The mortality of the soul has had a number of advocates throughout the history of both Judaism and Christianity.
Judaism Modern scholars believe the concept of an immortal soul going to bliss or torment after death entered mainstream Judaism after the
Babylonian exile and existed throughout the
Second Temple period, though both 'soul sleep' and 'soul death', were also held. Soul sleep is present in certain Second Temple period pseudepigraphal works, later rabbinical works, and among medieval era rabbis such as
Abraham Ibn Ezra (1092–1167),
Maimonides (1135–1204), and
Joseph Albo (1380–1444). Some authorities within
Conservative Judaism, notably
Neil Gillman, also support the notion that the souls of the dead are unconscious until the
resurrection. Traditional
rabbinic Judaism, however, has always been of the opinion that belief in immortality of at least most souls, and punishment and reward after death, was a consistent belief back through the giving of the Torah at
Mt. Sinai. Traditional Judaism reads the Torah accordingly. As an example, the punishment of
kareth (excision) is understood to mean that the soul is cut off from God in the
afterlife.
Christian views Second century In the second half of the second century,
Tatian wrote: "The soul is not in itself immortal... If, indeed, it knows not the truth, it dies, and is dissolved with the body, but rises again at last at the end of the world with the body, receiving death by punishment in immortality. But, again, if it acquires the knowledge of God, it dies not, although for a time it be dissolved." Tatian's contemporary
Athenagoras of Athens taught that souls sleep dreamlessly between death and resurrection: "[T]hose who are dead and those who sleep are subject to similar states, as regards at least the stillness and the absence of all sense of the present or the past, or rather of existence itself and their own life." In
Octavius, an account of a debate between a Pagan and a Christian by
Marcus Minucius Felix, the Christian in the debate takes mortalism to be a matter of common agreement:
Third to seventh centuries Mortalism in the early church in this period is testified by
Eusebius of Caesarea: This synod in Arabia would have been during the reign of
Emperor Philip the Arab (244–249). Redepenning (1841) was of the opinion that Eusebius' terminology here, "the human soul dies" was probably that of their critics rather than the Arabian Christians' own expression and they were more likely simply "psychopannychists", believers in "soul sleep". Some Syriac writers such as
Aphrahat,
Ephrem and
Narsai believed in the
dormition, or "sleep", of the soul, in which "...souls of the dead...are largely inert, having lapsed into a state of sleep, in which they can only dream of their future reward or punishments."
John of Damascus denounced the ideas of some Arab Christians as
thnetopsychism ("soul death").
Eustratios of Constantinople (after 582) denounced this and what he called
hypnopsychism ("soul sleep"). The issue was connected to that of the
intercession of saints. The writings of Christian ascetic
Isaac of Nineveh (d. 700), reflect several perspectives which include soul sleep.
Ninth to fifteenth centuries Soul sleep evidently persisted since various Byzantine writers had to defend the doctrine of the veneration of saints against those who said the saints sleep.
John the Deacon (eleventh century) attacked those who "dare to say that praying to the saints is like shouting in the ears of the deaf, as if they had drunk from the mythical waters of Oblivion."
Pope John XXII inadvertently caused the
beatific vision controversy (1331–1334) by suggesting that the saved do not attain the beatific vision, or "see God" until Judgment Day (in Italian:
Visione beatifica differita, "deferred beatific vision"), which was a view possibly consistent with soul sleep. The Sacred College of Cardinals held a consistory on the problem in January 1334, and Pope John conceded to the more orthodox understanding. His successor, in that same year, Pope Benedict XII, declared that the righteous do see Heaven prior to the final judgement. In 1336, Pope
Benedict XII issued the papal bull
Benedictus Deus. This document defined the Church's belief that the souls of the departed go to their eternal reward immediately after death, as opposed to remaining in a state of unconscious existence until the
Last Judgment.
The Reformation Soul sleep re-emerged in Christianity when it was promoted by some
Reformation leaders, and it survives today in some denominations, such as
Jehovah's Witnesses and the
Seventh-day Adventist Church. Conti has argued that during the Reformation both psychosomnolence (the belief that the soul sleeps until the resurrection) and thnetopsychism (the belief that the body and soul both die and then both rise again) were quite common. Anglican cleric
William Tyndale (1494–1536) argued against
Thomas More in favor of soul sleep: Morey suggests that
John Wycliffe (1320–1384) and Tyndale taught the doctrine of soul sleep "as the answer to the Catholic teachings of
purgatory and masses for the dead." Some
Anabaptists in this period, such as
Michael Sattler (1490–1527), were Christian mortalists.
Martin Luther (1483–1546) is said to have advocated soul sleep, though certain scholars, such as Trevor O’Reggio, argue that his writings reflect a nuanced position on the subject. In writing on Ecclesiastes, Luther says: Elsewhere Luther states that:
Jürgen Moltmann (2000) concludes from this that "Luther conceived the state of the dead as a deep, dreamless sleep, removed from time and space, without consciousness and without feeling." That Luther believed in soul sleep is also the view of Michael R. Watts. Some writers have claimed that Luther changed his view later in life.
Gottfried Fritschel (1867) claims that quotations from Luther's Latin works had been misread in Latin or in German translation to contradict or qualify specific statements and what he perceived as Luther's overall teaching, namely that the sleep of the dead was unconscious. These readings can still be found in some English sources. Several passages, including the following examples, show that Luther's views are more nuanced, or are even cited to show that he adhered to the doctrine of the immortality of the soul: On the other hand, others believing in soul sleep included
Camillo Renato (1540),
Mátyás Dévai Bíró (1500–45),
Michael Servetus (1511–1553),
Laelio Sozzini (1562),
Fausto Sozzini (1563), the
Polish Brethren (1565 onwards),
Dirk Philips (1504–1568),
Gregory Paul of Brzeziny (1568), the
Socinians (1570–1800),
John Frith (1573),
George Schomann (1574) and
Simon Budny (1576).
Seventeenth to eighteenth centuries Soul sleep was a significant minority view from the eighth to the seventeenth centuries, and it became increasingly common from the Reformation onwards. Soul sleep has been called a "major current of seventeenth century protestant ideology."
John Milton wrote in his unpublished
De Doctrina Christiana, Gordon Campbell (2008) identifies Milton's views as "thnetopsychism", a belief that the soul dies with the body but is resurrected at the last judgment. however Milton speaks also of the dead as "asleep". Those holding this view include: 1600s: Sussex Baptists d. 1612:
Edward Wightman 1627: Samuel Gardner 1628:
Samuel Przypkowski 1636:
George Wither 1637:
Joachim Stegmann 1624:
Richard Overton 1654:
John Biddle (Unitarian) 1655:
Matthew Caffyn 1658:
Samuel Richardson 1608–1674:
John Milton 1588–1670:
Thomas Hobbes 1643–1727:
Isaac Newton 1676–1748:
Pietro Giannone 1751:
William Kenrick 1755:
Edmund Law 1759:
Samuel Bourn 1723–1791:
Richard Price 1718–1797:
Peter Peckard 1733–1804:
Joseph Priestley Francis Blackburne (1765).
Nineteenth to twentieth centuries Belief in
soul sleep and the
annihilation of the unsaved became increasingly common during the nineteenth century, entering mainstream Christianity in the twentieth century. From this point it is possible to speak in terms of entire groups holding the belief, and only the most prominent individual nineteenth-century advocates of the doctrine will be mentioned here. Others include:
Millerites (from 1833),
Edward White (1846),
Christadelphians (from 1848),
Thomas Thayer (1855),
François Gaussen (d. 1863),
Henry Constable (1873),
Louis Burnier (
Waldensian, d. 1878), the
Baptist Conditionalist Association (1878),
Cameron Mann (1888),
Emmanuel Pétavel-Olliff (1891),
Miles Grant (1895),
George Gabriel Stokes (1897).
Primitive Baptist Universalists, some
Lutherans, the
Seventh-day Adventist Church,
Advent Christian Church, the Afterlife group,
Christadelphians, the
Church of God (Seventh Day),
Church of God (7th day) – Salem Conference, the
Church of God Abrahamic Faith, and various other Church of God organizations and
related denominations which adhered to the older teachings of
Herbert W. Armstrong's
Worldwide Church of God, and the
Bible Student movement.
Jehovah's Witnesses teach a form of thnetopsychism, in that the soul is the body (Genesis 2:7) and that it dies (Ezekiel 18:20; Ecclesiastes 9:5,10). They believe that 144,000
chosen ones will receive immortality in heaven to rule as kings and priests with Christ in Heaven (Rev 7:4; 14:1,3) but all the other
saved will be raised from the dead on the last day (John 5:28,29) to receive eternal life on a Paradise Earth (Revelation 7:9,14,17).
Seventh-day Adventists believe that
death is a state of unconscious sleep until the resurrection. They base this belief on biblical texts such as Ecclesiastes 9:5 which states "the dead know nothing", and 1 Thessalonians 4:13–18 which contains a description of the dead being raised from the
grave at the second coming. These verses, it is argued, indicate that death is only a period or form of slumber. Adventists also use a number of texts to defend this position. They use verses like Rom. 6:23, John 20:17, John 5:28, 29, Isa. 25:8, Job 19:25-27, to defend conditional immortality, stating:The wages of sin is death. But God, who alone is immortal, will grant eternal life to His redeemed. Until that day death is an unconscious state for all people. When Christ, who is our life, appears, the resurrected righteous and the living righteous will be glorified and caught up to meet their Lord. The second resurrection, the resurrection of the unrighteous, will take place a thousand years later.On John 11, they also comment:Although colloquially called “soul sleep, the official term in Adventist belief number 26 (Death and Resurrection) regarding the state of the dead is an “unconscious state.” Examples of it can be found throughout the Bible. For example, when looking at the story of Lazarus rising from the dead (John 11, NKJV), would it not be cruel to interrupt Lazarus’s perfect state in heaven by bringing him back to life to return to this corrupt earth, only to die again later? ==Critics/opponents==