Articles
Immortality:
The "Mother of All Changes"
By Paul Kroll 2007
There’s nothing certain in life except death and taxes, goes
the old saying. Taxes we might be able to deal with by making more
money or getting government to lower them… but death? What
can we do about death? Well, not much—nothing, in fact.
That’s
why the hope of all Christians is to live again—and live forever—by
a resurrection from death, an event the Bible says is to occur at
Jesus Christ’s return. But this brings up an intriguing question:
What kind of body will God provide for us? If you’ve ever
wondered about this, you can be sure you are not the first. In fact,
there’s a discussion of the "body question" in the
New Testament where the apostle Paul tried to enlighten his parishioners
in Corinth.
In this letter,
after explaining that the dead in Christ would indeed be resurrected
to immortal life, Paul asked: "But someone may ask, ‘How
are the dead raised? With what kind of body will they come?’"
(1 Corinthians 15:35).
If
we are Christians who believe in the resurrection of the dead, then
we already believe, by faith, that with God all things are possible—that,
though we die, we will live again in the resurrection. I got to
thinking of a fascinating analogy from nature that might help us
see that all things are possible with God—the dead can live
again! I’m speaking of nature’s marvel of metamorphosis.
The word simply means "change of form."1
A
stunning marvel
If you know
anything about the life history of a moth or butterfly, you know
it undergoes complete metamorphosis. It gets a completely new body.
You can see this for yourself. Take the eggs of a moth or butterfly—let
us say, tobacco hornworm eggs (about the size of a pinhead)—and
place them on leaves that they would eat.
Watch over
time as the eggs hatch into larvae, each measuring about half an
inch in length. The larvae will grow quickly as they gorge themselves
on the leaves. At full maturity about three weeks after hatching,
the hornworm caterpillar larvae will be about three inches long.
Each hornworm
will then wrap itself in a cocoon that it creates under a thin layer
of soil. After a time, the chrysalis with its brown color and varnished-like
finish will begin cracking and out will struggle, not a worm, but
a completely different life form—a Carolina Sphinx moth.
One form of
life, with a distinctive caterpillar body and nature, will have
metamorphosed or changed into a new form of life, a moth. This "death"
of the hornworm, its intermediate existence in a cocoon and then
the "resurrection" of a moth is a profound and moving
sight to see!
Mortal
to immortal in resurrection
Now, I’m
going to suggest an analogy between metamorphosis in nature and
the "metamorphosis" in resurrection that will occur to
those in Christ when he breaks yet again into our history in visible
glory and power.
I don’t
mean to say that the resurrection is like natural metamorphoses,
of course. The worm and the metamorphosed butterfly and moth are
both physical and mortal creatures. They both die. In the hornworm’s
pupa stage its caterpillar structures are reorganized and replaced
by those typical of the Carolina Sphinx moth (see box). But our
metamorphosis at Christ’s return will occur because God gives
us a transformed, spiritual body, not another mortal or physical
body that develops out of the old physical body, as in natural metamorphosis.
The dead in Christ will be called forth by the power of God and
given new bodies. This will be the mother of all metamorphoses!
Nevertheless,
natural metamorphosis is intriguing in that it can point beyond
itself to God’s work with us in the resurrection. The worm
ceases to be a worm and lies dormant in a pupal cell in which it
finds new, metamorphosed life as a moth or butterfly. We human beings
first live a physical, mortal human life. Then we die, awaiting
the coming of the Lord, at which time we will receive spiritual
bodies.
Thinking about the "new body"
So what kind
of bodies will God provide for us in the resurrection? Paul answered
the question by explaining the process with the help of another
analogy from the natural world: "What you sow does not come
to life unless it dies. When you sow, you do not plant the body
that will be, but just a seed, perhaps of wheat or of something
else" (verses 36-37).
Yes, that is
a marvel. A field of wheat from a handful of seeds. A mighty oak
tree coming from a tiny acorn! A worm buried in a tomb-like cocoon
reappears as a different life form, with a totally different body.
That’s
analogous to what will happen to us in the resurrection of the dead.
Paul explains: "The body that is sown is perishable [our present
state], it is raised imperishable… it is sown a natural body,
it is raised a spiritual body" (verses 43-44, italics mine).
The metamorphosed
body we are to receive will be a "spiritual body." Paul
didn’t say we receive a nonmaterial, spirit body, but a "spiritual
body." So what did he mean by the phrase? The Greek word is
pneumatikos, like in a pneumatic or air-filled tire. Pneumatikos,
"spiritual," means in a general sense, to exist in a manner
corresponding with or appropriate to the Spirit. That doesn’t
tell us anything specific about the make-up of spiritual bodies.
Another apostle,
John, also understood that there’s no explaining what our
metamorphosed bodies or life will be like in the resurrection except
in general terms: "Dear friends, now we are children of God,
and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that
when he appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he
is" (1 John 3:2).
The
same but not the same
Our post-resurrection
"spiritual" existence will be decisively different from
our present fleshly, earthly existence. Yet, a singular continuity
will exist within this fundamental discontinuity. We will still
be ourselves "on the other side," but fully regenerated
in nature and immortal in body.
New
bodies for old
So what is
it exactly that our changed—metamorphosed— new bodies
will have that they do not possess now? Paul again explains: "Listen,
I tell you a mystery…. The dead will be raised imperishable,
and we will be changed. For the perishable must clothe itself with
the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality" (Corinthians
15:50-53). Yes, the mortal will be clothed with or put on immortality.
Continuity, but also fundamental discontinuity.
Resurrection
bodies will be imperishable and immortal. Think about it. None of
our present fleshly weaknesses will exist. Never to be tired. Never
to be thirsty or hungry. Never to be sick and in pain. Never to
suffer from anxieties and fears. Never to sin. Never to die.
Paul knew what
it meant to suffer deprivation and pain in this temporal, physical
body, which is our present heritage. He longed to rest in peace,
waiting for the resurrection: "Now we know that if the earthly
tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal
house in heaven, not built by human hands…. For while we are
in this tent, we groan and are burdened, because we do not wish
to be unclothed but to be clothed with our heavenly dwelling, so
that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life" (2 Corinthians
5:1-4).
The book of
Revelation exults in this time after the resurrection, when we will
have new bodies: "God himself will be with them and be their
God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more
death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things
has passed away" (21:3-4). God’s gift to us of a new
spiritual and immortal body and a mind and heart regenerated and
perfected through Christ and in the Holy Spirit will make all this
possible.
Scripture testifies
to our human experience that physical human bodies grow old and
infirm, become sick and pained, decay and die. It also testifies
that in the resurrection we will receive a new body from God that
will give us true and eternal freedom and joy. "All creation
anticipates the day when it will join God’s children in glorious
freedom from death and decay. For we know that all creation has
been groaning as in the pangs of childbirth right up to the present
time. And even we Christians, although we have the Holy Spirit within
us as a foretaste of future glory, also groan to be released from
pain and suffering. We, too, wait anxiously for that day when God
will give us our full rights as his children, including the new
bodies he has promised us." (Romans 8:21-23, New Living Translation).
A new body
in which to live forever in a restored world, where nothing will
ever go wrong again. It is indeed the mother of all changes. •
1The
Random House Dictionary of the English Language defines metamorphosis
in biological terms as a "profound change in form from one
stage to the next in the life history of an organism."
http://www.christianodyssey.com/07/0708immortality.htm
What
happens in a chrysalis?
Have you ever
thought of a butterfly as a caterpillar with wings? Think again.
What happens inside a chrysalis is a wonder of creation, and a striking
analogy for the transformation from mortality to immortality that
is the hope of all Christians.
When the caterpillar
has eaten enough, it finds somewhere safe and spins itself a cocoon.
It then molts its outer skin, secreting a new covering that is much
thicker and stronger. In this form it cannot eat, excrete and usually
does not move. To all outside appearances it looks dead. But it
is far from lifeless. Inside, a miracle of transformation begins
to take place.
The first thing
that happens is that most of the caterpillar’s old body dies.
Enzymes are released that digest all the caterpillar tissue, so
that the caterpillar is converted into a rich organic soup. It actually
digests itself from the inside out—a process called "histolysis."
However, not all the old tissue is destroyed. In a number of places
in the insect’s body are collections of special embryonic
cells, called "imaginal buds" or "histoblasts."
Until now they played no part in the insect’s life. These
cells start developing early in the caterpillar’s life, but
then they stall, remaining inert in the caterpillar’s body.
As soon as metamorphosis gets under way, these cells start growing
again.
The job of
these imaginal bud cells is to supervise the building of a new body
out of the soup that the insect’s digestive juices have made
of the old larval body. One will become a wing; others form the
legs, the antennae and all the organs of the adult butterfly. In
this way, the entire internal contents of the caterpillar—the
muscles, the digestive system, even the heart and nervous system—is
totally rebuilt.
What eventually
emerges out of the chrysalis is not just a caterpillar with wings.
It is a new creature, no longer confined to crawling around and
preoccupied with eating. Although the potential to become a butterfly
is inherent in the caterpillar’s old body, the change cannot
happen until the old creature in effect dies. Then, and only then,
the wonderful process of metamorphosis begins to unfold, until eventually,
a totally new kind of creature emerges from the "tomb."
Borne aloft
on its beautiful wings, the butterfly can experience life in a way
a caterpillar could not begin to imagine.
http://www.christianodyssey.com/07/0708immortality.htm
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