Body

VIEW:53 DATA:01-04-2020
BODY in OT represents various Heb. words, especially that for ‘flesh.’ In Exo_24:10 it means, by a common idiom, ‘the framework of heaven’; there is no personification. In NT, though the body may be the seat of sin and death (Rom_6:6; Rom_7:24), it is never treated with contempt (Rom_12:1, 1Co_6:13; 1Co_6:19); Php_3:21 is a well-known mistranslation. Accordingly it could be used metaphorically of the Church, Christ being sometimes the Head, sometimes the Body itself.
C. W. Emmet.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


Although the Bible may speak of the body as being distinct from a person’s spirit, soul, or mind (Mic_6:7; Mat_10:28; Rom_7:23-25), it also speaks of the body as representing the person (Neh_9:37; Rom_12:1; 1Co_13:3). This is because the Bible regards a human being as a unified whole, not as something that can be divided into separate independent parts.
Part of a unified whole
Each human being, as created in God’s image, exists in a living body (Gen_1:27). For this reason the Christian’s hope is not for the endless life of the spirit or soul in a bodiless existence, because a person without a body is not a complete person. What Christians look forward to is the resurrection of the body to full and eternal life (2Co_5:1-5; see HUMANITY, HUMANKIND). They do not yet know the exact nature of this resurrection body, but they know at least that it will be imperishable, beautiful, strong, suited to the life of the age to come, and patterned on Christ’s glorious body (1Co_15:35-54; Php_3:20-21; 1Jn_3:2; see RESURRECTION).
Since the whole person is created in God’s image and the whole person is destined for eternal glory, Christians should not despise the body. They should not consider it something evil. They may be ashamed of the wrong things they do through the body, but this is all the more reason why they must exercise discipline over it (Mat_5:27-30; Rom_6:12-13; Rom_8:13; 1Co_9:27; 1Th_5:23; Jam_3:3-5; see FLESH). Another reason to exercise such discipline is that the body is God’s temple, God’s dwelling place within each individual believer (1Co_6:12-20). (Concerning the church as the body of Christ see CHURCH.)
Likewise in their dealings with unbelievers Christians must remember that it is the whole person, not just the spirit or soul, that is made in the image of God. They should therefore do what they can to meet the bodily needs as well as the spiritual needs of their fellows human beings (Jam_2:15-16; 1Jn_3:17-18). In this they will be following the example of Jesus Christ (Mat_14:14-16; Mar_1:40-42); though like Jesus Christ they will realize that ‘life is more than food and the body more than clothing’ (Mat_6:25).
A wrong view
In the church of the first and second centuries a kind of false teaching developed which asserted that the body, being material, was evil. This produced extremes of behaviour, from strict self-denial to unrestrained immorality. The false teachers claimed to have a special knowledge in relation to the world of matter and the world of spirit. Their ‘knowledge’, however, was false and its outcome was wrong behaviour (Col_2:23; 1Jn_1:8; 1Jn_3:10). (For further discussion see COLOSSIANS, LETTER TO THE; JOHN, LETTERS OF; KNOWLEDGE, sub-heading ‘Knowledge and morality’.)
Bridgeway Bible Dictionary by Don Fleming
PRINTER 1990.


bod?i:
I. Philological
Generally speaking, the Old Testament language employs no fixed term for the human body as an entire organism in exact opposition to ?soul? or ?spirit.? Various terms were employed, each of which denotes only one part or element of the physical nature, such as ?trunk,? ?bones,? ?belly,? ?bowels,? ?reins,? ?flesh,? these parts being used, by synecdoche, for the whole: עצם, ‛ecem = ?bone,? or ?skeleton,? hence, ?body,? is found in Exo_24:10 the King James Version; Lam_4:7; נפשׁ, nephesh = ?living organism? ( Lev_21:11; Num_6:6, Num_6:7, Num_6:11; Num_19:11, Num_19:13, Num_19:16; Hag_2:13); נבלה, nebhēlāh = ?a flabby thing,? ?carcass? (Deu_21:23; Isa_26:19; Jer_26:23; Jer_36:30); בּטן, beṭen = ?womb? (Deu_28:4, Deu_28:11, Deu_28:18, Deu_28:53; Deu_30:9; Job_19:17 the King James Version; Psa_132:11; Mic_6:7); ירך, yārēkh = ?thigh,? ?generative parts,? ?body? (Jdg_8:30); גּויּה, gewı̄yāh = ?a body, whether alive or dead? (1Sa_31:10, 1Sa_31:12; 2Ki_8:5 the King James Version; Dan_10:6); מעים, mē‛ı̄m, ?body? (Son_5:14); גּוּפה, gūphāh = ?corpse? (1Ch_10:12); גּוה, gēwāh = ?the back,? i.e. (by extension) ?person? (Job_20:25); שׁאר, she'ēr = ?flesh, as living or for food,? ?body? (Eze_10:12); גּשׁם, geshem = ?a hard shower of rain? hence, ?a body? (Dan_4:33; Dan_5:21; Dan_7:11); נדנה, nı̄dhneh = ?a sheath,? hence, the receptacle of the soul, ?body? (Dan_7:15).
The Greek word which is used almost exclusively for ?body? in the New Testament is σῶμα, sō̇ma, Latin corpus (Mat_5:29, Mat_5:30; Mat_6:22, Mat_6:23, Mat_6:25; Mat_26:26; Joh_2:21; Act_9:40; 1Co_15:35, 1Co_15:37, 1Co_15:38, 1Co_15:44; Eph_1:23; Eph_2:16; Eph_4:4, Eph_4:12, Eph_4:16; Eph_5:23, Eph_5:30). χρώς, chrō̇s, signifying primarily the ?surface? or ?skin,? occurs in Act_19:12. A compound word with sōma, as its base, σύσσωμος, sússōmos = ?a member of the same body,? occurs in Eph_3:6. From the above, it appears that the New Testament places the body as a whole into opposition to the spirit or the invisible nature. Paul, of course, employs the term also to designate the sublimated substance with which we are to be clothed after the resurrection when he speaks of the ?spiritual body? (1Co_15:44).

II. General
1. In the Old Testament
σῶμα, sō̇ma, Latin corpus: The term ?body? is not found in the Hebrew of the Old Testament in the sense in which it occurs in the Greek ?The Hebrew word for 'body' is גּויּה, gewı̄yāh, which is sometimes used for the 'living' body (Eze_1:11), 'bodies of the cherubim' (Gen_47:18; Neh_9:37), but usually for the dead body or carcass. Properly speaking the Hebrew has no term for 'body.' The Hebrew term around which questions relating to the body must gather is flesh? (Davidson, Old Testament Theology, 188). Various terms are used in the Old Testament to indicate certain elements or component parts of the body, such as ?flesh,? ?bones,? ?bowels,? ?belly,? etc., some of which have received a new meaning in the New Testament. Thus the Old Testament ?belly? (Hebrew beṭen, Greek koilı́a), ?Our soul is bowed down to the dust; our belly cleaveth unto the earth? (Psa_44:25 the King James Version) - as the seat of carnal appetite - has its counterpart in the New Testament: ?They serve ... their own belly? (Rom_16:18). So also the word translated ?bowels? (mē‛ı̄m, raḥămı̄m) in the sense of compassion, as in Jer_31:20, King James Version: ?Therefore my bowels are troubled for him,? is found in more than one place in the New Testament. Thus in Phi_1:8 the King James Version, ?I long after you all in the bowels (splágchna) of Christ,? and again, ?if there be any bowels (splagchna) and mercies? (Phi_2:1 the King James Version).
2. In the New Testament
?Body? in the New Testament is largely used in a figurative sense, either as indicating the ?whole man? (Rom_6:12; Heb_10:5), or as that which is morally corrupt - ?the body of this death? (Rom_6:6; Rom_7:24). Hence, the expression, ?buffet my body? (1Co_9:27, hupōpiázō, a word adopted from the prize-ring, palaestra), the body being considered as the lurking-place and instrument of evil. (Compare Rom_8:13 the King James Version ?Mortify the deeds of the body.?)
3. Other Meanings
Between these two the various other meanings seem to range. On the one hand we find the church called ?the body of Christ? (Eph_4:16; 1Co_12:13), with diversity of gifts, enjoying the ?unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.? On the other we read of a spiritual, incorruptible body, a resurrection-body as opposed to the natural body, which is doomed to corruption in death (1Co_15:44). Not only do we find these meanings in the word itself, but also in some of its combinations. On the one hand we read in Eph_3:6 of the Gentiles as ?partakers of the promise in Christ? as ?fellow-heirs,? and ?of the same body? (sússōma) in corporate union with all who put their trust in the Redeemer of mankind; on the other, we read of mere ?bodily (somatic) exercises,? which are not profitable. (1Ti_4:8) - where ?body? evidently is contrasted with ?spirit.? And again, we read of the Holy Ghost descending in ?bodily? (somatic) shape upon the ?Son of God? (Luk_3:22), in whom dwelt the ?fullness of the Godhead bodily? (somatically) (Col_2:9). So, too, the ?body? is called a temple of the Holy Ghost: ?Know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit?? (1Co_6:19).
4. The Body and Sin
From all this it is apparent that the body in itself is not necessarily evil, a doctrine which is taught in Greek philosophy, but nowhere in the Old Testament and New Testament. The rigid and harsh dualism met with in Plato is absent from Paul's writings, and is utterly foreign to the whole of Scripture. Here we are distinctly taught, on the one hand, that the body is subordinated to the soul, but on the other, with equal clearness, that the human body has a dignity, originally conferred upon it by the Creator, who shaped it out of earth, and glorified it by the incarnation of Christ, the sinless One, though born of a woman. Julius M?ller has well said: ?Paul denies the presence of evil in Christ, who was partaker of our fleshly nature (Gal_4:4), and he recognizes it in spirits who are not partakers thereof (Eph_6:12 the King James Version, 'spiritual wickedness in high places'). Is it not therefore in the highest degree probable that according to him evil does not necessarily pertain to man's sensuous nature, and that sárx (say body) denotes something different from this?? (The Christian Doctrine of Sin, I, 321, English edition). He further shows that the derivation of sin from sense is utterly irreconcilable with the central principle of the apostle's doctrine as to the perfect holiness of the Redeemer, and that ?the doctrine of the future resurrection - even taking into account the distinction between the sōma psuchikón and the sōma pneumatikón (1Co_15:44) - is clearly at variance with the doctrine that sin springs from the corporal nature as its source? (318).
5. The First Sin
The very first sin was spiritual in its origin - an act of rebellion against God - the will of the creature in opposition to the will of the Creator (Gen 3). It was conceived in doubt - ?Hath God said??; it was born in desire - ?The tree was good for food?; it was stimulated by a rebellious hankering after equality with God: ?Ye shall be as God, knowing good and evil?; it was introduced from without, from the spiritual world, through the agency of a mysterious, supernatural being, employing ?a beast of the field more subtle than any which Yahweh God had made.? That the serpent in the Old Testament is not identified with Satan, and that the clearest utterance in pre-Christian times on the subject is to be found in the Book of The Wisdom of Solomon 2:24 (?by the envy of the devil death entered into the world?), may be true. That the narrative of the Fall is figurative or symbolical may also be granted. But the whole tendency of the early narrative is to connect the first human sin with a superhuman being, employing an agent known to man, and making that agent its representative in the ?subtlety? of the great temptation as a prelude to the mighty fall. The New Testament is clear on this point (Joh_8:44; Joh_16:11; 2Co_11:3; 1Ti_2:14; Heb_2:14; Rev_12:9). Great historic truths are imbedded in that narrative, whatever we may think of the form which that narrative has assumed. There can be no doubt that the oldest and truest traditions of the human race are to be found there. It is not denied that sin has desecrated the temple of the liv ing God, which is the body. That body indeed has become defiled and polluted by sin. Paul recognizes ?an abnormal development of the sensuous in fallen man, and regards sin as having in a special manner entrenched itself in the body, which becomes liable to death on this very account (Rom_6:23; Rom_7:24)? (Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, I, 761). But we may safely say that theory which connects sin with the physical body, and gives it a purely sensuous origin, is alien to the whole spirit and letter of revelation.

III. Figurative
In the New Testament (σῶμα, sō̇ma, ?the body? both of men and animals) the word has a rich figurative and spiritual use: (1) The temporary home of the soul (2Co_5:6); (2) ?the temple of the Holy Spirit? (1Co_6:19); (3) ?temple? (Joh_2:21); (4) ?the old man,? the flesh as the servant of sin or the sphere in which moral evil comes to outward expression (Rom_6:6; Rom_7:7; compare Paul's use of sárx, ?flesh?); (5) The ?church? as Christ's body, the organism through which He manifests His life and in which H is spirit dwells (Eph_1:23; Col_1:24); (6) The spiritual ?unity? of believers, one redeemed society or organism (Eph_2:16; a corpus mysticum, Eph_4:4); (7) ?substance? (spiritual reality or life in Christ) versus ?shadow? (Col_2:17); (8) The ascended and glorified body of Jesus (Phi_3:21); (9) The resurrection or ?spiritual? (v. natural) body of the redeemed in heaven (1Co_15:44); (10) the whole personality, e.g. the spiritual presence, power and sacrificial work of Christ, the mystical meaning of ?the body and the blood? symbolized in the bread and cup of the sacrament (1Co_11:27). The term body is exceptionally rich in connection with the selfgiving, sacrificial, atoning work of Christ. It was the outward sphere or manifestation of His suffering. Through the physical He revealed the extent of His redeeming and sacrificial love. He ?bare our sins in his body upon the tree? (1Pe_2:24), Thus forever displacing all the ceaseless and costly sacrifices of the old dispensation (Heb_9:24-28). Special terms, ?body of his flesh? (Col_1:22); ?body of sin? (Rom_6:6); ?body of this death? (Rom_7:24); ?body of his glory? (Phi_3:21).
πτῶμα, ptō̇ma, used only of fallen, i.e. dead bodies (Rev_11:8, Rev_11:9).
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


Joh_2:21 (a) In this passage, the body of the Lord JESUS is represented as a temple in which GOD dwells.

Rom_6:6 (b) Here the word is used as though sin itself owned the body as, in fact, it does in some instances. The entire body, from head to foot, is used by some to serve sin.

Rom_12:5 (a) All the Christians bound together by the Holy Spirit are referred to here as forming the body of CHRIST. The believers on earth are called His very body because they are so precious to Him, and because of His utmost care for them. His life indwells all His church.

Eph_1:23 (a) The body is used here in the sense that all the members of the body of CHRIST, those who are saved by grace, belong to one another. As the parts of the body belong to one another and are made to serve one another, so each member of the body of CHRIST serves each other member. No part of the body is independent of any of the rest of the body and so it is among true believers.
Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types
press 1957.


Body
(represented by numerous Heb. terms; Gr. σῶμα, the animal frame of man as distinguished from his spiritual nature. Body is represented as opposed to shadow or figure (Colossiana 2:17). The ceremonies of the law are figures and shadows realized in Christ and the Christian religion. '" The body of sin" (Rom_6:6), called also "the body of this death" (Rom_7:24), is to be understood of the system and habit of sin before conversion, and which is afterward viewed as a loathsome burden. The apostle speaks of a spiritual body in opposition to the animal (1Co_15:44). The term also indicates a society; the Church with its different members (1Co_12:20-27).

CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.





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