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Resurrection Errors
[Response To Gentry's Analysis of the Full Preterist
View...]
[GENTRY] Fifth, there is a serious problem with the removal of the physical
resurrection from systematic theology. Christ's resurrection is expressly declared to be
the paradigm of our own (1 Cor. 15:20ff). Yet we know that His was a physical, tangible
resurrection (Luke 24:39), whereas ours is (supposedly) spiritual. What happens to the
biblically defined analogy between Christ's resurrection and ours in the hyper-preterist
system?
Fifth Here is another misrepresentation by Gentry. He claims the full
preterist view removes the physical resurrection from systematic theology and
thereby negates the biblically defined analogy [continuity] between Christ's
resurrection and ours. Not exactly.
Before we can reasonably discuss the amount of continuity our resurrection bodies have
with Christs, we need to know what kind of resurrection body He had with which we
are supposed to be in conformity. Once we define the nature of His resurrection body, then
we can discuss the degree of our continuity with it. This is where most studies of the
resurrection falter. Too many assume that Jesus resurrection body was nothing more
than the same kind (or quality) of pure physical body that He had before the crucifixion.
Is that a valid assumption? Is it possible that the nature of His resurrection body was
different? Or, was it still nothing more than a mere physical body, just like the body
with which Lazarus was raised?
I have asked several Reformed preachers this question: Was Jesus
resurrection body exactly the same in every detail (with absolutely no changes of any
kind) as His pre-cross body? Every single one of those to whom I asked this question
replied, No, its different in some way. A similar admission was
verbalized by one of the participants at the 1993 Covenant Eschatology Symposium. During
one of the discussion periods, one of the participants argued strenuously for the idea
that Christ had a physical resurrection, but admitted that Christs resurrection body
was ...a transformed body, not completely identical with the one before....
And in that same discussion period Max King made the observation that while the Gnostics
may have gone to the extreme of completely spiritualizing the nature of the resurrection
body, some in the church may have gone to an equally un-biblical extreme of insisting on
Christ having a completely physical resurrection body.
During another of the discussion periods, Max King suggested there may be a more
biblical way of defining the nature of Christs resurrection body, which is somewhere
between the two extremes. I believe most full preterists would agree with that. Murray
Harris, in his two books, Raised Immortal and From Grave To Glory, has
labored carefully to define that third position, which avoids both of the
extremes and better harmonizes the biblical data. J. I. Packer, Gleason Archer and Peter
Toon have all stated in print that they see Murray Harris position as Scripturally
orthodox, though Norman Geisler has challenged it. Unfortunately Harris books are
now out of print. At the time of writing this, Kingdom Publications still had a few
copies of his From Grave To Glory left in stock. We would highly recommend getting
this book and reading it if you can.
In view of Harris excellent defense of the idea that Christ was raised immortal,
it would seem evident that Jesus resurrection body cannot be accurately or
exhaustively described as nothing more than a pure physical body. His
post-resurrection appearances reveal that He had more than just a mere physical body. He
was raised immortal. All the others who had been raised from physical death before
Christ were raised mortal (still subject to death). Lazarus is a case in point.
After being raised by Christ, he lived out the rest of his life and died again. He was
raised with a pure physical body, nothing more. When Saul coerced the witch at Endor to
summon Samuel from the realm of the dead, it was not a resurrection of Samuels
physical body. It was the disembodied pure spirit form of Samuel (an
apparition) which appeared and frightened even the necromancer.
What we see here are two extremely different kinds of appearances: one purely physical,
and the other a pure spirit. Jesus resurrection body exhibited characteristics of both.
His resurrection body was not just purely physical. Nor was it a pure spirit as was
Samuels reappearance. Harris has shown convincingly and in conformity with biblical
orthodoxy that Christ was raised immortal, with a kind of body that no human had ever
possessed. How can we say that Jesus is the firstfruit of the resurrection if
He had the same kind of resurrection body as all the others before Him who had merely been
raised physically? Jesus was the first one ever to be raised with that kind of body. He
was the firstfruit (1 Cor. 15:20) of the resurrection harvest. His
resurrection body was not purely physical, nor was it pure spirit.
He was raised with an immortal body. He was the same person, but a different kind
of body. He was raised bodily, but not with the same kind of body.
Note how Paul not only clarifies the nature of the resurrection body in 1 Cor. 15, but
also affirms the continuity and conformity of our bodies with Christs resurrection
body:
...it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural
body, there is also a spiritual body. So also it is written, The first man, Adam,
became a living soul. The last Adam became a life-giving spirit. ...as is the
heavenly, so also are those who are heavenly. And just as we have borne the image of the
earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly. Now I say this, brethren, that flesh
and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; nor does the perishable inherit the
imperishable. (1 Cor. 15:44-50)
We are supposed to get the same kind of body that Jesus has. Jesus and our
resurrection bodies are described by Paul in this text as being spiritual,
glorious, imperishable, incorruptible,
immortal and heavenly. This doesnt sound like a mere
physical mortal body at all. Harris has done an excellent job of establishing this point
from the Biblical teaching about the resurrection. Jesus wasnt raised with a
physical body first and then changed into a spiritual body. He wasnt raised mortal
and then changed to immortal. He was raised immortal and spiritual
already. As Peter said, For Christ also died for sins once for all, the just for the
unjust, in order that He might bring us to God, having been put to death in the flesh, but
made alive in the spirit... (1 Pet. 3:18).
Jesus was raised with a body that was suited to His life in the heavenly realm. The
fact that He ascended into heaven with that same body suggests that it must have been much
more than just a pure physical body. Scripture affirms numerous times that mere physical
bodies cannot live in the spiritual realm. Christ was able to manifest Himself in a
tangible/visible form on several occasions after His resurrection and before His
ascension, but He was also able to disappear and remain in an intangible, immaterial form.
This is something new. No one had ever been raised with that kind of body before. It was
immortal (no longer subject to physical death). When Jesus appeared, He ate with them, but
not because His new body needed food to stay alive. He did so for evidence purposes. It
was to prove that He truly had been raised and was not just a disembodied spirit (like
Samuels appearance) awaiting the final resurrection like everyone else. His
resurrection with an immortal body was proof that the long-awaited defeat of Death and
reign of Life had begun. His appearances were signs that the eschaton had arrived and that
the full and final destruction of Death and Hades was imminent. He disappeared again to
prove that He was not just a mortal body like Lazarus resuscitated physical body. He
was raised immortal. The fact that He was able to exhibit both material and immaterial
qualities in His resurrection appearances was proof that He had brought true life and
immortality to light. He was the firstfruit of that kind of eternal, immortal life. The
fact that Christ appeared in tangible/visible form does not prove that His resurrection
body was merely a physical body, nor does it prove that He even had a physical,
tangible resurrection as Gentry suggested in his point number five. Harris (in From
Grave To Glory) has shown the profound significance of these tangible manifestations
as evidence that Christ had indeed overcome the power of Death and was raised with an
immortal, spiritual, imperishable, incorruptible and glorious heavenly body.
Gentry is merely repeating the shallow popular view when he says, Yet we know
that His was a physical, tangible resurrection. If Gentry is correct, Jesus
resurrection body was nothing better than what Lazarus got when he was physically
resuscitated. Murray Harris was not the first to suggest an alternative. Most of the
various theories about the nature of Christs resurrection body and ours was
discussed by the Ante-Nicene, Nicene and Post-Nicene ecclesiastics. J. N. D. Kelly,
Jaroslav Pelikan, Louis Berkhof, Brian Daley, Kurt Aland and Philip Schaff all discuss the
various positions taken by church fathers. Origen, Augustine and others took some similar
ideas about the nature of our resurrection bodies. This is not something new conjured up
by Murray Harris or the preterists.
Preterists are not removing the physical body from the Bibles systematic theology
regarding the resurrection. It was never the ultimate kind of resurrection body God had
planned and revealed in Scripture in the first place. Our ultimate victory over
Death was never intended to be the abolition of physical death. Those who say
the death God threatened in the Garden was physical are making Satan the
truth-teller and God the liar. God said they would die the very day they ate.
Satan said they would not die. Who told the truth? If God was talking about physical
death, then Satan was correct and God did not deliver on His death threat. God would not
be immutable after all. But man was separated from Gods spiritual fellowship that
very day. To be outside Gods fellowship and presence is Death. There was a worse
kind of death than physical death from which mankind more desperately needed deliverance.
There is a better kind of life and resurrection than physical resuscitation could ever
give us. We were not destined to be raised with a mere physical and mortal body. There is
something much better. We were destined to be raised immortal with a spiritual body like
Christs with which to live in Gods presence forever with. All of us agree that
we cannot live in Gods presence eternally with a mere physical body. Even those who
believe we are raised with a pure physical body still understand that we have to be
changed into a spiritual, glorious, immortal body before entering Gods presence. So,
the difference between Gentrys view and mine is not about what kind of ultimate body
we will live in Gods presence with. It is merely a question of WHEN we get that new
kind of body. Gentry says we are raised physically and then later changed into that
ultimate spiritual body. Harris and many other orthodox Christians (including preterists)
say we are raised with that kind of immortal body. No change after resurrection is needed.
And Apostle Paul says it is sown a natural body, and raised a spiritual body
(1 Cor. 15:44). Notice he doesnt say it is sown a natural body, raised a natural
body, and then later changed into a spiritual body. There are some important implications
that Gentry and many others have missed. Harris has done a great job of clarifying this
whole issue.
And what about Gentrys funeral eschatology? Does he teach at the graveside that
the dear departed believer is right now in heaven with Jesus? But in the classroom at
Christ College and Reedy River Church, what does he teach about Hades and the waiting
period until the resurrection and judgment? Which is it? Do we go immediately at death to
be with God in heaven, or do we have to wait until the resurrection and judgment before we
go to heaven? Does Gentry believe the saint gets to be in Gods presence before the
resurrection and judgment? Then at the resurrection he is taken back out of heaven,
reunited with his physical body for the judgment, then changed into some kind of immortal
body after the judgment, and finally moved back into the presence of God in heaven again.
How does Gentry get all that out of 1 Cor. 15 or any of the other resurrection texts? This
sounds every bit as much fabricated as the Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory.
Harris view is far more Biblical, easier to understand and consistent.
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