Your theology is very different from mine, obviously, and I would say, from my perspective, incorrect. Why did Christ die on the cross? To conquer death and sin (sin = death). Which means, once He died on the Cross and descended into hades and bound Satan and resurrected on the Third Day, death was aobolished, Those righteous in the tombs who were waiting for Christ were released and rose to heaven. No longer did people return to the ground (dust). Christ conquered death so that we now can rise and be with Him after we pass on from here.
Is it? Why did then Paul say that the
last enemy that will be destroyed is death? Why is there still sin in this world? Just watch the news. Why is there still death in this world? Just go to a grave.
Also, not exactly. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15:18 that without resurrection, those that asleep (euphemism for the dead) are
lost (note that the word "apollumi" can also be translated as lost, as is seen in Luke 15:4; but there, in verse 18 or chapter 15 of 1 Corinthians, it's translated as "perished", even though "lost" is equally valid). It says:
[FONT="]1 Corinthians 15:18 KJV[/FONT]
[FONT="](13)[/FONT][FONT="] But if there be no resurrection of the dead[/FONT] ...
[FONT="](18)[/FONT][FONT="] Then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ are lost.[/FONT]
Why would they be lost without resurrection if they are with God? Isn't being in the presence of God everything? How are they lost without the resurrection (it's a
physical resurrection, because it's also speaking about the resurrection of Christ in verse 12, which is also physical, because He never resurrected spiritually for He was never spiritually dead; so the resurrection in that chapter is physical; no spiritual talk here) if they are with God? To be resurrected is to be brought back to life. How are they lost without resurrection if they are in Heaven,
with life itself (John 11:25)?
No. We do not rise and be with Him immediately after we die. It is written:
[FONT="]1 Thessalonians 4:16-18 KJV[/FONT] (emphasis mine)
[FONT="](16)[/FONT][FONT="] For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first:[/FONT]
[FONT="](17)[/FONT][FONT="] Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.[/FONT]
[FONT="](18)[/FONT][FONT="] Wherefore comfort one another with these words.[/FONT]
It says that the dead will resurrect at Christ's coming, the alive will have a new body, and will be caught up in the air. And
then they "shall ever be with the Lord". Note that it also says "
Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air". Why would they meet Jesus if they are already with Him? Is it that they weren't actually with Him and at the resurrection some meet Him the first time?
Also, the final words of this chapter are interesting:
Wherefore comfort one another with these words. The first century Christians comforted themselves with the resurrection, that they will resurrect on the day of Christ's second coming and
then they shall (in the future) meet Him. I wonder why don't people comfort themselves with the resurrection any more? I mean, just look how much they talked about it. They put their hopes in the resurrection. Scriptures say that the dead will rise with new bodies, the alive will receive new bodies as well, and then they both (which were dead and which were alive at His coming) will go up in the clouds to
meet Jesus Christ, and
then they shall be with Him forever. But as I said, pastors today don't put their hopes in this.
But today some pastors don't even preach about the resurrection. They put their hopes in death, that when they'll die they'll see the Lord. But it's the opposite! The dead don't praise the Lord (Psalm 115:17). Those alive praise God, our Lord (Isaiah 39:19). We will be resurrected on the day Christ comes, we will be made
alive, and
then we will meet and praise God. Amen?
