They definitely mean to maintain that the process called death is a mere severence of soul and body, and that the soul is freed rather than injured thereby.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Death is the separation of soul from body.
Death is a release from the impressions of the senses, and from desires that make us their puppets, and from the vagaries of the mind, and from the hard service of the flesh.
Death is not extinction. Neither the soul nor the body is extinguished or put out of existence.
Thirdly, Death is nothing else but a change of a short and temporary for an unalterable and eternal condition.
Death may simply be an alteration in consciousness, a transition for continued life in a nonmaterial form.
Death is something that happens to others, you think, until it happens to you.
The doctrine of the immortality of the soul has more threat than comfort.
Death is not more certainly a separation of our souls from our bodies than the Christian life is a separation of our souls from worldly tempers, vain indulgences, and unnecessary cares.
While the Bible teaches that immortality of the soul is conditional upon well-doing, it makes no distinction in respect of the spirit.
The immortality of the soul is a matter which is of so great consequence to us and which touches us so profoundly that we must have lost all feeling to be indifferent about it.