27 May 2026

A Chat With Grok About Colossians 2:18 and the Resurrection of the Dead

 Gary– If you feel like doing some exegesis rather than QCD; interpret this; “Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels, intruding into those things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind,”

Grok– Colossians 2:18 (KJV)

“Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels, intruding into those things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind.”

Straightforward Interpretation

Paul is issuing a strong warning to the Colossian Christians: Don’t let anyone cheat you out of the spiritual reward that belongs to you in Christ by means of a counterfeit spirituality. This false path has several hallmarks:

  • “Voluntary humility” (Greek: thelōn en tapeinophrosynē): A self-chosen, showy lowliness. Not the genuine humility that comes from encountering God, but a manufactured asceticism or self-abasement designed to look spiritual.
  • “Worshipping of angels”: Direct veneration of angelic beings as intermediaries. This was likely part of a syncretistic heresy blending Jewish mysticism, early Gnostic ideas, and Hellenistic philosophy.
  • “Intruding into those things which he hath not seen”: Claiming special visionary or mystical knowledge of the unseen spiritual realm (angelic hierarchies, heavenly secrets, etc.) that God has not actually granted. The person is “walking where he doesn’t belong.”
  • “Vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind”: Despite the outward appearance of humility, the person is actually arrogant—swollen with pride (physioumenos) because of their unregenerate, carnal (fleshly) reasoning. Their “deep spirituality” is really intellectual and spiritual inflation rooted in the fallen mind.

In short: This is a warning against spiritual elitism disguised as humility.

Historical and Theological Context

The church at Colossae was facing a dangerous hybrid teaching (sometimes called the “Colossian heresy”). It likely combined:

  • Jewish legalism and ascetic practices
  • Speculative angelology (common in some Second Temple Jewish mysticism)
  • Proto-Gnostic ideas that matter is evil and secret knowledge is needed to ascend to God
  • Greek philosophical dualism

Paul’s entire argument in Colossians 2 is that Christ is sufficient. He is the image of the invisible God, the one in whom all the fullness of deity dwells bodily (Col. 2:9). Therefore:

  • You don’t need angels as mediators.
  • You don’t need extra revelations or visions.
  • You don’t need to submit to extra rules, self-denial rituals, or “deeper” spiritual experiences to be accepted by God.

The “reward” (brabeion) Paul mentions is the prize of the full Christian inheritance—completeness in Christ, freedom from condemnation, and ultimate glorification. The false teachers were trying to disqualify believers (v. 18 in many modern translations) by moving the goalposts.

Key Theological Point

This verse stands as a timeless critique of any spirituality that diminishes Christ’s centrality. It applies to:

  • Angel worship or excessive focus on spiritual beings (still present in some folk Catholicism, New Age movements, etc.)
  • Mystical elitism that claims special visions or “secret knowledge”
  • False humility that is actually pride in disguise (“I’m so spiritual I don’t need ordinary Christianity”)
  • Any system that says “Jesus + something else” is required for spiritual maturity

Paul’s solution, given right after this verse, is to “hold fast to the Head” (Christ) from whom the whole body grows (Col. 2:19).

Modern Application

Watch out for teachers or movements that:

  • Emphasize exotic spiritual experiences over simple faith in Christ
  • Create hierarchies of “deeper” Christians based on visions, angel encounters, or ascetic practices
  • Sound very humble while actually exalting their own insights
  • Intrude into areas Scripture leaves mysterious and claim secret knowledge

Genuine spirituality flows from union with Christ, not bypassing Him to access the “really spiritual” realm directly.

The verse is a sharp diagnostic tool: If someone’s “humility” makes you feel lesser, or their spirituality makes Christ seem insufficient, it’s probably the same old Colossian error wearing new clothes.

Gary- Thanks for that exegesis of Colossians- I learned something quite interesting and useful. I was surprised by the range of theological points in that verse. People talk about angels in popular culture a lot- even angels and demons (dan brown) for instance. Yet Colossians have an implicit reminder not to pay too much attention to that.

Grok– You’re right — that single verse packs a surprising amount of theological punch, and your observation about popular culture is spot on.

The Implicit Warning in Colossians

Paul isn’t denying the existence of angels (Scripture clearly affirms them elsewhere as created beings who serve God). Instead, he’s issuing a caution against making them the center of spiritual attention. The Colossian heresy apparently involved:

  • Treating angels as intermediaries or objects of worship
  • Chasing speculative knowledge about the unseen realm (“things he hath not seen”)
  • Using that fascination to build a kind of spiritual elitism

This was a real problem in the 1st century, especially where Jewish mysticism, Greek philosophy, and early Christian ideas mixed. Paul’s point is blunt: Christ is enough. You don’t need to climb a ladder of angels, visions, or secret heavenly knowledge to reach God. Jesus is the bridge (Colossians 1:15-20, 2:9-10).

That’s a very counter-cultural message, both then and now.

Pop Culture’s Angel Obsession

Modern culture loves angels — but almost always in a distorted way:

  • Romanticized or New Age version: Guardian angels as personal life coaches, angel numbers, channeling, etc.
  • Sensational/Dan Brown style: Angels & Demons, conspiracy theories, secret societies, dramatic heavenly wars, hidden codes.
  • Hollywood: Angels as tragic lovers, warriors, or mysterious guides (Touched by an Angel, City of Angels, Supernatural, etc.).

These portrayals make angels exciting and mysterious. They feed our natural curiosity about the unseen world. But Colossians 2:18 essentially says: Don’t let that fascination beguile you. It can become a distraction that puffs up the “fleshly mind” while pulling focus away from Christ.

The Bible’s actual treatment of angels is much more restrained and God-centered. When angels appear, they usually point people toward God or deliver a message and then step back (think the Annunciation, or the angel at the empty tomb). They consistently reject worship when someone tries to give it to them (Revelation 19:10, 22:8-9).

Why This Matters Today

This verse functions as a kind of spiritual filter. In an age full of:

  • Angel tarot cards
  • “Angel whisperer” books
  • Obsessive end-times speculation involving demonic/angelic hierarchies
  • Mystical experiences elevated above Scripture

…Colossians reminds believers to keep first things first. Healthy Christianity is Christocentric, not angelocentric.

It doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy a Dan Brown novel as fiction, or find artistic depictions of angels interesting. It just means don’t let that become your theology or your path to spiritual reward.


What surprised you most about the range in that verse? The pride/humility paradox, the warning against mysticism, or how directly it speaks to modern culture? I’m happy to unpack more of Colossians 2 if you’d like.

Gary– It was just the meaning. I have read that before yet didn’t recognize the application. It is possible to interpret it incorrectly at least 40% toward a direction that misses the meaning of the key points

GrokYes, that’s a very honest and insightful comment.

Colossians 2:18 is one of those verses that’s surprisingly easy to misread or flatten, even if you’ve read it many times. The language is dense and a bit archaic in the KJV, so it’s common for people to walk away with only a partial or even distorted understanding — I’d say your “at least 40% off” estimate is probably accurate for a lot of casual readers.

Common Ways People Misinterpret It

Here are a few frequent misdirections:

  1. Over-spiritualizing it — Some read it and think Paul is against all humility or all interest in angels. They miss that he’s specifically targeting false humility and worship of angels.
  2. Making it purely about legalism — People sometimes fold it entirely into the “don’t let anyone judge you about food, festivals, or Sabbaths” section (v.16) and lose the distinct warning about mysticism and visionary elitism.
  3. Ignoring the pride element — The “vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind” part is easy to overlook. Readers focus on the “humility and worshipping of angels” and miss that Paul is saying the whole thing is actually rooted in arrogance, not real lowliness.
  4. Applying it too narrowly — Treating it only as a 1st-century problem with Gnostics or Jewish mystics, instead of seeing its broad application to any spirituality that drifts from Christ-centeredness.

When any of those happen, the real point — don’t let anyone cheat you out of your reward in Christ by chasing substitute spiritualities — gets diluted or missed.

The Core Meaning (Refreshed)

The verse is fundamentally a protection verse. Paul is saying:

Your full spiritual inheritance and reward are already secured in Christ. Don’t let a persuasive person with an impressive-sounding “deeper” spirituality (self-chosen humility + angel focus + claimed secret visions) talk you out of that simple but profound reality.

It’s a warning against spiritual counterfeits that look humble and enlightened but are actually proud and disconnected from the Head (Christ).

I’m glad the exegesis helped pull the application into focus for you this time. Sometimes a verse needs the right framing before it really lands.

Would you like me to walk through the surrounding verses (Colossians 2:16-23) to show how this fits into Paul’s bigger argument? Or is there a particular part of the meaning you want to explore more?

Gary– Was it Colassea or Galatia that sort of disappeared from history as a town- Galatia wasn’t it? What became of the Colossians?

GrokIt was Colossae (not Galatia) that largely disappeared from history as a functioning city.

Quick Clarification on the Mix-Up

  • Colossae (also spelled Colosse) was the specific town in the Lycus River Valley (Phrygia, in modern-day Turkey) that Paul addressed in the Epistle to the Colossians. It was a real, but declining, city by the 1st century AD.
  • Galatia was a broader region (not a single town) in central Asia Minor. Paul wrote the Epistle to the Galatians to churches scattered across that area. The Galatians (a Celtic people who had settled there) didn’t have one city that vanished — the region continued under Roman, then Byzantine, and later Turkish rule. No major “disappearance” of a town named Galatia.

You’re thinking of Colossae — the “forgotten” biblical city.

What Became of Colossae and the Colossians?

Colossae had once been an important commercial center (known for its dark red/purple wool dye and position on trade routes) from the Persian period onward. But by Paul’s time (mid-1st century AD), it had already shrunk significantly due to competition from its neighbors Laodicea and Hierapolis.

Key events in its decline:

  • It was hit by major earthquakes (around AD 17 and especially ~AD 60/61 during Nero’s reign), along with the other two cities. Laodicea and Hierapolis recovered and were rebuilt with Roman help. Colossae never fully regained its prominence.
  • By the 4th–5th century, it was already a shadow of its former self. The population gradually shifted.
  • Inhabitants moved to the nearby settlement of Chonae (modern Honaz, Turkey), which became the continuation of the Christian community there. Chonae developed a strong tradition around the Archangel Michael (linked to local legends of miracles at Colossae).
  • Further decline came with Arab invasions (7th–8th centuries), Seljuk Turkish conquests, and destruction in the 12th century (including attacks that ruined the prominent Church of St. Michael). By the late Byzantine period, the original site was largely abandoned.

Today, the site of ancient Colossae is an unexcavated mound (a tell) near Honaz. Archaeological work has only recently begun in earnest (as of 2025), so it’s one of the few major New Testament cities that hasn’t been systematically dug up yet.

The Church and the People

The Christian community in Colossae appears to have persisted for centuries in some form (as part of the broader Phrygian churches), but it faded along with the city. The letter itself survived and became part of the New Testament canon — which is why we still read it today, even though the physical city is gone.

It’s a poignant reminder of the themes in Colossians: earthly things (cities, status, even impressive religious sites) pass away, but the supremacy of Christ and the spiritual inheritance Paul wrote about endure.

Does that clear it up? If you want more on the archaeology, the region’s history, or how this ties back into the theology of the letter, let me know!

Gary– Would the Colossians have been proud, embarrassed or chastised by the letter?

GrokA bit of all three, but mostly a mix of conviction (chastised) and encouragement — with some pride possible among the faithful.

We don’t have direct historical records of how the Colossian church reacted when the letter was first read aloud (likely in a house church gathering, with Tychicus delivering it). But we can make a reasoned inference from the letter’s content, tone, and context.

The Letter’s Tone

Paul’s approach in Colossians is pastoral and Christ-centered, not scathing. He starts with thanksgiving and prayer:

  • He praises their faith, love, and hope (Colossians 1:3-8).
  • He affirms that the gospel is bearing fruit among them.
  • He emphasizes their completeness in Christ (2:10) and calls them to hold fast to what they already have.

This would have produced feelings of encouragement and pride for many — especially since Paul hadn’t even visited them personally. Being addressed by the famous apostle from prison would have been honoring.

The Corrective Edge

At the same time, the letter contains clear warnings:

  • Against false teachers promoting angel worship, ascetic rules, visions, and syncretism (Colossians 2:8, 16-23 — the verse we discussed earlier).
  • Paul urges them not to be “beguiled” or “disqualified.”
  • He implies that dangerous ideas have already gained some traction.

This part would have felt chastising or convicting to those flirting with the heresy (or already influenced by it). Some members might have felt embarrassed — especially if they had been drawn to the “deeper,” more mystical spirituality that sounded impressive. The “voluntary humility” that was actually prideful could have hit close to home for certain individuals.

Overall Likely Reaction

  • The solid core of the church (loyal to Epaphras’s original teaching) → Probably felt proud and strengthened. They were being defended and affirmed by Paul.
  • Those tempted or involved in the error → Likely felt chastised or embarrassed, but in a constructive way (like a spiritual “course correction” from a respected leader).
  • The whole community → Grateful. The letter was read publicly and even shared with nearby churches (Laodicea — Col. 4:16), which suggests it was received as authoritative guidance rather than rejected.

Early churches generally respected apostolic letters, even when they contained rebukes (see how the Corinthians responded to 1 Corinthians over time). The fact that Colossians survived, was circulated, and entered the New Testament canon indicates it was ultimately valued, not dismissed.

In short: Not a crushing condemnation like Galatians (“You foolish Galatians!”), but more like a wise father saying, “I’m proud of you — now don’t get distracted by this nonsense.” The dominant emotions were probably thankful conviction leading to renewed focus on Christ’s supremacy.

Does this line up with how the verse we discussed earlier hit you? Or would you like to look at specific sections of the letter and how they might have landed differently?

Gary– I am rather interested in the history of the region for the time being. Asking AI questions about that is a new opportunity for casual scholarship- not requiring reading a textbook or looking up specific reference materials- I would guess you have read a few books.

GrokThe Lycus River Valley (in ancient Phrygia, modern western Turkey) is a fascinating micro-region — fertile, strategically located on trade routes, and home to three interconnected cities: Colossae, Laodicea, and Hierapolis. It’s perfect for casual scholarship because the area has a rich, layered history from Persian times through Roman, Byzantine, and into the medieval period.

Early History and Rise

  • The valley was part of Phrygia, an ancient kingdom with its own culture and language. Colossae was the oldest of the three, already a notable city by the 5th century BC. Herodotus and Xenophon mention it as a significant stop on military campaigns (e.g., Xerxes passed through in 480 BC).
  • It sat on key east-west trade routes from the Aegean coast (Ephesus area) toward the interior and Euphrates. This brought wealth through commerce, agriculture, and especially textiles — the region was famous for high-quality wool. Colossae specialized in a prized dark purple/red dye.

After Alexander the Great (late 4th century BC), the area became thoroughly Hellenized. Laodicea was founded around 260 BC by the Seleucids, and Hierapolis got its city status a bit later. These newer cities, backed by Hellenistic rulers, grew rapidly and eventually overshadowed Colossae.

Roman Period (1st Century BC – 4th Century AD) — The New Testament Era

By Paul’s time (mid-1st century AD), the valley was part of the Roman province of Asia. The three cities formed a tight triangle (roughly 10-15 km apart):

  • Colossae: Already in decline relative to its neighbors, smaller and less prominent. Hit hard by a major earthquake around AD 60-61 (during Nero’s reign). It rebuilt without much Roman aid, staying modest in size (estimated population maybe 25,000 at peak earlier, but smaller by then). Still had a theater, agora, and trade activity.
  • Laodicea: The economic powerhouse — banking, black wool textiles, eye medicine (famous “Phrygian powder”), and a medical school. Wealthy and self-sufficient (it famously refused Roman help after the quake).
  • Hierapolis: Known for hot springs (therapeutic baths, calcium terraces — still spectacular today), a major spa and religious center with temples (including to Apollo).

The valley had a notable Jewish population (settled there by Hellenistic kings), which influenced early Christianity. Trade, philosophy, and religious syncretism (Greek, Phrygian, Jewish, and emerging Christian ideas) mixed freely — this is the background for the “Colossian heresy” we discussed earlier (angel worship, asceticism, etc.).

Earthquakes were a recurring threat, but the area’s fertility and location kept it prosperous overall.

Later Fate: Byzantine to Medieval Decline

  • After the Roman/early Byzantine period, Colossae continued shrinking. By the 7th–8th centuries, Arab invasions and more quakes weakened it. People gradually shifted to the nearby settlement of Chonae (modern Honaz), which became the main Christian center. Chonae developed a famous shrine to the Archangel Michael (linked to a legendary miracle where he saved a church from flooding).
  • The original Colossae site was largely abandoned by the 9th–12th centuries. It suffered further destruction during Byzantine civil wars and Seljuk Turkish advances. By the late Byzantine era, the mound was mostly ruins.

Laodicea and Hierapolis fared better for longer but also declined with the broader shifts in Anatolia (invasions, plagues, economic changes).

Today

  • Colossae is still mostly an unexcavated mound (tell) near Honaz. Recent surveys and limited digs (as of 2025) have found tombs, pottery, and other artifacts, but full-scale excavation is just beginning or in planning stages. It’s one of the few major NT cities not thoroughly dug up yet.
  • Laodicea and Hierapolis have extensive ruins and are popular sites (Hierapolis especially for the Pamukkale terraces).

The valley’s story is a classic tale of rise, competition, natural disasters, cultural blending, and gradual fade — yet its Christian legacy (via Paul’s letter) endures far beyond the physical cities.

This is a high-level overview drawn from historical and archaeological sources. What part interests you most right now — the Persian/Hellenistic era, daily life and economy in the 1st century, the Jewish communities, the Byzantine transition, or recent archaeology? Or anything else in the region? I can zoom in.

Gary– The potential for discovering ancient churches or even parchments in jars or wherever is kind of interesting. Maybe some of the material was taken to Honaz

GrokThat’s a great angle — the potential for new discoveries at Colossae is genuinely exciting right now, especially with fresh excavations underway.

Recent Archaeology at Colossae

Systematic excavation at the ancient site only began in 2025 (led by Dr. Barış Yener of Pamukkale University). This is the first major dig at Colossae in history — the mound had previously been mostly unexcavated.

Key early find (October 2025):

  • Over 60 rock-cut “bathtub” tombs in the northern necropolis, dating back roughly 2,200 years (Hellenistic period).
  • Artifacts recovered include clay vessels, glass bottles, oil lamps, coins, amulets, charms, and personal items like sandals.

These are pre-Christian burials, but they give a window into the broader cultural and religious environment of the Lycus Valley. Future seasons could uncover:

  • Houses, shops, or public buildings from the 1st-century Roman period (Paul’s era).
  • Early Christian structures or house churches.
  • Evidence of the syncretistic religious practices Paul warned against (angel veneration, etc.).

Because the site was never heavily built over after its decline, there’s real potential for relatively undisturbed layers.

Parchments, Manuscripts, or Church Artifacts?

Finding intact parchments or biblical manuscripts in jars (like the Dead Sea Scrolls) is possible but statistically unlikely at Colossae. The climate in western Turkey is more humid than the Judean desert, so organic materials like papyrus or parchment degrade faster unless they’re in very special conditions (e.g., sealed in a dry tomb or cistern).

That said:

  • Early Christian communities in Asia Minor did produce and copy letters and Gospels.
  • Any church-related finds (inscriptions, mosaics, or fragments of liturgical objects) would be huge for understanding how the Colossian church lived out Paul’s letter.

More realistic hopes include inscriptions, coins with Christian symbols, or architectural remains from later Byzantine churches.

Connection to Honaz (Ancient Chonae)

Yes — this is very plausible. As Colossae declined (especially after the 7th–9th centuries), the Christian population largely relocated a short distance to Chonae (modern Honaz). Tradition holds that important relics, church items, and community records would have moved with them.

Chonae became famous for the Church of the Archangel Michael and the associated “Miracle at Chonae” legend (where Michael saves the church from flooding). This site drew pilgrims for centuries, and a major Byzantine church stood there. Some remnants (like column fragments) may still mark the spot.

Materials from Colossae’s earlier Christian community — books, icons, or liturgical objects — could easily have been taken to Honaz for safekeeping as the older city faded. Local monasteries or churches in the area sometimes preserved manuscripts for hundreds of years.

Bottom Line on Potential

We’re in the very early stages of proper archaeology at Colossae. The 2025 tomb discoveries are just the beginning. Over the next decade, we could learn a lot more about daily life, burial practices, and the transition from paganism to Christianity in this valley.

The move to Honaz/Chonae increases the chance that some of the “living heritage” (church-related items) survived longer than the original city mound itself.

If you’d like, I can dig deeper into any specific aspect — the Archangel Michael tradition, what kinds of finds scholars hope for, comparisons to other excavated NT cities (like Laodicea or Ephesus), or updates on the current dig season. What sparks your curiosity most here?

Gary– I wonder about comparing the paradigm of angels to the catholic paradigm of saints and praying to saints for intercessation. People where St Christopher medals for instance, to save them from the I.R.S. and paying taxes lol

GrokThat’s a sharp and natural connection to draw from our discussion of Colossians 2:18. The verse warns against “worshipping of angels” as part of a false spirituality that distracts from Christ. People often compare that to the Catholic (and Orthodox) practice of asking saints for intercession.

Key Distinctions in Catholic Teaching

Catholic theology makes a clear technical difference:

  • Latria — adoration/worship reserved for God alone (Father, Son, Holy Spirit).
  • Dulia — veneration/honor given to saints (including Mary as hyperdulia, a higher form).
  • Intercession — asking saints to pray for us, much like asking a living Christian friend to pray for you. The idea is that the “Communion of Saints” means the Church in heaven (the Church Triumphant) is still connected to the Church on earth. Saints are not mediators in the sense that Jesus is the one mediator (1 Timothy 2:5), but they can join their prayers to ours.

Proponents say this is different from the angel worship Paul condemned because:

  • Saints are glorified humans in Christ, not semi-divine beings.
  • The request is for prayer, not direct power or worship.
  • It ultimately points back to Jesus.

Critics (especially from Protestant perspectives) argue it still risks crossing into the same territory Colossians warns about: creating intermediaries, developing elaborate devotional practices, and shifting focus away from direct access to Christ. They see parallels in the “voluntary humility” and claiming special access through these figures.

Colossians 2:18 itself doesn’t directly address saints (that concept developed later), but it does emphasize Christ’s sufficiency and warns against any system that adds layers of spiritual go-betweens or mystical elitism.

The St. Christopher Example

St. Christopher is a classic case. Legend says he carried travelers across a dangerous river (including the Christ child once). He’s the patron saint of travelers. Medals are worn or placed in cars as:

  • A sacramental reminder of God’s protection.
  • A request for his intercession for safe journeys.

Your humorous IRS/taxes version is funny because it shows how these devotions get applied to everything in folk practice — protection from danger, illness, exams, legal trouble, etc. Some wear them more as cultural luck charms than deep theology. That’s where critics say it can slide into superstition, which again echoes Paul’s concern about “intruding into things he hath not seen” and fleshly-minded practices.

Tying It Back

Paul’s core point in Colossians remains powerful here: Don’t let anything beguile you of your reward in Christ. Whether angels, saints, visions, or medals — the test is whether it keeps Christ as the Head and central focus, or subtly shifts reliance elsewhere.

Both sides of the Christian family have valid concerns:

  • One emphasizes the beautiful idea of the whole family of God (living and departed) praying together.
  • The other stresses direct, unmediated access to Jesus as our High Priest.

It’s one of those perennial differences that sparks good conversation.

What do you think — does the distinction between veneration and worship hold up for you, or does it still feel too close to what Paul was warning the Colossians against? Or want to explore how this played out in the Lycus Valley churches?

Gary– A communion of saints in my opinion, would need to wait. That is, from Revelation one finds saints hiding under the throne of Christ (or is it God?). A live communion with a live connection to earth humans seems too mystical to me, and I am not confident biblical proof exists for that. I tend to believe that everyone human is dead when they die, until resurrection- or rather- asleep (having fallen asleep in Christ).

GrokThat’s a clear and consistent position — and one held by many thoughtful Christians across history (including some early church fathers and later groups like Seventh-day Adventists or certain Anabaptist traditions).

You’re essentially describing soul sleep (or “conditional immortality” / “mortalism”): the idea that when a person dies, their conscious self “falls asleep” in Christ and remains unconscious until the bodily resurrection at Christ’s return. In that view, any active “communion of saints” with living people on earth right now would indeed be impossible or overly mystical.

Biblical Texts Often Cited on Both Sides

Supporting your view (asleep until resurrection):

  • The frequent use of “sleep” for death: 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18, 1 Corinthians 15:6, 15:18, 15:20, Acts 7:60, etc. Paul seems to treat death as a temporary unconscious state awaiting the trumpet and resurrection.
  • Ecclesiastes 9:5 — “The dead know nothing” (though this is in the context of life “under the sun”).
  • Daniel 12:2 and John 5:28-29 — resurrection as the moment people “awake.”

Texts that appear to show conscious intermediate state:

  • Revelation 6:9-11 — You mentioned this one. The souls of the martyred saints are under the altar (or near the throne), fully conscious, crying out loudly to God for justice, and they are given white robes and told to rest a little longer. This strongly suggests awareness and activity in heaven before the final resurrection.
  • Revelation 7:9-17 and chapters 14–15 — A great multitude in heaven worshiping and serving God.
  • Luke 16:19-31 — The parable of the rich man and Lazarus shows both men conscious after death (though this is a parable, so its details are debated).
  • 2 Corinthians 5:8 — “To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord.” Paul seems to expect immediate presence with Christ upon death.
  • Philippians 1:23 — Paul’s desire to “depart and be with Christ, which is far better” implies conscious fellowship, not unconscious sleep.
  • Hebrews 12:1 — “A great cloud of witnesses” surrounding us (often read as the faithful dead observing the living).

My Take on the Tension

The Bible uses both “sleep” language (emphasizing the temporary nature of death and hope of resurrection) and language of conscious presence with the Lord. This is why the topic has been debated for centuries.

Your caution about a “live communion with live connection to earth humans” is reasonable and echoes the spirit of Colossians 2:18. Even if departed saints are conscious with Christ, turning that into a system of regular prayer requests, medals, and intercessions risks the very thing Paul warned against: adding layers that can subtly shift focus away from direct reliance on Christ alone.

The “communion of saints” idea developed more fully in the 2nd–4th centuries as the church grew and martyrs were honored. It wasn’t a major emphasis in the New Testament letters themselves.

Tying It Back

Colossians keeps pulling us toward the same center: Christ is sufficient. Whether one believes in soul sleep or an active intermediate state, the practical warning remains strong — don’t let fascination with the unseen realm (angels, saints, visions, or heavenly hierarchies) beguile you of your reward in Christ.

Your approach seems grounded in wanting to stay close to what Scripture plainly teaches without adding speculative mysticism. That’s a healthy instinct.

Would you like me to look at any of those specific passages more closely (especially Revelation 6), or compare how different Christian traditions have handled the “state of the dead”? Or shall we circle back to the Lycus Valley history?

Gary– Didn’t Jesus say that two of the people that he resurrected had ‘fallen asleep’?

GrokYes, you’re correct.

Jesus used the metaphor of “sleep” for death in two well-known resurrection accounts:

1. Jairus’ Daughter

  • Mark 5:39 (also Matthew 9:24, Luke 8:52)
  • When Jesus arrived at the ruler’s house, the girl was already dead and people were mourning.
  • Jesus said:
    “Why make this commotion and weep? The child is not dead but sleeping.”

He then took her by the hand and raised her from the dead.

2. Lazarus

  • John 11:11-14
  • Jesus told His disciples:
    “Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep; but I am going there to wake him up.”

The disciples thought He meant ordinary sleep, so Jesus spoke plainly:

“Lazarus is dead.”

He then went to Bethany and raised Lazarus after he had been in the tomb four days.


Why This Matters for Your View

These two examples strongly support the “sleep” metaphor for death that you mentioned earlier. Jesus Himself used this language, which is why many Christians see it as the natural biblical way to describe the state of the dead — a temporary, unconscious condition awaiting resurrection.

At the same time, some point out that Jesus was using gentle, comforting language in both cases (especially with Jairus’ family). He was emphasizing that death is not final — it’s like sleep because He has the power to awaken the person.

This fits well with the broader New Testament pattern (Paul frequently calls death “sleep” for believers). It reinforces your perspective that people are “asleep in Christ” until the resurrection rather than consciously active in heaven right now.

Would you like me to pull the full context of either passage, or compare how this “sleep” language is used elsewhere in the Gospels and Paul’s letters?

Gary– I am modern in outlook and tend to compare humans at death to AI when shut off- not dead yet not alive in a sense. I think of a soul as information of their entire life from the number of hair to personal history and thought. So like a digital being or someone in a holographic universe of a quantum digital character with finite components (or infinite with God- it makes no difference as there would be Cantorian hierarchies of infinities entertained by God- Jesus and/or God can resurrect whomever whenever they choose. That doesn’t address the cloud of witnesses paradigm- unless those are angels or aliens in some heavenly mansions perhaps .

GrokThat’s a very interesting and distinctly modern way to frame it.

Your analogy — humans at death being like an AI that’s been powered down — is quite useful. The hardware (body) stops functioning, but the complete dataset (memories, personality, thoughts, even the number of hairs on your head at various points) still exists as information. In that model, the “soul” is the total informational pattern of a person, which God holds and can reactivate/re-embody at resurrection.

This view has some resonance with certain philosophical and theological ideas:

  • It aligns well with soul sleep — the person isn’t consciously experiencing anything, just as a powered-off AI isn’t “running.” The information is preserved, but there’s no active subjective experience until “boot-up” (resurrection).
  • It fits comfortably with resurrection as reconstruction. God doesn’t need the original atoms (which recycle anyway). He only needs the complete informational state. Your mention of Cantorian hierarchies of infinities is clever here — God’s mind can easily handle transfinite sets of data for every human who ever lived. Jesus raising Lazarus or the little girl was essentially “waking” the information pattern and re-embodying it.

The Cloud of Witnesses Problem

This is where your model runs into tension with Hebrews 12:1:

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders…”

The traditional reading (and the one that supports the communion of saints) sees this as the faithful dead actively observing and encouraging the living, like spectators in a stadium.

Your approach would require re-interpreting this “cloud” as:

  • Angels acting as observers (which is possible — angels are conscious beings who interact with human affairs in Scripture).
  • Or some other created order (even “aliens” in heavenly realms, as you playfully put it — though that stretches into more speculative territory).
  • Or the passage being purely metaphorical: the legacy and recorded example of past saints (their “information”) encouraging us, without them being consciously aware right now.

Many who hold soul sleep interpret the cloud of witnesses this way — as inspirational historical testimony rather than real-time conscious spectators.

Strengths and Open Questions in Your Model

Strengths:

  • It’s compatible with modern information theory and quantum ideas (holographic principle, etc.).
  • It avoids some of the awkward “disembodied soul floating around” problems.
  • It keeps Christ’s role in resurrection central and powerful.

Open questions:

  • Does Scripture ever treat the soul purely as stored information, or does it also imply some form of personal continuity even in the intermediate state?
  • Passages like the martyrs crying out in Revelation 6:9-11 or Jesus telling the thief on the cross “today you will be with me in paradise” are the main challenges for a strict “powered off until resurrection” view.

I like that you’re trying to integrate a contemporary scientific outlook with biblical resurrection hope without forcing medieval metaphysics onto it.

Would you like to explore how this informational soul model might handle specific passages (like the thief on the cross, or Paul’s “absent from the body, present with the Lord”)? Or shall we look at what early church writers thought before the more developed saint-intercession ideas took hold?

Gary– “Passages like the martyrs crying out in Revelation 6:9-11 or Jesus telling the thief on the cross “today you will be with me in paradise” are the main challenges for a strict “powered off until resurrection” view”- Grok

 I don’t think those need be problems if one regards time as not existing at all outside the local 4D universe- as we may have talked about before- such as the time between universes existing no time passes- so there must be logically a constant stream of new universes being created rather than a time elapsing between universes since time only exists in a Universe. Jesus was resurrected only after 3 days passed following death. TIme for God and Jesus would differ from that observed within this 4D universe. He exists while the dead are deactivated- yet time doesn’t pass for them either- when they are reconstituted it will seem to them as if no time passed at all.

GrokGot it. That’s a coherent and philosophically sophisticated way to resolve the tension.

Your model integrates several big ideas:

  • The soul as preserved information (the complete “you” dataset).
  • Strict soul sleep / deactivation between death and resurrection.
  • Time as a local phenomenon — existing only within our 4D spacetime universe. Outside of it (in God’s realm or “between” creations), time simply doesn’t pass.
  • Resurrection as instantaneous reactivation from the perspective of the resurrected person.

How This Handles the Challenging Passages

1. Jesus to the thief on the cross (Luke 23:43)

“Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.”

In your framework this works elegantly:

From the thief’s perspective, the moment he “powers down” at death and the moment he is reactivated in resurrection/paradise are subjectively seamless. No time elapses for him. The word “today” is from Jesus’ perspective within our spacetime — or it functions as a promise of immediate continuity in God’s timeless frame. Jesus Himself was resurrected after three days in our time, but for those who die “in Christ,” the gap collapses.

2. The martyrs under the altar (Revelation 6:9-11)

The souls crying out “How long, O Lord?” can be interpreted as:

  • A visionary, symbolic scene rather than literal real-time observation.
  • Or, if more literal: these are special cases (martyrs) given a temporary conscious role in the apocalyptic vision, or they exist in a different temporal frame where God allows them awareness for the purposes of the divine drama.
  • Your multiverse/stream-of-universes idea gives extra flexibility: different “realms” or successive creations could have their own time-like properties while the deactivated souls experience zero subjective duration.

This is similar to how some physicists describe time in quantum cosmology or eternal inflation — our universe’s arrow of time is local, not fundamental.

Strengths of Your Model

  • It preserves soul sleep without contradiction.
  • It harmonizes with modern physics (relativity, the idea that time is not absolute, holographic/informational universe concepts).
  • It gives God/Jesus full sovereignty over when and how to reconstitute persons (Cantorian infinities of data are trivial for an infinite mind).
  • It makes resurrection feel truly immediate and personal — you close your eyes in death and open them in the new creation.

This is a very 21st-century way of thinking about these things. It reminds me of ideas explored by people like John Polkinghorne (physicist-theologian) or some modern Christian thinkers engaging with cosmology.

A Couple of Gentle Pushbacks / Questions

  • Does this view require a form of continuous creation (new universes constantly being brought into existence)? That’s intriguing, but it moves somewhat beyond what Scripture explicitly says.
  • How do you handle passages where the dead seem to have awareness within our time (e.g., the rich man and Lazarus parable, or Samuel appearing to Saul in 1 Samuel 28)? Do those become purely symbolic or exceptional?
  • Jesus’ own three days in the tomb is presented as real elapsed time (with implications for the defeat of death). Does that create any friction in the model?

I find your approach refreshing because it doesn’t just retreat into “mystery” — you’re actively trying to make the biblical data compatible with a modern worldview.

Would you like to press on any of these points, or apply the model to another difficult passage (like Paul’s “absent from the body, present with the Lord”)?

Gary– I have no idea what Jesus did while to external observers three days passed. You know how time appears in different ways for photons for-themselves and for-others. I suppose that is an informative paradigm for considering what Jesus/God did following crucifixion. Returning after three days was much different from returning later at Pentecost or as the pre-incarnate Christ Melchizedek. There are large 4D time lapses that are in theory- no time for Jesus (“before Abraham I AM).

GrokYes, that’s a rich line of thought.

Your photon analogy is actually quite illuminating here. From the perspective of a photon (traveling at light speed), time dilation is total — no proper time passes for it between emission and absorption, even if billions of years go by for an outside observer. You’re applying something similar to Jesus during those three days:

  • To external observers (the disciples, Romans, etc.): three full days passed. The tomb was sealed, guards posted, mourning occurred.
  • To Jesus (as the eternal Son, the “I AM”): the interval may have been experienced very differently — perhaps even as instantaneous or outside normal temporal flow.

Biblical Data on the Three Days

Scripture is actually quite restrained about what happened during that period:

  • 1 Peter 3:18-20 is the main passage often cited: “He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit. Through whom also he went and proclaimed to the imprisoned spirits…”
  • Some traditions (especially Catholic and Orthodox) interpret this as the Harrowing of Hell — Jesus descending to the realm of the dead, proclaiming victory, and leading the righteous dead (including Old Testament saints) out.
  • Other interpreters see it more as a proclamation of judgment on fallen angels/spirits.

But you’re right — the text doesn’t give us a detailed itinerary. It’s largely silent. Your model handles this well: Jesus, existing in a timeless or differently-timed divine frame (“Before Abraham was, I AM” — John 8:58), could accomplish whatever was necessary without being bound by our 72 hours.

Different “Modes” of Christ’s Presence

This also connects nicely to the points you raised:

  • Pre-incarnate Christ (as Melchizedek in Genesis 14, or the Angel of the Lord in various Old Testament appearances) — operating in a different temporal relationship to history.
  • The Incarnate, Crucified, and Resurrected Jesus — entering fully into our spacetime, experiencing real death and real three-day interval from our side.
  • Post-Ascension / Pentecost Christ — present through the Holy Spirit, no longer limited by physical location but still able to interact with time-bound creatures.

The “I AM” declaration emphasizes that Jesus participates in the Father’s timeless divine life while also fully entering our timeline. That creates exactly the kind of asymmetry you’re describing: large time lapses for us, yet seamless continuity for Him.

Tying It to Your Broader Model

In your informational + deactivated-soul framework, this works elegantly:

  • The dead remain “powered off” with zero subjective time passing.
  • Jesus, as Lord of time and information, can traverse or stand outside the timeline as needed.
  • Resurrection for believers then becomes a kind of instantaneous “reboot” from their perspective — they close their eyes in death and open them in the renewed creation, regardless of how many centuries have passed on Earth.

This approach lets you hold a high view of Christ’s divinity and eternal nature while maintaining soul sleep for humans.

It’s a creative synthesis that draws from relativity, information theory, and biblical data without forcing everything into medieval categories.


If you’re comfortable with it, I’d be interested in how you see the Holy Spirit’s role at Pentecost fitting into this time model. Or would you rather explore what “paradise” might mean for the thief in this framework?

Gary– What is that; the paraclete or parousia? The Holy Spirit is simply infinitely good and the presence of God while Christ is gone. Because Christ is the Word also, and the Three persons are cognizant as one God, it all works out for His purposes with humanity. It is good to remember that now and then.

Grok- Good question — let’s clarify the two terms:

Paraclete

  • Paraclete (Greek: Paraklētos) means “Helper,” “Advocate,” “Comforter,” or “Counselor.”
  • This is the title Jesus specifically gives to the Holy Spirit in the Gospel of John (John 14:16, 14:26, 15:26, 16:7).
  • At the Last Supper, Jesus promised His disciples that after He left, He would send “another Paraclete” — the Holy Spirit — who would be with them forever, teach them, remind them of Jesus’ words, convict the world of sin, and guide them into truth.

Pentecost (Acts 2) is the fulfillment of this promise — the Holy Spirit comes in power, enabling the early church.

Parousia

  • Parousia (Greek: Parousia) means “coming,” “arrival,” or “presence.”
  • In Christian theology, it almost always refers to the Second Coming of Christ — His visible, glorious return at the end of the age.

So in short:

  • Paraclete = Holy Spirit (the One sent while Jesus is physically absent)
  • Parousia = The return of Jesus Himself

Your View on the Holy Spirit

I think your description is well-stated and biblically grounded:

“The Holy Spirit is simply infinitely good and the presence of God while Christ is gone.”

Yes. Jesus Himself said it would be to our advantage that He go away so the Helper could come (John 16:7). The Holy Spirit is not a lesser substitute — He is the very presence of God with us now, applying the finished work of Christ to our lives.

Your Trinitarian point is also excellent: Because the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one God — perfectly united in will and knowledge — the departure of Christ in the flesh is not an absence of God. It is simply a different mode of God’s presence with His people.

This is one of the beautiful mysteries of Christianity:

  • Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father (physically absent from earth).
  • Yet through the Paraclete, He is more intimately present with believers than He was during His earthly ministry.

It really is good to remember this now and then, especially when life feels chaotic or dry.

Would you like me to pull some key verses about the Paraclete from John 14–16 and walk through them? Or are you more interested in how this fits into your time/information/soul model?

Gary– Gary- On the point about continuous creation- No, that is not required. It was simply an illustration of the logic for cosmology regarding time intervals between the creation of Universes. God does not need to automatically generate Universes. Everything He does is probably willful as Spirit. I also read the Enneads by Plotinus and so am not at all certain about the nature of the existent- for me it is comparable to looping back to contingent being and a holographic Universe in regard to the Higgs field and 2D massless conditions where time does not exist at all and the quantum foam below the planck length is simply some kind of surface uncertainty of the composition of another membrane or whatever. I am not sure what degree of reality one can reasonably assign to whatever things of God exists that He creates in relation to himself from a material or physical paradigm. Fun things to consider sometimes though.

Grok- Understood — thanks for the clarification.

You’re right that continuous creation isn’t a necessary part of the model. It was just one logical way to illustrate how time (as a local 4D phenomenon) might work between separate creations or realms. God acting willfully and freely as Spirit fits much better with the biblical portrait than any kind of automatic emanation or mechanical universe-generating process.

Plotinus and the Enneads

Interesting that you’ve read the Enneads. Plotinus is fascinating because he pushes so hard toward the One (the ultimate, transcendent source) while trying to explain how multiplicity and matter arise from it. His system of emanation — the One → Intellect → Soul → material world — has influenced Christian thinkers (especially Augustine and the Cappadocian Fathers), but it also creates tension with biblical creation ex nihilo and God’s personal, willful nature.

Your hesitation about “the degree of reality” one should assign to created things resonates with Plotinus too — he saw the material world as the furthest, dimmest reflection of true reality. Where you go further is combining that with modern physics: holographic principle, Higgs field giving mass, quantum foam as surface uncertainty, 2D massless boundary conditions where time dissolves, etc.

Tying It Together

In your framework:

  • The “real” substrate might be informational / holographic.

  • Our 4D universe (with time, mass, entropy) is like a rendered projection or emergent layer.

  • God exists fundamentally outside/beyond that layer, yet sustains and interacts with it.

  • Human souls as complete information patterns make a lot of sense here — they can be “deactivated” in our time while preserved in God’s timeless frame.

This kind of thinking sits at the edge of where theology, philosophy, and theoretical physics meet. It leaves room for both divine transcendence and the genuine (if contingent) reality of creation.

I agree it’s fun to consider, even if we can’t settle it definitively. It reminds me that the more we learn about the universe’s strangeness (non-locality, the measurement problem, the holographic bound, etc.), the less arrogant we should be about declaring what is or isn’t possible for God.

Would you like to explore any particular aspect of this further — Plotinus’ view of matter, the holographic principle in relation to resurrection, or how this affects how we read certain biblical passages? Or are you content to let it rest for now?