What is consciousness? Why and how are you aware of yourself? This is a question which philosophers and biologists hotly debate. Itās such a difficult question that some suggest consciousness doesnāt actually exist, itās just an illusion.
As usual, the Bible provides a clear common-sense answer. The first chapters of the Bibleās first book contain the account of the creation of the world and life upon it.
The Lord God formed the man of dust from the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living creature (Genesis 2:7).
God is the Creator of everything, including life. It stands to reason that He is the source of consciousness. His name, which most English Bibles print as āLordā, means something like āI Am That I Amā (see Exodus 3:14). He has given to each of us, and not just humans but all His creatures, a taste of that life which is His.
The reason we live is that we are energised by the breath of God. The Bible describes a direct link between the life of all animals and the breath of God: āWhen you hide your face, they are dismayed; when you take away their breath, they die and return to their dust. When you send forth your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the groundā (Psalm 104:29ā30).
Donāt be confused by that word āspiritā. In the original Hebrew text itās the same as the word ābreathā in the previous sentence. Itās a word that carries the basic idea of āwindā.
The spirit of God is a constantly recurring theme in the Bible. Itās the power by which He created and maintains everything, and itās often helpful to remember the idea that it is His ābreathā.
Godās creative āspiritā is evidenced in a marvellous way in the existence of animal life. Life begins when He gives His spirit, and ceases when he removes it: āand the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave itā (Ecclesiastes 12:7). Consciousness begins when He gives the breath of life, and ends when He takes it away.
The Soul
We saw that when God created the first man he ābecame a living creatureā (Genesis 2:7). That word ācreatureā is a Hebrew word, nephesh, which can be defined as āthat which breathesā. The word is used in the Bible of all animals: for example, āAnd God said, āLet the earth bring forth living creatures according to their kindsāā (Genesis 1:24).
The word nephesh has a complex meaning in the Hebrew Bible. Itās used to describe every aspect of animal life, and is translated into English as (among other things) ālifeā, āmindā, āheartā, ābodyā, āappetiteāāand also āsoulā. For example, āPrepare for me delicious food, such as I love, and bring it to me so that I may eat, that my soul may bless you before I dieā (Genesis 27:4).
There appears to be no particular reason why the translators introduced the word āsoulā, except that perhaps they had a certain idea they wanted to convey. Thereās a popular notion, which goes back at least as far as the ancient Greeks, that there is an essence of life which is independent of the body, and which can go on living after the body dies. This life essence has long been called āsoulā in English.
Itās not a concept thatās found in the Bible. The Bible is clear: the āsoulā is the living being, itās simply a ācreatureā: āBehold, all souls are mine; the soul of the father as well as the soul of the son is mine: the soul who sins shall dieā (Ezekiel 18:4).
Questions and Answers
Weāve established a simple and profound fact: the life of all creatures happens by the breath of God. We have no idea how this works, but it follows that this is the cause of consciousness. We can now turn to some popular questions people ask.
Will computers ever become conscious? The answer is that they may get phen-omenally intelligent and they may learn to perfectly mimic consciousness, but they will never become conscious.
Does every living thing have a soul? According to the Bible, souls are associated with breathāalmost everything that lives processes oxygen in some way, although there are some simple organisms such as certain types of bacteria which donāt. Again, according to the Bible souls are associated with intelligenceāthis is not limited to animals, for example itās now known that trees communicate with each other. However, the Bible only uses the word nephesh to describe people and animals, so thereās no point speculating any further.
And the most important questionāWhy am I here? The Bible provides the definitive answer. God is the essence and the source of life, and the highest purpose of all living things is to acknowledge this: āLet everything that has breath praise the Lord!ā (Psalm 150:6).
His purpose is that the earth one day will be filled with His glory (Numbers 14:21). This will happen in His Kingdom, after the return to earth of His Son Jesus Christ. He has invited us to be there. When Christ returns, those who have accepted his offer of salvation will be given immortality (1 Corinthians 15:23).
In the Bible weāre given a very few tantalising glimpses of whatās in store at the culmination of the Kingdom, when the earth and its population have been restored to perfection. This is one: āWhen all things are subjected to him, then the Son himself will also be subjected to him who put all things in subjection under him, that God may be all in allā (1 Corinthians 15:28). We cannot comprehend what is meant by God being āall in allā, but we know that it will include you and me, if we want it.
Chris Parkin
