Friday, July 4, 2025

The Resurrected

 



Below is a commentary from chapter sixteen, Rapture Passages in Matthew, from my manuscript, Waiting for the Day and Hour.  


The context of this passage (Matt. 22:23-28) is that the Sadducees (a political party of the Jewish elite) questioned Jesus about a man who died and had no children. According to Moses, the dead man's brother should marry his widow and have children, for him (Deut. 25:5-9). His brothers kept marrying his widow, one after the other, because they kept dying too. They asked Jesus which brother could claim the widow as their wife at the resurrection. Jesus was able to see through their deception because the Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection of the dead; they believed in no afterlife. Neither did they believe in the spiritual realm or angels, whether holy or fallen. However, the Pharisees did believe in these things. Jesus answered the Sadducees by referring to the resurrection of those who die and were faithful to him. This would be the faithful Church and the faithful Old Testament saints who were obedient to Yahweh.

There are three resurrections in Scripture: One at the rapture of the body of Christ (1 Thess. 13-17)—this is the one Jesus was referring to. At this resurrection, the dead in Christ will be reunited with their body. It will be resurrected and transformed into a heavenly body (1 Cor. 15:22-23, 42-44, 51-53). Then there is a resurrection referred to as the first resurrection (Rev. 20:4-6). At this resurrection, all those who are killed during the 7-year Tribulation/70th week of Israel, because they repent and turn to the One true God, will be resurrected to live again in their earthly body. During the Tribulation, they will not worship the Antichrist or his image. They will not receive his mark on their hand or forehead. These Tribulation saints will be resurrected after Jesus Christ defeats the kings of the earth, with their military, and the endtimes ἰσχυρός (ischyros) mighty men. These ischyros are similar to the Nephilim seen in the Old Testament (Gen. 6:4; Num. 13:33). They were also referred to as the גִּבּוֹר (gibôr) hero or mighty men (Gen. 6:4; 10:8-9; Josh. 10:2; Jdg. 5:23).[1] The נָפִיל (nāp̄îl) Nephilim/giants were the offspring of the sons of God (angels). The giant offspring of the angels were also called רְפָאִים (rᵊp̄ā'îm) Rephaim (Deut. 2:11, 20; 3:11, 13; Josh. 12:4). The Tribulation saints could be resurrected before Jesus sets up his earthly kingdom. After Christ’s millennial reign, there will be another resurrection (Rev. 20:7, 11-15). This resurrection is referred to as the White Throne Judgment. Everyone who does not have their name written in the book of life will have their body resurrected to be reunited with their spirit and soul. Because they do not have their name written in the Lamb’s book of life (Rev. 13:8), they will be cast into the lake of fire.   

Jesus made it clear which resurrection he was referring to. He said the resurrected will be ὡς ἄγγελοι ἐν τῷ οὐρανῷ (os ángeloi en tó ouranó) “like angels in heaven” (22:30b, mGNT). He meant the resurrection that is concurrent with the rapture of the body of Christ, who are still alive at this glorious event (1 Thess. 4:15-17). When the dead in Christ and the faithful Old Testament saints are resurrected simultaneously with the raptured body of Christ, each will receive a heavenly body (1 Cor. 15:51-53). Their Heavenly bodies will be similar to the kind of Heavenly body the angels live in. The raptured and resurrected saints will be like the angels in heaven, but different. That is what he meant when he said the resurrected will be like the angels. He was referring to the angel’s heavenly body. The body of Christ and the faithful Old Testament saints will become heavenly beings like the angels of God. The angels have one kind of heavenly body, and the body of Christ will have another type of heavenly body. The body of Christ and the faithful Old Testament saints will receive a heavenly body like the one Jesus received when he was raptured (Phil. 3:20-21; 1 Jn. 3:2).  

There is no other way Jesus could have explained the transformation of the faithful to the Sadducees, especially since the Church had not been born. And because they did not believe in the heavenly realms and life after death. He had to say the resurrected will be like angels, so they could get an idea of what he was saying.

When the Tribulation saints are resurrected, they do not receive heavenly bodies. At least the Scriptures do not imply they do. They are resurrected back into their earthly bodies, which will live forever. They would have to be raptured into the eternal realm for their resurrected body to be transformed from earthly to heavenly. The Scriptures do not imply they are raptured into Heaven after the Tribulation, like the church is before the Tribulation. When Jesus was resurrected, He came to life again in the same earthly body. He did not receive his heavenly body until he was raptured and taken into heaven before the eyes of the apostles (Acts 1:9). The Tribulation saints will dwell on the earth once they are resurrected in earthly bodies that will not die again. They will rule and reign with Jesus in their earthly bodies during his millennial reign (Rev. 20:4). After Jesus’ millennial reign the Tribulation saints and the offspring they produce during the millennial reign of Christ will experience Satan being released out of his prison (Rev. 20:7). Satan will deceive some of their descendants into joining him to turn against their forefathers, the Tribulation saints (Rev. 20:9a). But God destroys them from his throne in heaven (Rev. 20:9b).

Again, there is no indication in the Scriptures that the Tribulation saints receive heavenly bodies like the Church does at the rapture. The Scripture only says they come back to life again to serve Jesus in their earthly bodies. The Scripture leaves us with the idea they come back to life into their earthly bodies and stay that way for 1000+ years (Rev. 20:6). The raptured body of Christ will dwell in the eternal realm once resurrected and caught up to heaven, because this day will be the day when the salvation process in the body of Christ is complete (Rom. 8:18-23; 2 Cor. 5:1-4a). 

 

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Free for use under the Pixabay Content License  

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