No. I have had to keep answering the same points from you time and again. I guess you forget.
No. I don't forget. You keep prevaricating, and I keep pressing the facts.
Martin Marprelate said:
And I am arguing that He was (Luke 24:39) and will be (Acts of the Apostles 1:11) in a physical body.
Your arguing that His body remains physical is not from Scripture. It is from tradition. The "like manner" of Acts 1:11 relates to His going and returning in a cloud. That adverbial phrase says nothing about what He would be like at the return.
'In like manner as you saw Him go into heaven.' In what possible sense can His return be 'in like manner' if no one can see Him? In fact, of course,
'every eye shall see Him' (Revelation 1:7).
At the rapture the living saints were changed to be like Him.
You believe in a rapture that is already past? Fascinating! Is there any evidence that the saints in, say, Philippi, shed their physical bodies? I think we should be told.
That is why Paul said to the Thessalonians that they would be changed.
Those alive at Christ's return will be changed
'in the twinkling of an eye' from their mortal bodies into a body like Christ's glorified body.
And why he told the Corinthians that flesh and blood cannot enter into the Kingdom of God.
'Flesh and blood' is an expression meaning sinful humanity (Galatians 1:16; Ephesians 6:12). That is presumably why our Lord described His resurrection body as
'flesh and bones.'
There is no reason for Him to remain in physical form, beyond the "days of His flesh"..
This is your human reasoning. You have agreed that our Lord went up to heaven in a physical body. Where in the Scriptures does it say that He shed it at any point?
Acts of the Apostles 1:11 refutes Hyper-preterism, and so long as you continue to promote it on this board, I shall continue to present the verse.