Please read on. Everything happens in order. First Christ, then his followers, then the powers are destroyed, then all things are in subjection to Christ, then finally God is all in all. The people who aren't Christ's followers are part of all things being subjected to Christ, so they're on the list. (The other option is that those who aren't Christ's followers aren't resurrected, but are permanently dead. I guess it's possible that Paul intends that, but it kind of contradicts all being made alive in Christ.)Uh oh, I've run into a problem. The next verse talks about exactly which people will be made alive, and it only refers to those who are Christ's.
Remember that Paul didn't consider evil something that people just happened to do. He saw it as a supernatural power. (Eph 6:10-12) People who sin are slaves to sin. (Rom 6:16-20) Destroying the powers frees their slaves. Of course 1 Cor 15 isn't the whole picture. We still have Rom 2:6-11. People are responsible for their actions, and those who do evil will be punished. Paul speaks of wrath, etc. But for Paul the primary punishment is death. (Rom 2:12, 6:16) I think in the end the powers that held them as slaves, and even death to which they became subject, will be destroyed and they will become subjects of Christ. It's the defeat of the powers, including death, and their former slaves becoming Christ's subjects that you see in 1 Cor 15:24-28.
A lot of people seem to think that becoming Christ's subjects means that Christ is going to torment then forever. But that's contrary to the whole vision. They were being punished by being slaves of the powers and of death. Christ defeats those powers. Paul never had in mind that having defeated the powers and death he would take over their role as oppressors!
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