Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.3 BB
Summary of text [comment] page 81
Schoonenberg quoted St. Paul (Galatians 5:17) in discussing the opposition between flesh and spirit.
[My suggestion is this: Paul struggles against a metaphor that has been repurposed by an (infra)sovereign religion.]
The desires of the flesh [and, now, the bones] are against the spirit.
The desires of the spirit are against the flesh [and the elite ‘bones that support society’].
These statements differ, even though they sound the same.
[Does Paul’s term ‘flesh’ veil a change of meaning of the Old Testament opposition between ‘flesh and bones’ that occurred when the metaphor was usurped by an (infra)sovereign religion?
What a wonderful question.]