 
And Baha'i say our guys say your guys are all saying the same thing.

I disagree. Baha'i theology is a relational theology.

I wouldn't say that Baha'is say our guys say your guys are all saying the same thing. For example, I believe Paul believes in astral immortality: the pneumatic body will ascend to the stars. Baha'i scripture doesn't say that.

In fact, our guys and your guys can say different things. That's because these guys are speaking to different audiences in different time periods. This is a crucial point.

Baha'u'llah states the revelation is given in accordance with the capacity and understanding of the recipient, not according to the infinite nature of the divine. This suggests that the divine revelation is not a static, unchanging truth, but rather a dynamic process that adapts to the evolving consciousness of humanity. He said:

O Son of Beauty!
By My spirit and by My favor! By My mercy and by My beauty! All that I have revealed unto thee with the tongue of power, and have written for thee with the pen of might, hath been in accordance with thy capacity and understanding, not with My state and the melody of My voice.


The analogy of the water by Abdu'l-Baha emphasizes the idea that while God is infinite, God's manifestations in the world are tailored to the specific needs and capacities of each person.

O handmaid of God! Although the reality of Divinity is sanctified and boundless, the aims and needs of the creatures are restricted. God’s grace is like the rain that cometh down from heaven: the water is not bounded by the limitations of form, yet on whatever place it poureth down, it taketh on limitations—dimensions, appearance, shape—according to the characteristics of that place. In a square pool, the water, previously unconfined, becometh a square; in a six-sided pool it becometh a hexagon, in an eight-sided pool an octagon, and so forth. The rain itself hath no geometry, no limits, no form, but it taketh on one form or another, according to the restrictions of its vessel. In the same way, the Holy Essence of the Lord God is boundless, immeasurable, but His graces and splendors become finite in the creatures, because of their limitations, wherefore the prayers of given persons will receive favorable answers in certain cases.

There is a gap between our experiences and our ability to articulate them. The concept of indwelling spirit is a perfect example. Dr. Davudi's statement below further supports this idea, highlighting the inherent limitations in expressing spiritual experiences using physical language. In my opinion Dr. Davudi, a Baha'i, articulated what is called in the philosophy of mind "phenomenal consciousness overflows access consciousness" - which means "our experience (phenomenal consciousness, what it is like to be us) outstrips in complexity our ability to express it (the parts of our consciousness we can express" (to quote Erik Hoel). Dr. Davudi said:

"Note that even in divine revelation, the use of spirit is associated with the concept of 'breathing into' the physical frame. This indicates that from the outset the explanation of a spiritual phenomenon appearing in a physical body had to be expressed in sensible and material terms comprehensible and imaginable by the believers . . ."

We can recognize that our words may not fully capture the depth and complexity of our experiences, and that there is always more to be understood.
 
Last edited:
Resurrected "in the flesh" or not, it does not significantly change the cosmological outlook of ancient Christians in regard to "up" really meaning up.
No, and 'up' continues to mean 'up' in that sense.

People talk of people dying being 'taken up', etc. And of feeling 'down'.

Same as 'light' and 'dark' having broad figurative meanings.

We saw earlier that not only was Origen influenced by Platonic philosophy ...
It's a general rule of thumb that nigh-on all the Fathers were influenced by Platonism – it was the prevalent philosophy of the day.

but Paul was too.
Well Paula Fredriksen would debate that as a matter of degree.

As noted earlier, we see multiple heavens in his Platonic cosmology (2 Cor. 12.2–4).
I think the assumption it's a Platonic cosmology is probably mistaken – more likely, as PF would argue, its derived from Jewish mystical speculation. The Books of Enoch, for example ...

The Fathers taught, from the apostles, of three heavens – the first being our planetary atmosphere, the second being outer space, and the third beyond that.

He believes "we were enslaved by the elements of the cosmos” when we were children (Gal 4.3).
OK ... here you pick on a much-debated phrase in Scripture and one in which there is no scholarly concensus.

This enslavement to the elements of the cosmos is similar to what you would find in Plutarch or Philo - both thinkers strongly influenced by Greek thought.
You might think so ... I reserve judgement.

One of the most discussed, and most disputed, phrases in Galatians is the expression τὰ στοιχεῖα τοῦ κόσμου. Although there is universal agreement on the rather obvious fact that for Paul the general meaning of στοιχεῖα is negative and that freedom from enslavement to them has occurred through the work of Christ, scholarship on the specifc meaning of the term is marked by a complete lack of consensus.

You'd have to argue your source of that assertion.

For example, whereas Schmithals pronounced ‘[n]owadays it may be acknowledged as proved that in the τὰ στοιχεῖα τοῦ κόσμου we have to do with personal angelic powers’ ...

Delling declared, ‘to speak of spiritual forces [as the referent for the phrase] is a forced solution which conflicts with the linguistic findings and is hardly in accord with the context.’

Dunn: The long-running dispute over the precise meaning of the phrase (ta stoicheia tou kosmou) … is another example of either-or exegesis … Does it denote ‘the elemental substances’ … or ‘the elemental forms’ of religion … or ‘the heavenly bodies, the stars’ understood as divine powers which influence or determine human destiny … The answer probably ‘All three!’ Or more precisely, that Paul did not have such
distinction in mind.

His use of terms like "powers" (exousia), "principalities" (archai), and "rulers of this age" (kosmokratores) in 1 Corinthians 15 echoes Platonic concepts of cosmic hierarchies and the influence of evil forces.
OK, but then the echoes are older than that, as such goes right back into Greek philosophy ... and once again, we cannot simply remove Paul from the Jewish mystical speculation of his day.

Strangely, according to a follower of Paul, these evil forces can inhabit the air, which is the sublunar realm (Ephesians 2.2, 6.11). Other early Christians echo this as well. Athenagoras of Athens, for example, said fallen angels "haunt the air and the earth." Christ inhabits a realm higher up, not another dimension. Paul's clear about that: "For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor archons nor powers … nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." (Rom. 8:39) Here "height" and "depth" refer to the heights and depths of different layers of the cosmos.
Here, again, I would suggest you're being too overtly literal in your reading.

And, I think you simply do not believe in spirits? Paul and he age did, very much so ... and who's to say they were wrong?

Christ, in John, speaks of His being 'not from this world (cosmos)' – now whether you interpret that to mean He is of another world, another world (some distance away from this one), another dimension, a parallel universe ... is really to get tied up in finger-and-the-moon semantics. I'd say He is from a metacosmic order, or rather, 'worlds' doesn't come into it, except when we're talking about this one ...
 
No, and 'up' continues to mean 'up' in that sense.

People talk of people dying being 'taken up', etc. And of feeling 'down'.

Same as 'light' and 'dark' having broad figurative meanings.
What's your point? People often talk of old downtown areas being "resurrected" with new shops (in a sense of rebirth). People talk about how a new hit song or album has "resurrected" an artist's career (a return to relevance).
 
A pneumatic body.
Yes. soma pneumatikos.

"In his supramundane state, Christ had been in “god-form” before his descent into “slave-form” (μορφὴ θεοῦ/μορφὴ δούλου, Phil 2:6–7), that is, into a body of flesh and blood.
Allowing for figurative speech, OK, but reading literally – no. Christ is not a "god-form" as God is beyond forms.

Again, using the language of the Greek lexicon, form, or morphe as in the Greek of Philippians, means "the form by which a person or thing strikes the vision" or "external appearance" – in which sense, in both cases Christ strikes the vision in the Incarnation as Jesus.

David Bentley Hart's translation of Philippians 2:6-7 is a bit of a mouthful, and strange to the eye, but he argues the case in details in footnotes.
"... Jesus, who, subsisting in a god's form (the incarnation), did not deem ..."
It makes sense to me.

Presumably, in his postmortem manifestations—the only way that Paul would have experienced him—Jesus appeared in or as his pre-descent, god-form, a σῶμα πνευματικόv (which was the sort of body that characterized ancient divinity more generally).
I am obliged to pause here – fan as I am of PF, Paul never says he saw anything, other than a light. So there is no Scriptural reason to suppose he saw any 'form', divine or human. As she goes on to say:

"Paul’s phrasing sometimes implies that the risen Christ presented as a visual object (Ἰησοῦν τὸν κύριον ἡμῶν ἑόρακα, 1 Cor 9:1; Χριστὸς . . . ὤφθη, 15:5–8).More often, though, he uses locative language: Christ or his spirit is “in” Paul, “in”the body of the believer, “in” the assembly at large (e.g., Gal 1:16, God revealed his son ἐν ἐμοὶ; 1 Cor 6:12–19, spirit is “in” the body both of the individual and ofthe group). Christ’s indwelling spirit manifests by enabling charismatic acts: works of power, divinatory expertise, prophecy, angelic speech, exorcisms and healing.In effect, this sharing of spirit binds the assembly into “one body,” or specifically into Christ’s body (e.g., 1 Cor 12:12–13, 27–31)."
(Philo, Herod, Paul, and the Many Gods of Ancient Jewish “MonotheismPaula Fredriksen p19)

He does speak of a vision ... but not of the form of the vision.

Transformation into pneumatic body, Paul taught, was guaranteed to believers whether living or dead: flesh and blood (“which cannot inherit the Kingdom of God”) would transition into spirit (1 Cor 15:50, cf. v. 44; Rom 8:29)."
-Paula Fredriksen

Again, I pause ...

This is a big topic, and one better suited to its own thread.

The short note to point where that will be heading is:
Some argue that Paul's resurrection is a purely spiritual experience — but many, and N.T. Wright is one, supports the traditional conclusions.

The terms that Paul is contrasting are soma psychikon and soma pneumatikon. The latter can be reasonably be translated as “spiritual body”, but it seems odd to translate soma psychikon as “physical body” or even “natural body”. Psychikon is an adjective derived from psyche – commonly translated as 'soul' or 'life'.

Further, Wright says that psychikon and pneumatikon are adjectives that describe what animates a thing – in this instance, a body, rather than merely its attributes or its composition. Thus, an alternative translation comes into view:
It is sown as a body animated by the soul (the breath of life); it is raised a body animated by the Spirit (of God).

N. T. Wright quotes the original Jerusalem Bible as the only modern translation that truly comes to grips with the nuances of meaning in this text:

"When it is sown it embodies the soul, when it is raised it embodies the spirit."
 
Last edited:
Yes. soma pneumatikos.


Allowing for figurative speech, OK, but reading literally – no. Christ is not a "god-form" as God is beyond forms.

Again, using the language of the Greek lexicon, form, or morphe as in the Greek of Philippians, means "the form by which a person or thing strikes the vision" or "external appearance" – in which sense, in both cases Christ strikes the vision in the Incarnation as Jesus.

David Bentley Hart's translation of Philippians 2:6-7 is a bit of a mouthful, and strange to the eye, but he argues the case in details in footnotes.
"... Jesus, who, subsisting in a god's form (the incarnation), did not deem ..."
It makes sense to me.


I am obliged to pause here – fan as I am of PF, Paul never says he saw anything, other than a light. So there is no Scriptural reason to suppose he saw any 'form', divine or human. As she goes on to say:

"Paul’s phrasing sometimes implies that the risen Christ presented as a visual object (Ἰησοῦν τὸν κύριον ἡμῶν ἑόρακα, 1 Cor 9:1; Χριστὸς . . . ὤφθη, 15:5–8).More often, though, he uses locative language: Christ or his spirit is “in” Paul, “in”the body of the believer, “in” the assembly at large (e.g., Gal 1:16, God revealed his son ἐν ἐμοὶ; 1 Cor 6:12–19, spirit is “in” the body both of the individual and ofthe group). Christ’s indwelling spirit manifests by enabling charismatic acts: works of power, divinatory expertise, prophecy, angelic speech, exorcisms and healing.In effect, this sharing of spirit binds the assembly into “one body,” or specifically into Christ’s body (e.g., 1 Cor 12:12–13, 27–31)."
(Philo, Herod, Paul, and the Many Gods of Ancient Jewish “MonotheismPaula Fredriksen p19)

He does speak of a vision ... but not of the form of the vision.
Dunamis came upon him and he received Rhema ❤️
 
Oh, normally I would not say something like that. But these Catholics keep saying many distort or manipulate their scripture, so I am all but delighted to point out when they distort their own scripture.
I find your prior critiques of @RJM groundless – you've latched onto a 'dimension' as fixed it in a certain manner which I don't think he intended.

I find your reading of Paul lacking in substantial foundation, and the corpus of Pauline literature on this particular matter tends in another direction.
 
What's your point? People often talk of old downtown areas being "resurrected" with new shops (in a sense of rebirth). People talk about how a new hit song or album has "resurrected" an artist's career (a return to relevance).
That is my point – figurative language is contextual.
 
That is my point – figurative language is contextual.
In fact all language is contextual. Language is symbol.
A great logical reason why one can consider why God renews the Message from Age to age.

As humanity evolves and new discoveries are made, old concepts are replaced by knew understandings, those understandings, born from the "New Creation", the New Heaven and the New Earth, are then applicable to the age we live in.

Regards Tony
 
That is my point – figurative language is contextual.
In fact all language is contextual. Language is symbol.

Words like "taken up" can have figurative meanings. Their original, literal meanings within the cultural and historical context of the Bible are key, however. A biblical writer's understanding of the physical world is different from our own. Simply asserting that this type of language back then was used figuratively without substantiation is not a sufficient argument.

I have provided sufficient proof. Origen was a prominent theologian fluent in Greek and Hebrew. His writings were widely influential. Instead of engaging with the evidence, you engage in special pleading, creating an exception to a general rule in order to avoid an inconvenient conclusion. Don't you see the contradiction in acknowledging Origen's belief in astral immortality and dismissing its significance? He thought of it literally. So did Paul.
 
Words like "taken up" can have figurative meanings. Their original, literal meanings within the cultural and historical context of the Bible are key, however. A biblical writer's understanding of the physical world is different from our own. Simply asserting that this type of language back then was used figuratively without substantiation is not a sufficient argument.
And I've said the term has to be understood contextually.

The evidence for such is Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:2:
"I knew a man who is in Christ, one such as was rapt up all the way into the third heaven fourteen years ago – whether in the body I do not know, whether out of the body, I do not know – God knows".

So he is saying whether literally bodily, or figuratively 'out of the body', he does not know – but clearly he understands the difference.

Scripture says Christ ascended bodily (although the Risen Body is not quite like our physical bodies).

Tradition holds that Mary was taken up bodily, although Catholic and Orthodox differ in the detail.

The Jews believe Enoch and Elijah were both taken up.

Islam has commentaries on Muhammed (pbuh).

Instead of engaging with the evidence, you engage in special pleading, creating an exception to a general rule in order to avoid an inconvenient conclusion.
What exception, what rule?

Don't you see the contradiction in acknowledging Origen's belief in astral immortality and dismissing its significance? He thought of it literally. So did Paul.
I don't think either Paul or Origen spoke of 'astral immortality' in precisely those terms, so I'd have to ask how you define that, as 'astral' has a broad connotation today, not necessarily as the Jews or Paul and Origen and their contemporaries saw it?

Christianity in general speaks of the immortality of the soul, which both Paul and the Fathers saw in relation to Christ, so I'm not sure where you think I dismiss it, or make any special pleading?
 
Last edited:
As humanity evolves and new discoveries are made, old concepts are replaced by knew understandings, those understandings, born from the "New Creation", the New Heaven and the New Earth, are then applicable to the age we live in.
Indeed, but the point being the 'new understandings' are deeper insights into the original texts – they're not dependent on new texts.

With regard to new texts, or new exegesis, or new commentaries, they have to be judged on merit to determine their insight and veracity.
 
In an effort to help improve and deepen our dialogue with @Thomas and @RJM, I would like to share a few quotes about Baha'u'llah's approach to metaphysics from The Archeology of the Kingdom of God, which is an English translation by Peter Terry of a French work by Jean-Marc Lepain. Because it is a translation, the wording for me is a little strange in places, but the writer is clearly knowledgeable. Let's start off with a comparison between Baha'u'llah's approach and the general approach of classical metaphysicians. We'll go elsewhere and explore further from there. :)

1. It looks like where we start our approach differs dramatically. Classical metaphysics begins with God and a descent through the hierarchy of Being. Baha'u'llah's approach works the other way around: "It is because one begins by defining the nature of man that one can thereafter ascend the degrees of the hierarchy of Being."

"While classical metaphysics begin with God to descend thereafter through the degrees of the hierarchy of Being, from the world of essences to that of individuals, the question which is found at the heart of the philosophy of Baha’u’llah is an inquest upon the nature of man. It is because one begins by defining the nature of man that one can thereafter ascend the degrees of the hierarchy of Being. This explains that the philosophy of Ideas or of Forms appropriate to Platonism or Aristotelianism is replaced by a philosophy of values. It is in the function of the meaning which is given to human life that one can define the finality of the physical reality of the universe."

More on the reasoning behind this thinking here:

"For Baha’u’llah, there are two complementary ways of apprehending the world: the one rational and scientific which exists from our exteriority, and the other intuitive and mystical which exists from our interiority. But, in order to take this second path, man must first explore and understand his interiority. Furthermore, in that which concerns God and the spiritual worlds in general, the way of interiority alone exists. This is why Baha’u’llah, after the knowledge of self, assigns as finality to human existence “to know and love God”. He affirms that this is not only the finality of all human existence but that it is also the finality of all creation, for it is impossible to conceive of a divine creation without a consciousness which knows his Creator. This is what we have called “the anthropic principle” of Baha’u’llah. This principle overturns all of philosophy and had multiple and fundamental implications which are far from being explored. It is this principle which explains that the reality of the universe appears to be structured in its functioning by a law of intelligibility which the universe shares with the human spirit. It is this principle which also implicates the necessity of a noetic and epistemological link between the creature and the Creator which is at the source of the Baha’i hermeneutic. From that also follows that Being cannot be at the center of the metaphysic, and even of the ontology, of Baha’u’llah."

2. "Being is no longer at the center of metaphysics" in Baha'i thought.

"The principle which is the resume of the anthropology of Baha’u’llah, and which constitutes the key to the vault of his teaching is contained in the affirmation that the nature of man is spiritual. The fundamental philosophical problem which this principle poses consists then in understanding what the word “spiritual” signifies. We can say that this question is the object of the metaphysic of Baha’u’llah, for the concept of the spiritual refers to a world of transcendental values, intermediary values between God and His creation, the existence of which one must explain. Now we understand why the metaphysic of Baha’u’llah is not presented according to the mode to which the classical systems have habituated us. Being is no longer at the center of metaphysics; it is replaced by the spirit and the consciousness."


3. Old terms are redefined by Baha'u'llah as a result of this approach.

"Whenever Baha’u’llah takes up the mystical language of the Arabo-Persian tradition it is always in a metaphorical sense and not in order to approve the dogmas which were generated therefrom. This is the case with all the vocabulary of the Ishraqi theophany, such as ishraq (auroral light), mashriq(orient, dawn), tajalli (radiance, effulgence, emanation), zuhur (manifestation, appearance), mazhar(place of manifestation), ufuq (horizons), and so forth. These words are, in the work of Baha’u’llah, redirected from their original meaning to express new ideas in the midst of a philosophy that denies all dogmatism and all systematic philosophical theorization. It is in the spirit of this transformation that we must examine the role and the place of the terminology of the divine worlds in the work of Baha’u’llah.

It is also important to emphasize that Baha’u’llah broke with the entire philosophical tradition of Islam. He rejects the ontology of Ibn Sina which furnished that tradition with its principal structure over the course of several centuries. He repudiates the theory of the creative Imagination which Ibn Sina, Ibn al-'Arabi and al-Suhrawardi developed. He also rejects existential monism which, since al-Hallaj, seemed to be the only form of thought definitely opposed to Islamic orthodoxy. He dares to affirm the eternity of the creation and reduces to allegorical symbols the greater part of the Quranic dogmas, including the resurrection, the final judgment, the appearance face to face with God, the angels, the Imams, and so on. The profundity of his thought manifests itself above all in its limpidity which contrasts it with the extreme sophistication of the thought systems of his time.

One does not find in the work of Baha’u’llah a single exposition sui generis of an ontological or metaphysical theory. This does not mean to say that Baha’u’llah did not have any conception of his own in this domain. But this conception is implicit. The only way to rediscover it is to become impregnated with his work, to study it deeply and to meditate thereon. Then abysses of wisdom reveal themselves. This refusal of all theorization by Baha’u’llah is fundamental. The Manifestations of God do not come to construct systems. The elaboration of a knowing discourse is the province of theologians, mystics and philosophers who follow the Manifestations in each Dispensation.

In the Writings of Baha’u’llah, it is often necessary to compare one text with several others in order to release the complete image of his thought. This brevity exemplifies the great reserve which Baha’u’llah leaves to be penetrated in the case of metaphysical questions. This reserve exists for two reasons. The first refers to the concept which Baha’u’llah has of his own mission. A Manifestation of God is not a professor of philosophy, no more than he is a medical doctor, a biologist, a physicist or other specialist. The Manifestation of God does not come to reveal to us the secrets of the universe, but to give us a moral and spiritual teaching susceptible of contributing to the spiritual expansion of man. The spiritual blooming of man is found in detachment, in the service of humanity and in teaching the Cause of God, not in metaphysical speculation.

However, the brevity of the discourses consecrated by Baha’u’llah to the divine worlds, and the evident reserve with which these are treated, should not make us believe that the subject has little importance in his eyes. He habitually employs this concise and stripped down manner of writing which delivers only the essential. One could even say that the absence of literary ornament always characterizes the most important passages of his writings. The “Most Holy Book” (Kitab-i-Aqdas) is the very model of brevity and concision. The establishment of Houses of Justice, signally the foundation of the Baha’i Administrative Order, is treated in less than three lines and none of his essential points receives a long elaboration. What is fundamental in the exposition of Baha’u’llah in the “Tablet of All Food” is the link that he establishes between the question of the divine worlds and a spiritual hermeneutic (ta'wil), in which he indicates that a certain food (understood as spiritual in nature) corresponds to each world, and that at the same time the word “food” itself is susceptible to receiving an interpretation particular to its function in each of these worlds, so that in fact the term contains innumerable significances."
This makes a lot more clear to me. It gives me something to think about.
 
1 Corinthians 15 is the main text. The glorified body is simply a material spirit - the same immortal material the heavenly bodies like the stars and planets were thought to be made of during Paul's time period. This all makes so much sense when we consider the cosmology of Paul
The point I have been making in citing David Bentley Hart elsewhere.

I think the cosmology of Paul perhaps goes further than this short gloss on Fredriksen might allow.

In a more recent work: All Things Are Full Of Gods" – Hart's title quotes Thales of Miletus.

His premise is the "spiritual shaping and animating reality that I regard as most fundamental to any living thing."

Furthermore:
"Of God, however, I would say that the book argues that the essential and original act of all things, their source and end and essence, is the one infinite act of divine knowledge and life. In short, the primordial reality of all things is mind.. (David Bentley Hart interview)

A good example is the Burning Bush – Exodus 3:
"And the angel of YHWH appeared unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush ... And when YHWH saw ... Elohim called unto him out of the midst of the bush ... Moreover he said, I am Elohim of thy father, Elohim of Abraham, Elohim of Isaac, and Elohim of Jacob. And Moses hid his face; for he was afraid to look upon Elohim and YHWH said ... "

So first an angel appears, but then God speaks, and I would say rather than discreet entities, Hart offers a view that God is indeed "all in all" and the heavens and the gods are far more than a hierarchical dynamic continuum than discreet entities occupying distinct geographical regions – and I would further argue that Paul, and others, balanced both views – a 'scientific' as well as the 'spiritual', without contradiction, and probably more accurate, in reality, than the insistence on bifurcation evident in modernity.
 
And I've said the term has to be understood contextually.

Good luck with that from a few letters.

The evidence for such is Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:2:
"I knew a man who is in Christ, one such as was rapt up all the way into the third heaven fourteen years ago – whether in the body I do not know, whether out of the body, I do not know – God knows".

So he is saying whether literally bodily, or figuratively 'out of the body', he does not know – but clearly he understands the difference.

Where are you getting figuratively out of the body from? It's not there: οἶδα ἄνθρωπον ἐν Χριστῷ πρὸ ἐτῶν δεκατεσσάρων εἴτε ἐν σώματι οὐκ οἶδα εἴτε ἐκτὸς τοῦ σώματος οὐκ οἶδα ὁ θεὸς οἶδεν ἁρπαγέντα τὸν τοιοῦτον ἕως τρίτου οὐρανοῦ.

That's why Augustine, for example, could readily admit the possibility of a literal out-of-body experience: "Perhaps then we must infer that he ignored whether, when he was rapt to the third heaven . . . his soul went out of his body altogether, so that his body lay dead." Imagine how an ancient person could interpret a near death experience in a Jewish culture that regularly equated the afterlife with zooming to the stars, which were imagined to be angelic beings.

Translation: Your proof isn't strong and conclusive at all.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top