My hands were paralyzed and I use voice recognition software that poorly spells and punctuates. Please over look errors. I know it says part two but this is actually part one. I just like the picture lol Thanks for donations
The bible says, in 1 Cor. 15:46 The Spiritual Did Not Come First, but the Natural,
and After That The Spiritual. People who have disagreed with this scripture have
made statements like this. That which is spiritual comes first because God is first. I
always remind them that even though God is a spirit. He has no beginning and no end.
The word Natural is never applied to God, angels, or demons in the bible. I will prove
this later on. I had one person argue that heaven is spiritual and it was first. I had to
let the person know The heaven and earth created in Genesis was natural and literal
. The heaven and earth in bible prophecy was symbolic and spiritual. Heaven and
earth in bible prophecy represented the old covenant and the people under
the old covenant. http://apostolicpreterist.com/Heaven___Earth_by__DKP.html
We will first briefly discuss the correlative terms, Natural and Spiritual. A strict
definition of these terms is needful in order to understand the important rule laid down
in 1 Cor. 15:46, that God's order is first: the natural and afterward the spiritual.
A study of the New Testament in the manner indicated above will give us such a
definition. But first I will give the meaning of the words in my own language and then
notice the scriptural proof.
Natural means pertaining to this state, earthly, fleshly, corrupt. Spiritual, being
the opposite of natural means, pertaining to the restored (or resurrection) state,
finished, perfect. Both words refer to human beings; they are never applied to spirit
beings, to God, or angels, or demons. Now let us look at the Bible and we shall
find these statements confirmed. On the word natural see Jas. 3:15 and Jude 19.
In both of these passages the words rendered "sensual" are the same in the original as
the word rendered "natural" in 1 Cor. 15:46. The context clearly shows that natural
pertains to man as "earthly, sensual, devilish." The spiritual being the opposite of the
natural and coming after it according to God's order, may now be readily identified; the
natural. as we have seen, refers to the corruptible condition; the spiritual then must
refer to the restored, incorruptible state; or in other words the natural refers to the
process of creation, the spiritual to the finished
result. Excert - http://www.tentmaker.org/books/SpiritOfTheWord/003DefinitionOfBible
1 Cor.2:14 But the natural G5591 man receiveth not the things of the spirit god, for they
are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them for they are spiritually discerned.
1 Cor.15:44 it is sown on natural G5591 body., it is a raised a spiritual body. There is a
natural G5591 body; and there is a spiritual body
1 Cor.15:46 Howbeit that was not firs which was spiritual, but that which is
natural G5591, and afterword’s, that which is spiritual.
Jas. 3:15 The wisdom that descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual G5591
Develish.
Jute 19 These be who separate themselves, sensual, G5591 having not the spirit.
G5591 psychikos - Strong’s concordance meaning- Having the nature and
characteristics of the Principle of animal life -natural. They use the above scriptures
for examples. The word sensual is the same as the word natural. You can view this
information above here- https://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/Lexicon/Lexicon.cfm?strongs=G5591&t=KJV
I read a book a while back. It was called, beyond creation science, I do not
recommend the book. Here is some of the problems I came across.
The book teaches that there were people before Adam. It also taught that the heavens
and earth that were created in Genesis were not literal. They taught that since the
heavens and earth means the old covenant and it’s people in bible prophecy that in
the beginning that is what God was creating instead of the literal sky. I called my
Pastor who is very wise and asked him what he thought. That is when he began to
teach me about the Bible Principal first comes the natural and then the spiritual of
1 Corinthians 15:45- 47. After that I began to see this throughout the entire bible.
Cain was the first natural man and Abel was the spiritual man. King Saul was the
first and he was the natural man, while King David was the spiritual man of God.
As for their being people before Adam this comes from Jewish mysticism which is
very evil. A very evil woman named Madam Blavatsky wrote in her book called the
dark secrets about a pre-Adamic race. According to her you can’t see the pre-Adamic
race without the help of demons. It is an Occult book.
Examples of first comes the natural, and then
the spiritual.
1. Heaven and earth were first created naturally and literally.
2.Heaven and earth in bible prophecy was symbolic of covenant and
the people under it. http://apostolicpreterist.com/Heaven___Earth_by__DKP.html
3.The sun Moon and stars or the constellation. This was first natural and literal.
4The constellation was symbolic in bible prophecy.http://apostolicpreterist.com/Sun_moon___stars.html
5. God created literal natural clouds these were created first.
6.The clouds in bible prophecy were symbolic. They were represented
judgment. http://apostolicpreterist.com/Coming_in_the_Clouds_851O.html
7.The tree of life represented Jesus Christ’s. When they believed his words they ate
from the tree of life.
8.The tree of the knowledge of good and evil represented the law. It tells you what’s
good and evil was right and wrong as
does the law. http://apostolicpreterist.com/Beginning___end_of_sin.html
9.The reptile that deceived Eve and had to crawl on its belly like a snake was
natural and litreral. The snake was possessed by Satan. Satan spoke through the
serpent.
10.This reptile/snake was symbolic it represented the dragon reptile in revelation.
11.Adam was a literal natural man who caused the fall.
12.Adam represented the second man who would come without sin like Adam
started out and undo the curse of sin by making an end of sin at Calvary.
1 Cor.15:45-47 Heb.9:26
13.Eve was naturally and literal. She was the wife of Adam
14.The bride of Christ represented symbolically Eve who married the 2nd Adam.
15.Cain was natural and physical. He presented to God an unacceptable offering of
fruit.
16.Abel represented the spiritual son who presented to God an offering that was a
blood sacrifice this was acceptable to God.
17.Esau was fleshly natural literal. He sold his birthright to his brother Jacob.
God said Jacob have I loved, and Esau have I hated.
18.Jacob was a spiritual son that had his name changed to Israel.
19.King Saul was natural. He disobeyed God when sacrificed instead of the high
priest. He did not wait for the high priest to come and do it.
20.King David was spiritual and loved the Lord.
21.David had a natural son King Solomon. This son turned from God.
22.The spiritual son of David was Jesus Christ.
23.There was the first tabernacle of Moses. The law caused spiritual death.
24.Then there was the second tabernacle of David. This was a spiritual tabernacle of
God.
25.There was God’s chosen people that rejected Him.1 John 1:11-13,
26.Then there was the spiritual children of God These were the children who believed
on Jesus Christ for salvation and became Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the
promise. Galatians 329
27.Then there was the red sea. When the children of Israel went through it.
That represented them being baptized and having sin removed.
28.Then there was the crossing of the Jordan River. This represented being baptized in
the spirit.
I am inserting a picture that shows the natural or first and the spiritual interpretation. It also reveals the transition that took place in the old and new covenant. Once you start to see it. It goes
throughout the bible and is known as the first comes the natural and then the spiritual
Principle.The Rest is are lots of exerts .
God’s “breathing upon” Adam was the Holy Spirit
A very broadly propagated misconception is that the ‘blowing upon” referred to in the Book of Genesis (Genesis 2:7), was supposedly the ‘giving’ of a soul to a pre-fabricated, earthen, inanimate statue of a man.
This cacodoxy has its roots in ancient Hellenistic ‘dualist’ anthropology, where the soul was considered as something pre-existent to the body, given that –by nature– the soul is timeless and immortal. This ‘life-giving’ to a body and soul within a time frame is idolatrous and absolutely anti-Christian, as is every other dimension generally pertaining to body and soul.
«Απόβλητος επίσης ο παρ’ αμφοτέρων λόγος… μήτε κατά την ελληνικήν απάτην… μηδ’ αυ πάλιν οιονεί πήλινον ανδριάντα προδιαπλασθέντα τω λόγω τον άνθρωπον, τούτου ένεκα την ψυχήν γίνεσθαι λέγειν… Ενός όντος του ανθρώπου… μίαν αυτού και κοινήν της συστάσεως την αρχήν υποτίθεσθαι, ως αν μη αυτός εαυτού προγενέστερός τε και νεώτερος γένοιτο».
Translation of Greek text: «Both aspects are unacceptable… we should not believe, according to the Hellenistic fallacy… nor that God created man by His word as an earthen statue, for the sake of which, the soul was afterwards created… because man is one, just as the beginning of his existence is one and simultaneous, so that it may not be said that man was created before his self was created.” (Saint Gregory of Nyssa, PG 44, 229-237)
The Fathers persistently stress that man was created whole, from the moment of conception, and that neither is his soul pre-existent to his body, nor is his body pre-existent to his soul. They furthermore stress that the creation of Adam is repeated in each of us, in the same way, and by the same Hand.
«Η χειρ δε η πλάσασα τότε τον Αδάμ, και αύτη και νυν και αεί τους μετ’ εκείνον πάλιν πλάττει και διασυνίστησι».
Translation of Greek text: «….as for the hand that had once shaped Adam, it is the same one that -now and forever- also shapes and constitutes those after him.” (Saint Athanasios, PG 25, 429).
«Ημείς δε την μέσην οδόν ως βασιλικήν κατά τους Πατέρας ημών οδεύοντες ούτε προϋπαρξιν ούτε μεθύπαρξιν ψυχής ή σώματος συνύπαρξιν δε μάλλον φαμεν»
Translation of Greek text: «For we, who travel the middle path as a royal path, just like our Fathers did, do not proclaim the pre-existence or the post-existence of the body or the soul; rather the co-existence of both.” (Saint Maximus, PG 91, 1325D).
What, in fact, was the “blowing upon”, that we read in the New Testament? “Jesus blew upon them, and said to them: ‘Receive Holy Spirit’” (John, 20:22).
«Ανακαινίζων τον άνθρωπον ο Κύριος, και ην απώλεσε χάριν εκ του εμφυσήματος του Θεού, ταύτην πάλιν αποδιδούς, εμφυσήσας εις το πρόσωπον των μαθητών, τι φησί; “Λάβετε Πνεύμα Άγιον”».
Translation of Greek text: «When renovating mankind -which had lost the grace it had received through God’s blowing upon it- the Lord restored it again, by blowing upon the persons/countenances (*) of the disciples, by saying what? ‘Receive ye Holy Spirit’ ” (St. Basil the Great, 140D).
Whatever the “blowing upon” was in the New Testament, it was exactly the same as the one in the Old Testament: It was the Grace and the Energy of the Holy Spirit. Just as the apostles weren’t earthen statues, but living and moving people, so was the person who was “blown upon” in the Old Testament. This Grace of the Holy Spirit was that which was lost through man’s disobedience, and was restored to the Apostles by our Lord. The Lord did not give the Apostles a soul; they already had souls, just as Adam did. He gave them something else, which made their souls “living souls”. Just as He did with Adam.
«Let the dead bury their dead » Christ had said. (Matthew 8:22). These “dead” were people with souls and movement, but who did not have the Holy Spirit, which «invigorates» (Corinthians II, 3:6).
«By the Holy Spirit, every soul becomes alive». This Grace of the Holy Spirit is given to a whole person, body and soul, and it hallows and vivifies him.
«Ενεφύσησε γαρ εις το πρόσωπον αυτού, τουτέστι μοίράν τινα της αυτού Χάριτος εναπέθετο τω ανθρώπω, ίνα τω ομοίως επιγινώσκη το όμοιον»
Translation of the Greek text: «He (=God) blew upon his (=Adam’s) person/countenance (*); meaning that a certain degree of His (God’s) Grace was deposited in man, so that the ‘likeness’ (=man) could acknowledge its ‘likeness’ (=God). (Vasileios the Great, PG 29, 449B).
Let’s not forget the words also that God spoke to Adam: “On the day that you eat of this (=the tree), you shall die”. But Adam lived on, for many more years after that! His “death” therefore was obviously a spiritual one. Adam became a “dead soul”, after losing the Holy Spirit that was given to him when God “blew upon” him the breath of life. Reversely, this “blowing” of the Holy Spirit was what had made him a living soul.
According to the Fathers, man is not only flesh, nor only soul. He is a psychosomatic whole. In this way, it is understandable how a dead body cannot be considered a human being, just as a soul without a body cannot be considered a human being.
Father Hierotheos Vlachos in his book “Life after death” (published 1994), page 54, writes: “Man is a psychosomatic being, which means that the soul doesn’t comprise the whole man, just as the body doesn’t comprise the whole man.”
Of course the holy Fathers are in full accord on the above, as apparent in a multitude of their writings, samples of which we present herebelow:
According to Saint Gregory Palamas: “..the verdict for spiritual death - to the actualization of which disobedience led us - according to the justice of the creator…” (Natural, Theological, Ethical and Practical Chapters, Migne , PG vol.150, p.1157-1160)
Tatianus writes: “The one who was created in the image of God and was separated from that more powerful (Holy) Spirit, becomes a mortal.” (Tatianus to Hellenes, 7)
Also according to Saint Irenaeus:
“Separation from God is death” (Saint Irenaeus, Remonstration E’ XXVII)
“Therefore, they –whomsoever they may be- who do not have whatever saves and leads into life, shall be called ‘flesh and blood’, because they are the ones who do not have the Spirit of God in them. Such people are referred to by the Lord as ‘dead’, as He had stated: “Let the dead bury their own dead”, because they do not have the Spirit which vivifies man.” (Saint Irenaeus, Remonstration E’ XI, 1)
“Man (and not just a part of him), was created in the likeness of God. Now, both the soul and the Spirit may certainly constitute part of man, but not the entire man, because the perfect man consists of a combination and a union of the soul that has accepted the Spirit of the Father, together with that fleshy nature which was formed in the image of God.” (Saint Irenaeus, Remonstration E’ VI, 1)
According to Saint Vasileios: “The more that he kept away from life, the more he approached towards death. God is Life. Deprivation of life is death. Thus Adam, by moving away from God, gave rise to death.” (Vasileios the Great: “Homily, that God was not the cause of evils.” 7, Migne P.G., 31, 345).
The above writings by the holy fathers are appropriately summarized by father John Romanides, as follows: “If those who don’t have Holy Spirit still live, they are nonetheless dead…. The soul’s death is its separation from the vivifying energy of the Holy Spirit.” (The Original Sin, page 119. Published 1957).
But let’s take a look at the passage of Genesis 2:7 more carefully:
“And God created man, earth from the earth, and He blew upon his person/countenance (*) the breath of life, and man became a living soul” .
According to this passage, who did God create? “MAN”. And into whom did He blow the breath of life? Into “him”, in other words, “MAN”. And who “became a living soul”? “MAN”. What we must note here is that the term “man” pre-existed, even before the “blowing upon” him by God. If “man” were biologically dead at the moment that God blew His breath upon him, then the Holy Bible would not have characterized him as “man”!
Saint Seraphim of Sarov said to his pupil Motovilov:
“We have become extremely careless in the task of our salvation. And this is the reason that many of the passages of the Holy Bible are not taken into consideration in the appropriate way. And this, because we do not ask for God’s Grace, nor do we allow His Grace –on account of our haughtiness- to penetrate our souls, and consequently, we don’t have the true enlightenment that God sends to all those souls that hunger and thirst for His justice.”
Here is an example of what is meant here:
Many people interpret the Bible passage that says: «And God created man, earth from the earth, and He blew upon his person/countenance (*)the breath of life, and man became a living soul» (Genesis 2:7) as meaning that until that moment, Adam had no soul and human spirit, but was only fleshy, having been shaped from the mud of the earth. This interpretation is incorrect. Because, although the Lord and God may have created Adam from the mud of the earth, He did present him as a composition of body and soul, hence the apostle Paul’s assurance that: “….the entirety of our spirit, our body and our soul be preserved immaculately, during the (second) presence of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Thessalonians I, 5:23)
All three components of our existence were created from the mud of the earth. However, Adam was NOT shaped into a dead creation by God; He was created a living being, similar to the other living creatures made by God that lived on the earth. But, he had something of fundamental significance: If, after having created Adam, God had not blown upon his person/countenance (*) “the breath of life”, in other words, the Grace of the Holy Spirit, which proceeds from the Father and rests in the Son, and is sent forth into the world by the Son, then Adam -albeit the most perfect amongst God’s creations, and the crown of all terrestrial creations- would have existed, devoid of the Holy Spirit Who raises mankind and equates him with God. Adam would have been exactly the same as all the other creations that have a body, a soul and a spirit. “according to their species”, but without the Holy Spirit inside them.
When the Lord blew upon the person/countenance (*) of Adam the breath of life, then, according to the words of Moses, “Adam became a living soul” (Genesis 2:7). In other words, Adam became similar to God, immortal like Him, forever and ever, eternal.
We have here a clear Patristic voice, which assures us that:
1. –The usual explanation by contemporary Christians that Adam was created by God like a clay statue or a corpse and that the breath that God blew upon his countenance was supposedly Adam’s soul, originates from the reality that “we have slipped away from the simplicity of the original Christian knowledge”, because “the pride in our minds does not allow the Grace of God to reside within our souls, and that is why we don’t have true enlightenment by the Lord” and instead, we conjure up “myths”.
2. –Before receiving the breath of God, Adam was a living being -like all the other animals on earth- complete with all his natural characteristics, possessing a spirit, a mind, a heart, just like all the animals, each and every one according to its species.
3. –The breath of God does not contain any natural, biological or psychological inference; it is not one of the biological components of a human being. It is the uncreated Energy of the Holy Spirit, given to mankind by the Christ.
This breath of God –the uncreated Energy of the Holy Spirit-
That which makes man entirely different to all other animals, is that he –unlike the animals- has the ability to receive the energy of the Holy Spirit. That which gives man this ability, however, is not his biological superiority, or the superiority of his mind. This ability that Man has to receive –if he so wishes- the energy of the Holy Spirit, is not given to him by anything natural; it is only because man was created in the image of God (Genesis 1:27); it is because he is a person. (Genesis 2:7).
“He blew upon his countenance the breath of life”. A person can never be a lifeless thing. Corpses or statues cannot be persons. Adam was a person, because he was made in the image of the incarnate Person of the Logos of God.
Holy Spirit, forceful breath of the Pentecost, blowing upon. The blowing upon Adam and the Apostles may be precedent chronically to the Pentecost, but it is through it, that the Holy Spirit is given.
The protoplasts were «attired in the glory from above….. the glory from above covered them, rather than any garment” (Saint John the Chrysostom, PG 53, 123 and 131).
The “glory from above” is naturally not a created thing; therefore it cannot be a soul. It is the uncreated glory of the Holy Spirit, which elevates man, “to the likeness”. This uncreated glory - the “likeness” - can be lost by man, or never be acquired by him. But the “image” we can never lose, because we acquire it at birth. «The divine likeness cast aside, the image we did not lose» (Saint Gregory Palamas PG 150, 1148).
We are human beings, because we are images of Christ. This is because Christ is God and human, bearing our flesh. This Flesh, which is seated at the right of the Father, upon the throne of Godhood, is the glory of mankind and its identity; it is the source of all good things, which are given to us without discrimination, but it is up to our free will, if we embrace them or reject them.
Adam did not turn back into a clay statue when (after his disobedience) he lost the Grace of God’s breath. He did however realize his nakedness (Genesis 3:7), and thenceforth began to cover it, with terrestrial substitutes of that Glory which had previously covered him, just like mankind does, to this day. Without the Holy Spirit, human beings are “soul-beings, lacking the Spirit” (Jude, 19). A spiritual and perfect person is the one who has inside him the Grace of the Holy Spirit (Saint Irenaeus, “Remonstrations”, 5, 6:1). This divine Energy permeates man who receives it through and through, even as far as his kidneys and his heart and his bone marrow. The Holy Spirit, through the Flesh of the God-man, inhabits our own flesh. The Logos of God bestowed on the flesh (that He had borrowed from us) the energy of His godhood, thus making all of mankind receptive to the ‘divine fire’.
We are not image of God because we received the blowing of His breath; We received the blowing of God’s breath BECAUSE we are images. We are –from the moment of our creation- the torches that will most assuredly light up, if we ever wish to bring them in contact with the Unsetting Light, and, once lit, will never be extinguished, provided we safeguard them from the violent gusts of the world: “Do not extinguish the Spirit.”
(*) In the Septuagint text of Genesis, God is mentioned as “blowing upon” the “πρόσωπον” of Adam. The Greek word «πρόσωπον» has a dual meaning: it can literally mean “countenance” or “face” .
In this article, an entire chapter from edition No.89 - Summer 2004 of the magazine “Epignosis” was inserted. http://www.oodegr.com/english/ag_grafi/pd/genesis/emfysima1.htm