7th December 2016

What Is The Guff

“What is the guff?”The guff is a term the Talmud uses to refer to the repository of all unborn souls. The Talmud is the Jewish commentary on the Torah, or the Old Testament, and especially the first five books of the Bible known as the Pentateuch. Jewish tradition states that the Talmud began as oral teachings handed down from Moses that were eventually completed sometime between the 4th and 2nd century B.C.Literally, the word guff means “body.” The Talmud essentially says, “The Messiah will not arrive until there are no more souls in the guff." The Talmud is saying that there are a certain number of souls in heaven waiting to be born. Until they are born, they wait in a heavenly repository called “the guff,” and the Messiah will not arrive until every single one of these souls has been born into the physical world.Is the idea of the guff biblical? No, it is not. Neither the Hebrew Scriptures nor the New Testament teaches that there is a storehouse of souls in heaven. The Bible does not teach that souls are waiting to be attached to bodies when people are born. The Bible is not explicitly clear on when/how human souls are created, but the concept of the guff does not agree with what the Bible does teach about the origin of the soul. It is far more biblical to hold that God creates each human soul at the moment of conception, or that the human soul is generated along with the body through the physical-spiritual union of conception.

“How are human souls created?”There are two biblically plausible views on how the human soul is created. Traducianism is the theory that a soul is generated by the physical parents along with the physical body. Support for Traducianism is as follows:

(A) In Genesis 2:7, God breathed the breath of life into Adam, causing Adam to become a "living soul." Scripture nowhere records God performing this action again.

(B) Adam had a son in his own likeness (Genesis 5:3). Adam's descendants seem to be "living souls" without God breathing into them.

(C) Genesis 2:2-3 seems to indicate that God ceased His creative work.

(D) Adam’s sin affects all men-both physically and spiritually-this makes sense if the body and soul both come from the parents. The weakness of Traducianism is that it is unclear how an immaterial soul can be generated through an entirely physical process.

Traducianism can only be true if the body and soul are inextricably connected.Creationism is the view that God creates a new soul when a human being is conceived. Creationism was held by many early church fathers and also has scriptural support.

First, Scripture differentiates the origin of the soul from the origin of the body (Ecclesiastes 12:7Isaiah 42:5Zechariah 12:1Hebrews 12:9).

Second, if God creates each individual soul at the moment it is needed, the separation of soul and body is held firm. The weakness of Creationism is that it has God continually creating new human souls, while Genesis 2:2-3 indicates that God ceased creating.

Also, since the entire human existence-body, soul, and spirit-are infected by sin and God creates a new soul for every human being, how is that soul then infected with sin?A third view, but one that lacks biblical support, is the concept that God created all human souls at the same time, and "attaches" a soul to a human being at the moment of conception. This view holds that there is sort of a "warehouse of souls" in heaven where God stores souls that await a human body to be attached to.

Again, this view has no biblical support, and is usually held by those of a "new age" or reincarnation mindset.Whether the Traducianist view or the Creationist view is correct, both agree that the soul does not exist prior to conception. This seems to be the clear teaching of the Bible. Whether God creates a new human soul at the moment of conception, or whether God designed the human reproductive process to also reproduce a soul, God is ultimately responsible for the creation of each and every human soul.

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