- Mar 16, 2004
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Mark, thank you again for coming in and taking my side on this. I was getting tired of hearing Quid say how Paul could not possibly be talking of a disembodied spirit surviving to live in a new body.
I'm not getting that from anything he said, he seems focused on the fact of the bodily resurrection.
Please understand that the purpose of my questions is to understand, not to mock. When I ask direct questions, I would like direct answers.
Now I'm confused, you do seem to mock at the resurrection in light of being absent from the body present with the Lord.
OK, but I asked you a direct question. Figurative language about Paul wearing figurative white clothes in heaven does not answer my question as to what body you think Paul now has.
He doesn't, that's fulfilled at the end of the age.
I am going to guess that you think he is a disembodied spirit with no body.
I don't want to be rude, your obviously trying to be a gentleman about this but the word, 'duh' comes to mind. How someone could miss this from the straight forward testimony of Scripture is a complete and utter mystery to me. Paul is awaiting the resurrection.
Not all Christians believe this. Some teach that the soul sleeps until the resurrection.
Yes, the Jehovahs Witnesses who are a cult.
Some teach that the soul immediately goes to heaven and walks around heaven in his new body immediately, never coming back for the body in the grave.
I'm not familiar with them, your going to have to provide a few more details.
So when I hear these different things and I ask, it is because I expect an honest answer. I don't need figurative talk or angry refusal to answer. I simply would like a respectful answer.
That was a respectful answer, they were given robes. I don't get to wander the courts of heaven seeing how things are with the believers who went before me. I know the Scriptures and I know the doctrine of the resurrection and that's going to have to be good enough because that's the witness of Christian faith.
Excuse me, I have done no mocking. If you think I have done mocking, please post those words back to which you object. If I agree it is mocking, I will apologize. But in the absence of all evidence, I will wait for actual evidence of your claim.
I don't know that you would agree but this is what I'm talking about:
The concept that Paul would be dead for centuries, that his body would be gone, that his spirit would not exist any more, but that God will make a brand new duplicate of Paul's body and call it Paul is ridiculous, but that appears to be what you are saying. If this is not what you are saying, please, please make an attempt to tell us where you think Paul is now and how he could possibly live again if his body is gone.
Huh? I brought the subject up of the different views of resurrection and mentioned this long before in this thread. So when I am the one that brought this up, how can you say I am not acknowledging the very thing I brought up?
The core belief of Christians everywhere, through the last two thousand years is that the resurrection is a bodily one. You cannot seriously be pretending that you have never heard of this.
The key word there is "a". Paul's body is gone, but you think he will return to get "a" body.
Yes, as did Paul.
In other words, you agree with me. Paul thought that he had a spirit that would survive death, and be given a new body. We agree.
Yes, just not some celestial body that is some convoluted mysticism from some ridiculous pagan mystery religion.
But Quid argued against the concept that a spirit could survive without a body and then be given a new body. That was what this whole debate with him has been about. So I find it odd that you come on board supporting that Paul says what I say he says, in spite of Quid proclaiming that Paul could not possibly be saying that.
Quid is arguing for the bodily resurrection of Christ and the dead respectively as far as I can tell. If he argued something else I completely missed it. Could you manage a quote?
Again, thank you for coming on and taking my side on this.
Sure, no problem, you need all the help you can get.
The issue before us is not whether the miracle is incomphensible. The issue is whether Paul says he will be dead until the old body is raised, or if Paul thought his spirit could live on even as his old body decays and disappears.
You said that as if it were two different things. The old body does decay and disappear but he is still raised at the return of Christ. This is as basic as it gets, there is no genuine confusion.
Since you believe that Paul thought his spirit could survive outside the body, to be united to a new body at the resurrection, why could he not have thought that Jesus' spirit could survive outside his body to be united to a new body at the resurrection?
Paul did believe that he would receive a new body at the resurrection, he also believed that Christ's body was raised on the third day. The spirit of Jesus did survive, it did return to his body. The spirit of Paul did leave his body, it did survive and it will return at the resurrection.
This is as basic as it gets, do you honestly believe Christians are this confused about their core doctrines? Seriously?
I have one question for you, would you like to argue this formally? Because I would love it.
Grace and peace,
Mark
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