Did you know that Jesus is referenced in 1 Peter as the Guardian of our souls? (1 Peter 2:25)

I’ve been listening to Dallas Willard lately and have been fascinated by his teachings on the soul.  Wow, there is so much to be gleaned from these messages! To hear him paint a word picture on how magnificent and vast is the soul is, and how it was created by and for God, is a tremendous thought! So often we don’t give much thought to our soul, or may not completely understand the distinction between body, soul, and spirit. It’s easy to think of our body as being the sum of who we are. Here are few excerpts from his teaching:

Our spirit is the God-connection to our soul.  Anyone who may read my posts on a regular basis may have seen me write a lot about this. Consider that when man fell, not only did our spirit die but our soul – the mind, will, and emotions –became disconnected from God as a result.  This changed the entire way we received information.  Our souls no longer receiving directly from God Himself through the spirit connection, but rather we now began to receive from our five senses instead – from what we see, what we hear, how we feel, and so on. 

So… here is a wild thought! I learned not long ago that the ancient Israelites only occupied about 15% of the land the Lord had given to them. When I heard this, the first thought that came to mind was from Dallas Willard’s teaching – how vast and magnificent our soul is.  The crazy thought is, if we think in terms of the territory of our soul, could the physical representation of the tribes of Israel only occupying 15% of the land God had given them be analogous to the “soul” territory God has given us? 

What an odd picture that paints, of the soul as a territory – perhaps big like the United States.  Can you imagine only a small corner of the United States being occupied?  One who is born of the Spirit has that direct connection with God restored. If this is you, the result might be you, standing on the Plymouth Rock of your soul, looking out across the vast expansiveness. So much to explore! So much waiting to be occupied!

How much of our soul have we welcomed the Holy Spirit to come in and transform?

For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it. For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Or what will a man give in exchange for his soul?  – Mark 8:35 – 37

5 responses to “The Territory of the Soul”

  1. Thanks for the verse. I do not remember seeing it before.
    Dallas seems hard for me to understand but sounds like a good preacher

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You’re welcome! Yes he can be deep but when the moment is right, it all makes sense 🙌😄

      Liked by 1 person

  2. True

    He just seems to go in circle for me

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Awesome! I had a memorable breakfast with a pastor/friend one morning… he said losing your soul is analogous to hearing the voice of the Holy Spirit, but continuing to ignore, suppress, grieve, quench… the voice becomes fainter and fainter as the call of the world becomes dominant… eventually, you stop hearing it.

    The verse “what would a man give in exchange for his soul?”… speaks to that pivotal moment when you’re facing Jesus the judge and you’ve got nothing to show, no crowns to lay at his feet, bitterly regretting your decision to follow the world vs following God’s call… at that moment, nothing you have, nothing you can offer can save you…

    Think God we have a savior, an intercessor, a great High Priest who extends his hand until our last breath! ❤️🙏

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Amen, Darryl, so true and thank God! ❤️ Thanks for sharing your thoughts!

      Like

Leave a reply to Alabastersky Cancel reply