The resurrection of believers
to immortality at Christ’s appearing is the hope of all Christians. It’s not
surprising, then, that when the apostle Paul heard some members of the
church in Corinth were denying the resurrection, he challenged their
misperceptions in 1 Corinthians, chapter 15.
Paul first rehearsed the gospel
message, which they believed, that Christ had been resurrected. Paul
reviewed how the crucified Jesus was laid in the tomb a dead corpse, but
three days later was bodily resurrected to glory (verses 3-4). He then
explained that Christ was raised to life as our forerunner—pointing the way
to our future resurrection at his appearing (verses 4, 20-23).
Christ resurrected
Paul validated the truth of
Christ’s resurrection by referring to more than 500 witnesses to whom Jesus
appeared after he rose to life. Most of the witnesses were still
alive when he wrote his letter (verses 5-7). Christ had also appeared to the
apostles and to Paul himself (verse 8). The fact that so many people saw
Jesus this side of his grave in material form confirmed he had been raised
bodily, though Paul didn’t make an issue of this in the chapter.
But, he did tell the Corinthians
it was plain foolishness—with absurd consequences for Christian faith—to
doubt a future resurrection of believers, since they did believe
Christ had been raised from the grave. To disbelieve in a resurrection was
to logically deny that Christ himself had been resurrected. If Christ had
not been resurrected, believers would not have any hope. That Christ was
resurrected guarantees believers will also be resurrected, Paul told them.
Paul’s message about the
resurrection of believers is thoroughly Christ-centered. He explains that
the work of God through Christ in his life, death and raising him to life
makes the future resurrection of believers possible, leading to God’s
ultimate defeat of death itself (verses 22-26, 54-57).
Paul had steadfastly preached this
good news—that Christ had been raised to life and that believers would also
be resurrected at his appearing. In an earlier letter, Paul wrote: "We
believe that Jesus died and rose again, and so we believe that God will
bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him" (1 Thessalonians
4:14). Such a promise was, said Paul, "according to the Lord’s word" (verse
15).
The church, following the hope and
promise of Jesus in the Scriptures, has taught a belief in the resurrection
throughout its history. The Nicene Creed of A.D. 381 says, "We look for the
resurrection of the dead and the life to come." The Apostle’s Creed of
around A.D. 750 says, "I believe in… the resurrection of the body and life
everlasting."
Resurrection body question
In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul
responded to the Corinthians’ specific disbelief of and mistaken view about
the bodily resurrection: "But someone will ask, ‘How are the dead raised?
With what kind of body will they come?’" (verse 35). The issue was how the
resurrection would work, namely what kind of body, if any, would those
raised to life receive. The Corinthians wrongly thought Paul was teaching it
was the same kind of mortal, sinful body they possessed in this life.
What need of a body in the
resurrection, they wondered, especially the present corrupt body? Had they
not already achieved the goal of spiritual salvation and actually needed to
get rid of their body? In the words of theologian Gordon D. Fee: "The
Corinthians are convinced that by the gift of the Spirit, and especially the
manifestation of tongues, they have already entered into the spiritual,
‘heavenly’ existence that is to be. Only the body to be sloughed off at
death, lies between them and their ultimate spirituality."1
The Corinthians had failed to
understand that the resurrection body would be of a higher and different
order than the present physical body. This new "spiritual" body would be
necessary for life with God in the kingdom.
Paul used a farming example to
point to the greater glory of the resurrection body over our present
physical body, appealing to the difference between a seed and the plant that
grows from it. The seed may "die," or cease to exist, but the body—the
plant—that comes from it is much more magnificent.
"When you sow, you do not plant
the body that will be, but just a seed, perhaps of wheat or of something
else," Paul wrote (verse 37). We can’t predict what our resurrection body
will be like by pointing to our present physical body’s characteristics, but
we know that it will be of vastly greater glory, as is the oak tree in
comparison to its seed, the acorn.
We can have faith that the
resurrection body, having glorious life without end, will make our eternal
life much more splendid than our present physical life. Paul wrote: "So will
it be with the resurrection of the dead. The body that is sown is
perishable, it is raised imperishable; it is sown in dishonor, it is raised
in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power" (verses 42-43).
The resurrection body will not be
a clone or exact replica of our physical body, Paul is saying. Nor is the
body we receive at the resurrection composed of the identical atoms of the
physical body we had in this earthly life, which decayed or was destroyed at
death. (Besides, which body would we receive if that were so: our body at
age 2, 20, 45, or 75?) The two kinds of bodies will be as different in
quality and glory as is the beautiful butterfly that emerges from the cocoon
that previously housed a lowly worm.
Natural and spiritual bodies
There is no use to speculate on
exactly what our resurrection body or immortal life will look like. We may,
however, say some general things about the major difference between the two
types of bodies.
Our present bodies are physical
like an animal’s, subject to decay and death, and sinful. The resurrection
body will possess a different order of life—immortal and imperishable. In
Paul’s words, "It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body"
(verse 44)—not a "spirit" body, but a spiritual body in the sense of being
appropriate for the life of the age to come. The believers’ new body in the
resurrection will be "spiritual," not immaterial, but spiritual in the sense
of having been created by God to bear the likeness of Christ’s glorified
body, transformed and "adapted to the life of the Spirit in the coming age."2
The new body will be utterly real; believers will not be bodiless ghosts or
specters.
Paul contrasts Adam and Jesus to
underscore the difference between our present body and our resurrection
body. "As was the earthly man [Adam], so are those who are of the earth; and
as is the heavenly man [Jesus], so also are those who are of heaven" (verse
48).
Those who are in Christ when he
appears will have a resurrection body and life in Jesus’, not Adam’s form
and being. "Just as we have borne the image of the earthly man, so shall we
bear the image of the heavenly man" (verse 49). The Lord, said Paul, "will
transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body"
(Philippians 3:21).
Not subject to death
This means our resurrection body
will not be perishable flesh and blood as we know it now—not dependent on
food, oxygen, and water for life. Paul was adamant: "I declare to you,
brothers and sisters, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of
God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable" (1 Corinthians
15:50).
At the Lord’s appearing, our
mortal bodies will be transformed into immortal bodies that are eternal and
not subject to death and decay. Hear Paul as he tells the Corinthians: "I
tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed—in a
flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet [a metaphor signaling
the future appearing of Christ]. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will
be raised imperishable, and we will be changed" (verses 51-52).
Our being raised bodily to immortality
is our joyous and sustaining hope as Christians. In Paul’s words: "When the
perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with
immortality," at the appearing of Christ, "then the saying that is written
will come true: ‘Death has been swallowed up in victory’" (verse 54).
1
Gordon D. Fee, The First Epistle to the
Corinthians (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1987), p. 778.
2
Ibid., p. 788.
Is our brain all there is to who we are?
Nobel Laureate Francis Crick,
co-discoverer of the structure of the DNA molecule, has written that we "are
in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and
their associated molecules… nothing but a pack of neurons."1
Vilayanor S. Ramachandran, a renowned neuroscientist, claims: "All the
richness of our mental life—all our feelings, our emotions, our thoughts…our
religious sentiments…[our] own intimate private self—is simply the activity
of…our brains. There is nothing else."2
Neuroscientists do not find
evidence of a distinct mind or "soul" when they do their research. They only
witness "brain work"—the firing of neurons when we think, emote or are
engaged in a creative activity. Further, when a person’s brain is injured,
his or her ability to reason, relate to others and create can be impaired,
depending on the injury. On such visible evidence, scientists and
philosophers naturally conclude that this is all there is to who we
are—brain, neurons and body.
Christians believe that the
essence of what a human being is—call it mind, self, being or
"soul"—survives the death of the body and brain. Jesus said, "Do not be
afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul" (Matthew 10:28),
thereby distinguishing between physical body (including the brain,
obviously) and the essence of personhood—our conscious being.
Scientists such as Gerald L.
Schroeder (God According to God) and best-selling author on
Christian topics, Dinesh D’Souza (Life After Death: The Evidence and
What’s So Great About Christianity), provide a number of analogies to
help us think outside the box about a parallel existence of both brain and
mind—our consciousness.
Think of the brain as the radio
receiver and radio waves as the mind. If the radio is turned off, one might
conclude that radio waves don’t exist. But turn on the radio and tune it to
a station, perhaps playing a piece of music, and the existence of radio
waves suddenly becomes evident.
For the radio waves to be
manifest, we must turn on the radio receiver. Turn the radio off or smash
it, and there is only silence. Now, the radio waves appear not to exist. The
radio doesn’t create the radio waves, but they can’t be played for us to
hear without it being turned on and in working order.
Let’s look at the analogy of a DVD
of a movie. For the contents of the DVD to be seen, it must be played
through a computer’s hardware or DVD player. Smash the computer or player
and the movie disappears as though it didn’t exist. But the DVD contents do
still exist and can be played on another computer or DVD player.
In a similar way, the mind is
impaired if the brain is impaired, and the mind disappears from our view if
the brain dies and decays. But it is not hard to see that a mind could be
"played" again if given a different body by the God who created us in the
first place.
Dr. Schroeder explains what the
real conundrum is about the mind-brain connection: "The puzzle of the
mind-brain interface is not in the recording and biochemical storage of the
incoming sensory data. That is brainwork… The puzzle is in the replay. There
is no hint in the brain of how you hear or see what you have heard or seen….
The location of that perception is the puzzle."3
The promise of Christ in the
Scriptures is that a person’s mind or soul will be "brought back" by the
power of God, despite the death and decay of the present physical body. God
will provide a new and glorious body for us in the resurrection.
1
Francis Crick, The Astonishing Hypothesis:
The Scientific Search for the Soul (New York: Touchstone, 1994), p.
3.
2
V.S. Ramachandran, A Brief Tour of Human
Consciousness (New York: Pearson Education, 2004), p. 3.
3
Gerald L. Schroeder, God According to God: A Physicist
Proves We’ve Been Wrong About God All Along (New York: Harper One,
2009), pp. 151-152.
Copyright 2010

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