'We are confident, I say,
and willing rather to be absent from the body,
and to be present with the Lord.'
(2 Corinthians 5:8)
Hello
@Butch5,
You refer to the verse above in response to
@Admon Mikha'el's use of it, and it is very often used as a proof text by those who maintain that when the believer dies, he merely exits this present life to continue living in the presence of the Lord. However, this is not what this verse is saying at all.
Paul was willing to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord, yes: but for that to happen would require the Lord's return, for only then will the believer exchange what is mortal for that which is immortal, corruption for in-corruption (1 Corinthians 15:53-54) only then will death be swallowed up in victory. Only the power of the resurrection can bring about that change in the bodies of those that are alive and remain at His coming, and raise incorruptible those who are '
asleep in Christ' (1 Corinthians 15:52).
At the time that Paul wrote those words, the expectation among believers was that Christ's return was imminent. It only awaited Israel's repentance as a nation (Acts 3:19-21). That was the hope all the way through the approx. 40 yrs of the Acts period. However, as we now know, Israel did not repent, and was laid aside (temporarily) in blindness and unbelief. So the resurrection still awaits those who are '
asleep in Christ' (1 Corinthians 15:18), There is no life apart from resurrection.
Thank you
In Christ Jesus
Chris