Friday, March 18, 2022

Andrew Loke on 1 Corinthians 15:47

  

Carrier (2005a, p. 134) argues from Paul’s statement, ‘Christ is a life-giving spirit’ (v. 45), and citing verse 47, he claims that while Adam’s body is made of earth, Christ’s body is not; it comes from heaven. In reply, verse 45 can be understood as emphasizing the spiritual aspect of the resurrected Jesus, but this does not deny that the resurrected Jesus had a physical body. On the contrary, the view that Jesus’ resurrected body had both spiritual and physical properties is already affirmed by other texts . . . By ‘life-giving spirit’ Paul could also be identifying Jesus with the Spirit on the level of Christian experience (2 Cor. 3:17) and/or Paul might be comparing Jesus with God’s life-giving breath in Genesis 2:7 (Wright 2003, p. 355). ‘The second man from heaven’ (v. 47) is referring to Jesus’ second coming and not the discontinuity of his resurrected body with his old physical body (ibid.). (Andrew Loke, Investigating the Resurrection of Jesus Christ: A New Transdisciplinary Approach [Routledge New Critical Thinking in Religion, Theology and Biblical Studies; Oxfordshire: Routledge, 2020], 135)