Waiting
that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death; in order that I may attain to the resurrection from the dead. Philippians 3:10-11 NASB
Resurrection from the dead – About a week ago we looked at Paul’s expression concerning resurrection in Romans 1 (see August 12). We discovered that deliberate mistranslation was theologically incorporated in order to avoid certain uncomfortable implications about the first century message. But now we see that Paul embraces the same idea here, that is, the general resurrection from the dead. In fact, he is looking forward to it. He expects to be included in this apocalyptic, cosmic event. It’s the reason why he is willing to suffer so much now. The end is coming and when it arrives everything will at last be straightened out. Yeshua’s return is the proof necessary to ensure divine justice.
We are inclined to think that this resurrection will exonerate the good and punish the bad. Perhaps it will. But there’s something else implied here that we often overlook. The resurrection from the dead means that all the darkness of the world will at last be brought into the light. That might be terrifying, even for those of us who think we will be rewarded. But maybe it shouldn’t be, and not because our “sins have been forgiven” but because the darkness is much more than our moral failures. The darkness is our own experiences of emptiness, unease, incompleteness, being alone, misunderstood, abandoned. The darkness is what frightens us when we realize that we aren’t safe, that there’s no real sense of home for us, that we don’t really belong. “ . . . whatever it is that is truly home for us, we know in our hearts that we have somehow lost it and gotten lost. Something is missing from our lives that we cannot even name—something we know best from the empty place inside us all where it belongs.”[1] The resurrection from the dead isn’t just about us coming back from the grave. It’s about returning whole. It’s about filling that emptiness that made us weep silently inside all those years that we traveled, looking for where we needed to be and knowing we didn’t find it. Resurrection from the dead is coming to life, not just being reanimated so we can stand before the Great White Throne and be reminded of our failures. Resurrection from the dead is giving life to what we longed for when we were once alive, to fill the pain and suffering with higher purpose, with meaning rather than confusion, to know that all those tears held back for fear of humiliation can now be released because they will heal us. Resurrection from the dead is the chance to remember differently. Remember, it’s resurrection from what is dead, and there’s a lot in each of us that is already in the casket. “To have faith is to remember and wait, and to wait in hope is to have what we hope for already begin to come true in us through our hoping.”[2]
Paul longs for it, perhaps because he knew his own darkness so well. Me too.
Topical Index: resurrection from the dead, Philippians 3:10-11
[1]Frederick Buechner Secrets in the Dark: A Life in Sermons(HarperOne, 2006), p. 76.
All will come to light and be revealed, we are told. Either we hate the darkness or we hate the light: exposure: nakedness. (Dead folks, of course – including those who “have been conformed to his death” – are already naked and exposed and don’t care.) We are told “all knees will bow”, too. Everybody will be convinced who is Lord of all, but some of them will be hating Him and some loving Him, depending on where we are at with the light of full knowledge of not only Him but ourselves. Choice time will be over, as will faith time, for both can only exist in the ambiguity: the chaos: which is the necessary substrate of free will. Darkness, where we can’t see, is the only place people are still free to choose evil and still hope for salvation, for only ignorance can be corrected. Sin in defiance: in full sight of Him who sits on the throne: there is no remedy for.
The way I read the Bible, now, in the darkness where we have to have faith, is the choosing time. In the light, we will all see what we have already chosen and where we have already placed our loyalty.
God has a purpose for everything.
Darkness is a key component to this age
for numerous reasons, yes, including our
personal experiences of incompleteness.
The hope we’ve been given of coming into
His light and being able to walk in it during
this lifetime is one of the sublime realities
God offers us all to choose.
And of course our final resurrection from what
is dead will thrill and amaze us beyond all that
we can think or imagine.
Being whole is what our faith assures us is well
worth waiting for . . .
Thank you for this Skip
Skip, In my 68 years I have read a lot; everything from Dick and Jane to Descartes and Jung, but the insight that you gleaned from Buechner on resurrection may be the most profound and profitable words that I have ever read (or maybe it’s just now finally “clicked”). “The resurrection from the dead isn’t just about us coming back from the grave. It’s about returning whole”. … “Resurrection from the dead is giving life to what we longed for when we were once alive”…”Resurrection from the dead is the chance to remember differently”. … “it’s resurrection from what is dead.”
I’ve shared before about how my frontal lobes, which control the executive functions of the brain, were twice damaged in separate incidents in my childhood; that damage, along with the resulting physical, mental and emotional abuse which I suffered at the hands of everyone I encountered in my childhood and adolescence, altered my experience and perception of reality and made my life a living hell. But the idea generated by your words and now germinating in my heart that I will yet be given (or more miraculously is NOW being given), “a chance to remember differently” and that… “it’s resurrection from what is dead” is, I say again, possibly the greatest thing that I have ever read, heard or understood. Thank you from the bottom of my broken heart and damaged brain. I now have hope, even if it is not fully realized until I am bodily resurrected, but who knows what faith combined with hope can yet do today and tomorrow? I plan to find out. I’ll keep you posted.