As we saw in
the previous article, the doctrine of the resurrection of believers is taught
in the Old Testament. The Apostle Paul identified it as a promise upon which
the hope of the Jews rested as they earnestly worshiped (Acts 26:6-8).[1]
The precise nature of the resurrection, however, was not clear and is one of
the things made known through the person and work of Christ (2 Tim. 1:10).
Whatever
extent the teaching remained in shadows throughout the Old Testament, the
doctrine of the resurrection is a clear and central theme in the New. In fact,
the author to the Hebrews lists the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead as
one of the elementary and foundational doctrines of Christ (Heb. 6:1-2). It is therefore
something all Christians must understand and believe. In the next two posts I
hope to show that this New Testament resurrection is undoubtedly a physical
bodily resurrection.
Clear Statements Regarding Physical
Resurrection:
The teachers
who prompted this series of articles accept that resurrection is a central
claim of the New Testament but they spiritualize it and deny its physical
nature. The New Testament, however, repeatedly makes the explicit claim that
the resurrection is physical and bodily in nature.
Paul speaks
of the hope of salvation to include the redemption of our bodies in addition to
the spiritual blessings we already have when he says, “And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits
of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the
redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved...” (Rom. 8:23-24)
Paul has
already explained that the power of God displayed in the raising of Christ is
the same power through which our bodies will be raised. “If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he
who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal
bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you.” (Romans 8:11)
In the
longest and most important passage on resurrection Paul emphatically defends bodily
resurrection, even addressing the question, “How
are the dead raised? With what kind of body do they come?” (1 Cor.
15:35). The Corinthians, influenced by Greek philosophy, could not
understand how material bodies could possibly inherit immortality. Paul
explains that the resurrection is not merely a reanimation of corpses but that a
change takes place that makes our bodies fit for glory. Although these new
bodies are spiritual, they are still bodies. Paul says, “So is it with the resurrection of the dead. What is sown is perishable;
what is raised is imperishable.” (1 Cor. 15:42). Notice, that which is
raised is that which was perishable, namely our bodies.[2]
Paul also affirms
the physical nature of our resurrected bodies elsewhere, explaining we will be
like Christ. “… we await a Savior, the
Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like
his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to
himself.” (Philippians 3:20-21). The Apostle John says the same thing
more succinctly when he says “We know
that when He appears we shall be like Him” (1 John 3:2).
As Murray
Harris has said, “In
distinctive New Testament usage, resurrection signifies not [only] the
reanimation of corpses but the transformation of the whole person into the
image of Christ by the power of the indwelling Spirit, in spite of the
intervention of death.”[3]
Our lowly bodies will not
be discarded but will instead be transformed to be like Christ’s.
Christ’s
resurrection body was a physical body (Luke 24:39) and although it was changed,
it was the same body He previously had as is demonstrated by the empty tomb as
well as the wounds in His hands and side (John 20:27). He ate food, had
conversations, and was even mistaken for other people.
Jesus also
affirms the physical nature of the resurrection when He says, “Do not marvel at this, for an hour is
coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and come
out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who
have done evil to the resurrection of judgment.” (John 5:28-29). The
emptying of tombs requires the reanimation of the physical body and cannot be a
spiritual resurrection.
Preterists
often claim Paul’s condemnation of those who denied the resurrection does not
apply to them because he wrote before what they think was the resurrection
event in A.D. 70. What is clear, however, is that the emptying of the tombs of
the righteous and wicked did not happen in A.D. 70. If this day is yet future,
then not all prophesy has been fulfilled and preterism cannot be correct.[4]
Resurrection as a Defined Term:
As we have
seen, there are several passages that clearly assert that our physical bodies
will be redeemed in addition to the spiritual blessings we already possess as
believers (Eph. 1:13-14; 2 Cor. 5:5).[5]
Support for bodily resurrection, however, is founded on even more than the verses
explicitly mentioning our bodies. In fact, all of the New Testament references
to resurrection entail a physical bodily event. As good students we must take
the time to see how the New Testament authors define the terms they use. When
Paul, Jesus, John, etc. use a term like resurrection we must ask what
exactly they meant.
There are no examples
in the New Testament where resurrection language is used only of the spirit of
a person. In fact, scholars who have studied the Jewish literature of the
Second Temple period have concluded that 1st Century Judaism did not
have the concept of resurrection without a body.[6]
Although Jewish views of the afterlife were diverse and complex, scholar N.T.
Wright asserts “if a first-century Jew said that someone had been “raised from
the dead,” the one thing they did not mean was that such a person had gone to a
state of disembodied bliss…”[7]
The New
Testament contains many references to resurrection including over 40 uses of
the specific term ἀνάστασις. These references were all understood in their Jewish
contexts to involve the raising of the body. When Jesus, Paul and others use
the general term resurrection they mean a physical bodily resurrection. Indeed,
it was confusion about this Jewish concept in the Greek Church at Corinth that
prompted Paul’s extended explanation of the doctrines of resurrection and
glorification in 1 Corinthians 15, which I plan to deal with in detail in the next
article.
Immortality as a Defined Term:
Likewise, terms related
to immortality in the Bible do not carry the Platonic ideas that so strongly
influence our current cultural views. These days most people think of
immortality as a characteristic of the soul or spirit that is eternal or
continues after death. This, however, is not the New Testament view.
There are 3
words in the New Testament that are used to refer to immortality. These terms
are never used of the soul or spirit of human beings. They are only applied to entire
human beings in relation to the future state of believers. Only God Himself is
immortal (1 Tim. 6:16). Human beings gain immortality when they become
partakers of the divine nature though their union with Christ and are glorified
through the power of God (Rom. 8:30, 38).
Biblical
immortality is not the continuation of the spirit after death or into eternity.
All human souls will persist after this life, some to glory and some to
judgment. Human immortality in the biblical sense is deliverance from the
suffering and decay of the flesh and the torment of the Second Death. This is
accomplished in our final glorified state. There is never any mention in the
Bible of an immortal or glorified human spirit. Biblically, human immortality is
directly connected to the hope of the bodily resurrection.
We even see
this in various subtle ways. For example, believers who have passed away are often
said to be asleep (1 Cor. 15:51; Eph. 5:14). To sleep implies an awakening. The
image seems clearly to indicate it is the body rather than the soul primarily
in view (2 Cor. 5:1-9). Likewise, we are said to be clothed in our bodies and
are longing not to be unclothed (no body) but that we would be further clothed
(glorified body), “so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life.” (2 Cor.
5:4)
Conclusion:
There is much
more that could be said regarding the New Testament teaching on this issue but
this article is already too long. I pray that it is at least clear that there
are several New Testament verses that explicitly teach a physical bodily
resurrection. Beyond that, the New Testament concept of resurrection itself entails
a physical aspect. Finally, the Biblical concept of immortality is always
developed in coordination with the glorification of the body. Having laid this
foundation, I plan to focus on Paul’s extended teaching on resurrection in 1
Corinthians in the next article.
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
[1] Having been most clearly
developed in the Prophets, the resurrection was denied by those, like the
Sadducees, who did not accept the writings of the prophets as Scripture.
[2] I will deal extensively with
Paul’s argument in 1 Corinthians 15 in the next article.
[3] Murray Harris, “Resurrection and
Immortality: Eight Theses,” Themelios
1, no. 2 (1976): 51.
[4] Russell acknowledges that the
reference in John must refer to a literal resurrection. Even in placing the
events fully within a Palestinian context, however, he fails to make any
adequate case to account for the scope of Christ’s words. Essentially, his
position is that almost nothing is known about the events taking place for 60
to 80 years after the end of Acts and so a lot of stuff could have happened.
The quotes he uses to support this view are referring to specific knowledge of
historical development within the Christian community. It is not true that we
have no historical records from that time. One would expect to find references
in Greek, Roman, Jewish, or other sources if there was a massive emptying of
graves associated with the Roman occupation in Jerusalem. Nothing of the sort
is mentioned.
[5] Notice that Ephesians 1:3 establishes that we have every spiritual blessing, yet verses 13-14 indicate
that the Holy Spirit is a down payment on us receiving the fullness of our
inheritance which we have yet to possess. The full inheritance is the
completion of our redemption in glorification.
[6] N.T. Wright, “Resurrection of
the Son of God”, especially chapters 3–4.
[7] N.T. Wright, Christian Origins
and the Resurrection of Jesus: The Resurrection of Jesus as a Historical
Problem.
No comments:
Post a Comment