Body, Soul and Life Everlasting
John W. Cooper (Eerdmans: January 1989), 272 pages.The book defends a functional integration of human life (body and soul are separate but dependent) on earth and in heaven but a disembodied intermediate state wherein the body and soul will be both separate and independent. Cooper’s research, objective and scrupulous, examines the widest spectrum: (1) Traditional Christian anthropology and its modern critics; (2) Old Testament anthropology’s holistic emphasis; (3) Old Testament anthropology’s dualistic implications; (4) The anthropology of intertestamental eschatology; (5) The monism-dualism debate about New Testament anthropology; (6) Anthropology and personal eschatology in the New Testament’s non-Pauline writings; (7) Anthropology and personal eschatology in the New Testament’s Pauline epistles; (8) New Testament eschatology and philosophical anthropology; (9) Practical and theological objections against dualism; (10) Holistic dualism, science, and philosophy; (11) And finally, a vindication of holistic dualism. ~ Blake G Edwards
Table of Contents
-
- Acknowledgments
- Preface to the Second Printing
- Introduction: The Body-Soul Question: Still A Vexing Problem 1
- 1 Traditional Christian Anthropology and Its Modern Critics 7
- 2 Old Testament Anthropology: The Holistic Emphasis 33
- 3 Old Testament Anthropology: The Dualistic Implication 52
- 4 The Anthropology of Intertestamental Eschatology 73
- 5 The Monism-Dualism Debate about New Testament Anthropology 94
- 6 Anthropology And Personal Eschatology in the New Testament: The Non-Pauline Writings 110
- 7 Anthropology And Personal Eschatology in the New Testament: The Pauline Epistles 134
- 8 New Testament Eschatology and Philosophical Anthropology 158
- 9 Practical And Theological Objections against Dualism 179
- 10 Holistic Dualism, Science, and Philosophy 204
- Index of Subjects 233
- Index of Authors 236
- Index of Scripture References 239