
02-20-2008, 12:54 PM
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 | Puritanboard Doctor | | Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: LA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by danmpem Quote:
Originally Posted by k.seymore
Wright: "[Paul] uses the regular image of falling asleep for death, enabling him to speak of people who have fallen asleep but will one day wake again, and to do so with echos of Daniel 12:2... This has led some interpreters to speak of 'the sleep of the soul', a time on unconcious post-mortem existence prior to the reawakening of resurrection. But this is almost certainly misleading – another case of people picking up a vivid Pauline metaphor and running down the street and waving it about. ...in fact, if we were speaking strictly, we should say that it is the body that 'sleeps' between death and resurrection; but in all probability, Paul is using the language of sleeping and waking simply as a way of contrasting a stage of temporary inactivity, not necessarily unconsciousness, with a subsequent on of renewed activity." ["The Resurrection of the Son of God" p.216] | I mostly agree with this, but I must wonder when Wright said this. So many people considered Wright to be pretty solid in his earlier days, before his theology took a 'new perspective'. | he wrote that in 2003 or 2004
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J. B. Atken
John Knox PCA
Layman, M.A. student at Louisiana College
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