You appear to be mocking my faith. That would be just another indicator that you have no further arguments.
No; if you simply believe what people have told you and what is written in an old book, without any means to verify it, that would imply a level of gullibility. OTOH, if you had a personal epiphany, such as hearing the voice of God, you would have reasonable grounds for belief - assuming you were unaware of how often people hear voices and have life-changing experiences & realisations of various kinds.
Citation to support your claim "biology has shown" that idea of the soul is false. (If a thing is "at best metaphorical" then it must be untrue.)
What I said was that it has shown the idea of a soul as an animating force to be unnecessary. We've known for some time that life is a process of complex organic chemistry. Animating principles beyond that are redundant. There are other formulations of the soul concept that are not quite so simply refuted.
... your point is simply that the death of the body is a process?
That's right.
The soul continues to animate the body but non-functioning body parts cannot respond. Death occurs when no body part can be animated. At that point, the soul vacates the body.
It was an understandable and plausible idea for its time, but the evidence was extremely weak, and even before scientific advances made it redundant, it had the problem of interaction. But now we have a better explanation (see my post on what makes a good explanation) from physiology and molecular biology, and evidence from thermodynamics and particle/quantum physics that claims for the soul are not tenable.
The soul has always been postulated as immaterial. Your claim that an immaterial substance is merely a redundant material substance is nonsense. All of science's attempts to disclose the supposed and imagined life force as a material substance have failed.
That wasn't my claim. I said that the soul as an animating force was redundant. We know in considerable detail what living things are made of and how they work - the animating pronciple of life is fundamentally no different to that of fire; the release of energy via redox (oxidation-reduction) reactions.
Immateriality is the major problem - the problem of interaction; how can the immaterial affect the material? if there was some animating principle, material or immaterial, that could influence the body, that influence would have been detected. As it is, we have an explanation that requires no undetected influences, material or immaterial.
How can a thing be called "redundant" when the referent that makes it so has never been demonstrated.
When there is an explanation that doesn't require it. That it is undetectable simply reinforces its redundancy.
Wishful thinking, I suppose.
I suggest the wishful thinking is on the part of the believers in immaterial animating principles. YMMV.
What other Christian concepts of "soul" do you think differ from mine? Citations, of course required.
Here you go:
Soul: Christian Concepts
Another sign of an exhaustion of arguments.
No, just losing patience.