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Sinking the Ship of “Hyper-Preterism” Torpedo #2 “The Resurrection of the Body” (Response by Don Preston Resurrection When? In your article you
argue that there is a spiritual resurrection for the believer then a future
physical bodily resurrection. If Jesus taught a
physical resurrection and that it was to occur in his generation, then he
was wrong and Christianity is built on a false foundation.
1.) Daniel 12, 1-7,
13
2.) Matthew 8:11ff
Jesus said the
Banquet would occur when the Sons of the Kingdom, i.e. Old Covenant
Matthew 8 is an excellent commentary on 1 Corinthians 15. In verse 54 Paul said the resurrection would be the fulfillment of Isaiah 25:8. In verses 50 he said "flesh and blood cannot enter the kingdom of heaven." Resurrection equaled entrance into the kingdom, cf. John 3:1-5. Notice the correlation between Matthew and Corinthians.
In Matthew and Corinthians, Isaiah 25:6-8 is the foundational Old Testament prophetic text. In both Matthew and Corinthians entrance into the kingdom is the focus of the fulfillment of the prediction, Mat. 8:11; 1 Corinthians. 15:50. In Matthew the Kingdom Banquet would be enjoyed when the Jews were cast out, i.e. at the end of the Old Covenant Age. In Corinthians the resurrection would occur at the consummation of the Old Covenant promises, i.e. when all of the Old Testament promises had reached final reality. Thus when the Old Covenant would pass, Matthew 5:17-18.
3.) Matthew 13:36-43
4.) Matthew 16:27-28
5.) Matthew 23:29-39 But in Matthew 23 Jesus said that "all the righteous blood shed on the earth" all the way back to creation would be judged "Assuredly, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation" 23:36. Here is my argument:
Major Premise: The resurrection is when all the martyrs of God are judged.
It can scarcely be
argued that the fall of
The theme of the book of Revelation is the judgment of the city that killed the prophets, and was guilty of the blood of "all who have been slain on the earth" 18:24. This city is none other than where the Lord was crucified, 11:8, and that judgment was "at hand" 1:1-3.
6.) Matthew 24:29-31
When it is seen that Jesus' Olivet Discourse is the foundation for Paul's Thessalonian discourse about the Lord's coming to gather the saints, 1 Thessalonians. 4:13-18; 2 Thessalonians. 1:7-10; 2 Thessalonians. 2:1, then these resurrection passages must also be seen in the light of the time frame of the Olivet Discourse; the end of Israel's Old Covenant World.
7.) Luke 20:34
8.)Luke
20
9.)1 Corinthians. 15:52
Further, Paul said they were living in the end of the age, 1 Corinthians. 10:10-11; they would possess the miraculous gifts of the Spirit until the coming of the Lord, 1 Corinthians. 1:4- 8; and that the time had been shortened and the world was passing away, 1 Corinthians. 7:28-31.
It is significant that in Revelation we read of seven Trumpets and that the resurrection, which would be when the prophets and martyrs would be rewarded, 11:18, is directly associated with the fall of the city "where also our Lord was crucified", 11:8.
The time of the
sounding of the seventh (last) trumpet is also when all the things foretold
by the prophets would be fulfilled, 10:7. And do not forget that Jesus
placed the final fulfillment of "all things that are written" in relation to
the fall of
10.)2 Timothy 4:1
11.) 1 Pt. 1:3-13
This is why Peter said Jesus was "ready to judge the living and the dead" 4:5. The word "ready" is the same word as in chapter 1. The Expositors Greek Testament says the Greek reader would understand it to refer to "the imminent judge." Here then is an unequivocal statement about the first century imminence of the resurrection.
Peter also said "the end of all things is at hand" 4:7. Literally, this reads "has come near," cf. Mat. 3:2, "the kingdom of heaven has come near." In what ever way the kingdom had drawn near in Matthew, the end of all things had drawn near in Peter. The kingdom was truly imminent in Matthew, therefore the end of all things was truly imminent in Peter.
The apostle also said "the time has come for the judgment to begin at the house of God" 4:17. Do not all agree that the resurrection is concurrent with the coming of the Lord, the end of all things and judgment? Certainly. Thus, in Peter we find that the Lord was "ready" to be revealed; "the end of all things" was "at hand"; the time for "the judgment" had come; and Jesus was "ready to judge the living and the dead." How much clearer could inspiration declare the imminence of the resurrection?
Here then are several
emphatic chronological indicators, and there are many more, for not only
when the resurrection was to occur but the framework for its occurrence — at
the end of the Old World of Israel. It does not matter what one's concept of the resurrection is: if one is to maintain belief in Biblical inspiration he must acknowledge that the Old Testament prophets, Jesus, and his disciples plainly taught that the resurrection was to occur at the end of the Jewish Theocracy in A.D. 70.
The overwhelming sense of eschatological imminence that permeates the New Testament simply cannot be ignored by the honest Bible student. Scholars have struggled with this imminence coupled with their literalistic views of the "last things" and come to the conclusion that Jesus and scripture was not inspired. And it is not a question of whether the imminence was real; the Greek words admit no other meaning and these scholars know it. On the other hand, the language of resurrection very plainly does admit of a spiritual, non-literal meaning. And this is the only solution for the dilemma.
Allowing the Bible to
define the resurrection as deliverance from the Old Covenant of Death to the
New Covenant of Life, as deliverance from the death brought by sin,
separation from God, not physical death, acknowledges the full force of the
New Testament language of imminence. |
as of 8-2005