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Percho said↑
so also it hath been written, 'The first man Adam became a living creature,' the last Adam is for a life-giving spirit, but that which is spiritual is not first, but that which was natural, afterwards that which is spiritual.
...Tom
Flesh and blood did not inherit the kingdom of God but flesh (spiritual) and bones did.
On the basis of 1 Cor. 15 I just cannot come to your conclusion. Whether "flesh and bones" or "flesh and blood" they are both part of what we are to be changed from. I do not want to write it all again but somewhere in this thread I try to show from 1 Cor 15 how that essence comes out of origin. Your verse that you quoted above is part of the proof. We first had the essence of Adam. We will have the essence of Christ - the pre-incarnate Christ. That is, we will have spiritual bodies.
Tom Riggle
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I believe 1 Cor 15 says the opposite.
This is the incarnate Christ. Lev 17:11 Darby for the soul of the flesh is in the blood; and I have given it to you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls, for it is the blood that maketh atonement for the soul.
Jesus committed the spirit of himself into the hands of his Father. Upon doing this Jesus the Son of God was dead. Without life. Jesus the Son of God did not raise himself out of the dead. God the Father raised Jesus the Son out of the dead, Gal 1:1
It is the spirit that is in the blood making alive the soul of the flesh. That is what gave life to the incarnate Son of God.
He poured out the soul of the flesh that was in his blood and that is hoe his blood made atonement for our souls.
Three days and three nights later God the Father made the dead Son of God alive to the Spirit. That is afterward, after the resurrection. 1 Cor 15:46 is about the last Adam IMHO Jesus was made life giving Spirit.
1 Cor 15:46 but that which is spiritual is not first, but that which was natural, afterwards that which is spiritual.
That is speaking of the last Adam.
That is the the essence of Christ we will have. The post incarnate Christ who died and was raised out of the dead.
I wonder why Josephus didn't write anything about Jesus coming in 70 AD and all those folks rising from the dead and disappearing?
First of all, for the sake of clarity, I point out that there is a sentence (in green) above that I did not say. From the way it is quoted it looks like I wrote it. I assume that you mistakenly quoted your own words as if they were mine. I wonder what passage allows you to say that spiritual flesh and bones could inherit the kingdom of God.Percho said↑
so also it hath been written, 'The first man Adam became a living creature,' the last Adam is for a life-giving spirit, but that which is spiritual is not first, but that which was natural, afterwards that which is spiritual.
...Tom
Flesh and blood did not inherit the kingdom of God but flesh (spiritual) and bones did.
On the basis of 1 Cor. 15 I just cannot come to your conclusion. Whether "flesh and bones" or "flesh and blood" they are both part of what we are to be changed from. I do not want to write it all again but somewhere in this thread I try to show from 1 Cor 15 how that essence comes out of origin. Your verse that you quoted above is part of the proof. We first had the essence of Adam. We will have the essence of Christ - the pre-incarnate Christ. That is, we will have spiritual bodies.
Tom Riggle
I wonder why Josephus didn't write anything about Jesus coming in 70 AD and all those folks rising from the dead and disappearing?
Jesus committed the spirit of himself into the hands of his Father. Upon doing this Jesus the Son of God was dead. Without life. Jesus the Son of God did not raise himself out of the dead. God the Father raised Jesus the Son out of the dead, Gal 1:1
First of all, for the sake of clarity, I point out that there is a sentence (in green) above that I did not say. From the way it is quoted it looks like I wrote it. I assume that you mistakenly quoted your own words as if they were mine. I wonder what passage allows you to say that spiritual flesh and bones could inherit the kingdom of God.