for the name of Deity used in that place does not bring
out the meaning of the passage. It was evidently an [25]
illuminated sense through which she discovered the
spiritual origin of man. “The soul that sinneth, it shall
die,” means, that mortal man (alias material sense) that
sinneth, shall die; and the commonly accepted view is
that soul is deathless. Soul is the divine Mind,—for [30]
Soul cannot be formed or brought forth by human
thought,—and must proceed from God; hence it must [1]
be sinless, and destitute of self-created or derived capacity