Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
몸이 다시 사는 것과 영원히 사는 것을 믿사옵나이다 (Relationship b/w the resurrection of Christ…
몸이 다시 사는 것과 영원히 사는 것을 믿사옵나이다
Relationship b/w the resurrection of Christ and our resurrection
Difference b/w the Son of God and sons of God
The same legal right for the inheritance
Resurrection and eternal life are the inheritance of Christians (1 Pet 1:3-4)
1 Cor 15
Greeks believed that the soul is immortal and that therefore when it is separated from the body the latter dies but the soul goes on living. They were also convinced that one's true self was the soul and that therefore the death and corruption of the body had little significance
Christian teaching differed from the common notion of the immortality of the soul on two main scores
eternal life is a gift from God
God's final purposes include the material as well as the spiritual
Eternal life
Eternal life is not an infinite extension of our present lives
"eternal life"
βίος: mere biological existence
ζωή: life in all its fullness (Jn 10:10)
'Eternal' means outside time
Eternal life means that our present relationship with God is not destroyed or thwarted by death, but is continued and deepened by it.
Eternal life is something we can begin to experience now. - foretaste
It is certainly true that eternal life in all its fullness is something we can only hope to gain in the age to come (Lk 18:30)
The resurrection of Lazarus
To enter fully into eternal life is to extend and deepen our experience of the presence and love of God
Heaven: God's answer to suffering
2 Cor 4:17
2 Cor 11:24-28
Rom 8:20-22
2 Pet 3:13
Rev 21:1-4
Criticism: Karl Marx
Amen
Faith involves more than assent - it involves trust and obedience
Many people look for hope
But the earth does not provide any hope
The Christian proclamation of resurrection and eternal life is of crucial importance
Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have (1 Pet 3:15)
Hope in its full-blooded sense means "a sure and confident expectation"
It is this hope that has inspired Christian endurance down the ages (1 The 1:3)