Your arguments attempt to synthesize various biblical passages into a unified theology of death. However, these points rely on conflating distinct biblical definitions of death and misapplying the imagery of baptism and circumcision.
I think what Paul was doing in the verses I gave, is unifying different concepts of death by explaining the relationship between the spirit and the body and to God and death. So that we understand that the circumcision and baptism Christ gives us are real things. Not just imagery and metaphors. Christ gives us the real circumcision (to men and women) and a real death (not just a symbolic one) and the real baptism.
How does Jesus do that? How does He do these real things? What are they?
(I would love to hear your answer to that if you get time.)
Bob Enyart once said that the brain is the interface between the body and the spirit. Now as far as I know, he only mentioned this maybe once or twice. But I think that was a useful teaching. So I am extending that idea here, to concepts of death in the Bible and to what Paul wrote. (Because I think Paul does the same thing.) To see if it fits. To see if it helps us model these things that Paul talks about in Colossians, as though they really happened. As though they are
real things. (They are in fact, real things) And not just symbols, metaphors and imagery.
Specifically, these things:
The circumcision of Christ (The circumcision Christ gives us)
Our death and baptism in Him
And that we have died and our lives our hidden with Christ in God (I am taking Paul literally and treating this as an actual real event that really happened.)
Spoken of here:
Colossians 2:11-12 In Him you were also circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body [
h]of the sins of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, 12 buried with Him in baptism, in which you also were raised with Him through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the dead.
Colossians 3:1-4 If then you were raised with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ is, sitting at the right hand of God. Set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth. For you died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ
who is our life appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory......so stop sinning.
Because Paul tells us, that when he speaks about Christ, he speaks of
reality. Again, right here in Colossians!
Colossians 2:16-17 Therefore do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. 17 These are a shadow of the things that were to come;
the reality, however
, is found in Christ.
So, with all these things in mind (including the Law, which I haven't really mentioned yet),
how might a cohesive structure of these things be modeled? Regrettably, I was not able to afford the set of Bob's Bibles studies on Paul, which was recently on offer. I am having trouble with walking so I am not able to work as much as I used to at the moment. So I don't know, or remember, a lot about what Bob specifically taught about Paul. And I am not as knowledgeable as Bob and Paul were. But I like Bob's idea, of understanding the brain as an interface between the body and the spirit. And I suspect that Bob would not have posited such an idea, if he felt it conflicted with something Paul wrote. Quite the opposite actually.
So I model all these things in the following way:
When God created Adam, He restricted a part of Adam's spirit from becoming attached to his brain/flesh/body. So that Adam did not know Good and Evil. There was no place at the time in the spiritual realm (flesh did not exist there) to learn about evil, so God somehow kept this part of Adam's spirit in the spiritual realm, with Him. So that Adam could still interact with the physical creation, but God did something to protect him from sin.
Adam bypassed this protection, when he disobeyed God. So that part of Adam's spirit which God was hiding from the physical realm, became attached to the flesh. Adam died in that very instant,
not because his spirit was leaving his body. His death was the opposite of Christ's circumcision. Adam's death is something we now all experience, once our human brains develop a particular attachment of our spirit to the physical realm. This is Adam's death. A once unique event which we all now experience. (Babies don't experience it)
When Rachel dies in
Gen 35:18, because her spirit departs from her body, this was not Adam's death. In Adam's time it was just a normal thing that happens to us when we cannot eat from The Tree of Life (God was loving when he removed that access to that tree).
Now we call it death. But it was not what God said death was, when he told Adam
"In that day you shall surely die". Jesus did not need access to that tree, because He is God. Jesus' spirit was attached to his brain/body the same way Adam's spirit became on the day Adam disobeyed God. His temptation was real. But Jesus overcame it.
Jesus did not overcome this death because He had a special privilege of not inheriting Sin from a human father. The correct way to understand inherited sin is understanding it as the same "full" attachment Adam experienced on the day he surely died. Likewise, Jesus didn't have to be crucified to prevent babies from going to Hell when abortion doctors murder them.
Fast forward 4000 years or so. After Christ's Resurrection, Paul is saying "Remember the death that Adam died when
he (his spirit, we our are spirits, not our bodies) was separated from God and became attached to the Law and to the Physical Realm? That same death we all go through (but not babies) because of him? We don't have to worry about that death anymore. Because Jesus overcame that death on the cross. The only death that exists for us is death of our spirit disconnecting from our bodies
(disconnecting a part of the spirit from the interface). And we have already experienced what that death is like for us, the day we were saved. On that day, Jesus circumcised a part of our spirit from our flesh. The very same part that became attached to this physical realm, the day Adam died in The Garden.
So stop sinning.
It is the opposite of Adam's death in The Garden. Adam immediately knew he was naked when he died that death. Adam didn't have to
learn how to sin. That dreadful knowledge God protected him from, came to him immediately on that day. With our death in Christ, Paul is telling us
to stop sinning because
we have to learn how to stop sinning and that we can stop sinning. To understand that the part of the spirit Christ circumcised, is with HIM now. It is a new thing. It is a new relationship that we can learn and grow in. So Paul tells us to stop sinning. Because now we can and Christ is helping us.
Genesis 35:18 and James 2:26: These verses address the cessation of biological life—the point where the life force (spirit or breath) leaves the physical body. This is a physiological event.
These verses help to affirm the idea that death involves the separating of spirit from the flesh.
Ephesians 2:1-3: This passage does not describe biological death, but rather a state of spiritual alienation. One can be biologically alive ("walking according to the course of this world") while being "dead in trespasses." Treating this as the same phenomenon as the death in Genesis 35 ignores the context of moral and legal standing before God.
Sure. I pretty much agree, I guess. That is not what I am doing though.
The argument posits that Paul creates a "multi-dimensional" and conflicting view of death.
No, my argument is that Paul resolves what can seemingly be misunderstood as contradictions concerning death in the Bible.
If i told someone Death is separation from God. And then told Him Death is when the spirit leaves the body, he might see that as a contradiction. Or as 2 conflicting views.
Paul solves this, not by adding more symbolism and metaphors to old ones. He solves it by telling us what he knows is a reality.
Paul uses these terms as metaphors
Paul
is not using these terms as metaphors. Why would you even think he would do something like that? He wasn't
given a metaphor to preach to the gentiles. He was given the reality. From God.
The argument that Jesus only circumcised "part" of the flesh to allow us to keep "walking and talking" contradicts the biblical teaching that believers are new creatures
No it doesn't
Sin brought death.
Rom 5:12 (AKJV/PCE)(5:12) Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned:
Sure, but it brought the death that Adam immediately died in the Garden. It is not the same death some babies tragically die from when suffering from a physical illness.
When an unborn baby is murdered by an abortionist, it is not because the baby committed a sin or because God is
punishing the baby for something his father did. Or for what Adam did. When Jesus died on the cross, it wasn't because He sinned.
Not the eternal kind of death.
Death is separation and those that refuse God will be separated from God forever. That is the second death.
Rev 20:14-15 (AKJV/PCE)(20:14) And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death. (20:15) And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire.
Of course it is useful to point this out. But I don't understand why you think this necessarily conflicts with something I have said.
I appreciated your criticisms and I hope you will make more of them if you can. I hope you will also answer the question I asked at the beginning of this post. Because I am interested to know what you think.