For the word of God 
	is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates 
	even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts 
	and attitudes of the heart. Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s 
	sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom 
	we must give account. (Hebr. 4:12-13)
	
	
Some people view the soul and body interchangeably, while 
	others think the soul and spirit are the same. But it’s more accurate to 
	think of them as separate components.  Our soul is the conscious part 
	of us, composed of mind (intellect), will, and emotions.   It 
	makes choices and controls our behavior by giving orders to the body. Our 
	spirit is the subconscious part, an internal adviser to the conscious soul.  
	It’s  our conscience.
	
Both our soul and our spirit are intangible and eternal 
	and are housed in our body which is tangible and temporal. Our body is 
	designed for use in this life, and when we die we leave it behind. Paul 
	described our body as our earthly dwelling and spoke of how we long to be 
	clothed with our heavenly dwelling.  Believers don’t desire so much to 
	be rid of our earthly bodies, he said, as to receive our heavenly ones. He 
	said receiving our heavenly body is the very purpose for which we were 
	created, and that’s why God gave us the Holy Spirit at the first moment of 
	our belief. He’s a deposit guaranteeing what is to come, which is the 
	exchange of our earthly dwelling for our heavenly one. (2 
	Cor. 5:1-5)
	
It Wasn’t Always Like 
	That
	
I believe Adam and Eve were created with a heavenly 
	alignment of body, soul, and spirit.  Their body was submissive to 
	their soul which was submissive to their spirit which was one with the 
	Spirit of God.  But at the fall this alignment was perverted and 
	through Satan’s influence the soul began to assert itself over the spirit. 
	Both were contaminated by sin and the direct link to God was broken. In the 
	time after the fall the soul became more assertive as man entered the period 
	between Adam and Noah that some call the Dispensation of Conscience. Man was 
	left to decide for himself what was right but because of the misalignment 
	that came with the fall,  things got progressively worse until God had 
	to wipe the slate clean and start over. This experience has been repeated 
	again and again . Even the time of Israel’s dominance in the world, when the 
	communication link with God was formally re-opened, ended in failure. During 
	that period Prophets were appointed to speak to the people for God and 
	Priests to speak to God for the people. But it wasn’t enough.
	
The problem was that the spirit of unsaved man is 
	confused and uncertain because of the effects of sin and often gives bad 
	advice to his soul, which is also contaminated by sin, making it impossible 
	for him to please God.
	
The cross changed all that. Now, when we are born again 
	our spirit becomes one with the Spirit of God (1 
	Cor. 6:17) and the confusion and uncertainty clears up. Our spirit again 
	knows right and wrong as absolutes, and as our conscience it begins to serve 
	as a reliable guide to our soul, which is still sin infested.
	
The difference that being born again makes in us is so 
	profound that we can only understand God’s word after we become believers. 
	The natural man cannot comprehend it. (1 
	Cor 2:14) This explains why the Lord’s disciples were often confused 
	about His teaching, and failed to understand much of it. They didn’t receive 
	the Holy Spirit until the night of His resurrection. (John 
	20:22)
	
This is also why Jesus told us that our righteousness has 
	to surpass that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law.  Not 
	being born again, their efforts at keeping the law were acts of will and 
	were often in conflict with what their spirits were advising them to do. In 
	other words, it was still a matter of their soul asserting itself over their 
	spirit. They just knew the law well enough to know when their spirits were 
	giving them bad advice.  In 
	Isaiah 29:13 the Lord had said, 
	“These people come near to me with their lips (governed by the soul), but their hearts (spirits) 
	are far from me.” Jesus accused them of looking like whitewashed tombs, 
	beautiful on the outside, but inside full of dead men’s bones and everything 
	unclean (Matt. 23:27) Their 
	obedience to the law was only intellectual assent backed up by will power. 
	Their spirit was still infested with sin.
	
Back To Hebrews 4
	
But the Lord pays special attention to the motives of our 
	heart and judges us on our intentions, not our actions. This is what the 
	writer to the Hebrews meant when he said that the word of God can divide 
	soul (behavior) and spirit (motive). He’s not fooled by man’s attempts at 
	good behavior. He knows the thoughts and attitudes of our heart. Nothing is 
	hidden from His sight. Commenting on ceremonial cleanliness He said that 
	it’s not what goes into us that makes us unclean, but what comes out of us.
	“For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual 
	immorality, theft, false testimony, slander.” (Matt. 15:17-19) Jeremiah wrote that the heart of man is deceitful 
	above all things and beyond cure. (Jere. 
	17:9) After sinning with Bathsheba, David prayed that God would create 
	in him a pure heart, and renew a steadfast spirit within him. (Psalm 
	51:10)  This is what happens when we’re born again and the Holy 
	Spirit unites with our spirit. It renews a steadfast spirit with in us.  
	It’s what David longed for, but it couldn’t happen before the cross. (John 
	7:39)
	
In effect, the Holy Spirit works through our spirit to 
	repossess our soul from its bondage to sin. But since it’s not the conscious 
	part of us, our spirit can only work to influence our decisions. Our soul 
	must choose to heed the advice of our spirit, in whose “ear” the Holy Spirit 
	is whispering. This is what Paul meant when he told us to be transformed by 
	the renewing of our minds (soul) (Romans 
	12:2).  This transformation consists of consciously choosing to 
	allow the Holy Spirit to become the primary influence in determining our 
	actions. This is the heavenly alignment again. God’s Spirit to our spirit, 
	to our soul, and to our body. This is why the Pharisees were criticized. 
	God’s Spirit was not within them, and so their obedience was a product of 
	their intellect, their soul. Their spirit remained unregenerate. It looked 
	good on the outside, but inside it was all out of order. It was form without 
	substance, and it produced self righteousness, not humility.
	
The biggest problem we have is that our soul is still 
	struggling with its bondage to sin, and therefore must constantly choose to 
	submit to our renewed spirit. Remember the soul is where our behavioral 
	decisions are made. Our spirit is one with the Spirit of God, but can only 
	advise. Paul described our dilemma poignantly in
	Romans 7:14-25, saying that he 
	had the desire to do good but could not carry it out. His spirit was one 
	with God, but his soul sometimes rebelled. Inwardly he could delight in 
	God’s Law, but outwardly he would sometimes conform to the law of sin and 
	death.
	
It’s actually the opposite of the Pharisees’ problem. 
	They looked good on the outside but were full of evil thoughts and 
	intentions. While the Lord condemned them, he directs no condemnation toward 
	us (Romans 8:1) because although 
	our soul often betrays us, our spirit is one with God. He goes so far as to 
	separate the behavior from the believer saying that it’s not we who sin, but 
	the sin nature that dwells within us. (Romans 
	7:20)
	
Will This Ever End?
	
When we die or are raptured, our transformation will be 
	complete, and the Holy Spirit’s work of repossessing our soul will be 
	finished. The heavenly alignment will be permanently restored, our 
	regenerated soul in perpetual submission to our spirit which is one with 
	God. Only then will we be ready for our resurrection bodies. It will no 
	longer occur to us to behave in a manner contrary to God’s will, and we’ll 
	finally be fit to dwell with Him forever.
	
The new body we receive will compare to the old one only 
	in physical characteristics. The old one is corrupt and doomed to perish. 
	The new one will be incorruptible and will never perish. (1 Cor. 15:53) We’ll recognize each other and will know God as we are 
	known by Him. (1 Cor.13:12) No 
	longer will things be hidden from our understanding or beyond our 
	comprehension because our soul, where understanding and comprehension take 
	place, will finally be freed from the bondage of sin. The immeasurable 
	creative capacity with which the human mind was created will finally be 
	unleashed for our eternal use and enjoyment. The tiny nuggets of talent and 
	ability in the arts and sciences that we can only faintly glimpse now will 
	become rich veins to be mined for all eternity.
	
And best of all, we’ll finally achieve our heart’s true 
	desire, to be one with our Creator, body, soul, and spirit. Selah 02-18-12