Paul actually did go deeper in defining how he meant those ideas of spiritual, heavenly, and incorruptible.
Oh? I don't see that in the passage/chapter in question...
many are used to following pop doctrines of men that they lose the focus required to actually read the Scripture as written.
This is quite an assumption you're making, here, and an ill-defined one, too. What do you mean, exactly, by "lost the focus to actually read the Scriptures as written"?
One of the first problems I see many brethren running into with 1 Cor.15 is not first understanding that God's Word defines TWO different dimensions of existence, the earthly one we live in, and then the heavenly one where God and the angels dwell, including Satan and his angels.
Why do you refer to these two spheres, or realms, or planes of existence as "dimensions"?
Also, I can assure you I'm not one of these "many brethren" you describe.
Our earthly dimension is made up of material matter. The heavenly dimension is made up of Spirit.
I know what it means for the material world to be made up physical matter, but what does it mean for the heavenly/spiritual realm to be "made up of Spirit"? Is Spirit a substance out of which things can be made? If so, wouldn't that make it a kind of material thing and thus of the physical "dimension"?
In John 3, Lord Jesus even showed this early on when He said that which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of The Spirit is spirit.
Yes. He also implied that the Spirit was like the unseen wind whose origin and destination no one knows.
John 3:8
The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of it, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit.”
What is the chief distinction, on the level of basic distinguishing characteristics, between flesh and spirit? We can talk of what flesh is, but what the stuff of spirit is, well, that's a mystery to us all, I think - just as Jesus implies in the verse above.
So we are not to confuse the two different dimensions.
Yes. This is pretty obvious.
The Heavenly dimension of Spirit is one we cannot see with the naked eye, and is not made up of material matter.
This is, of course, to speak of a thing in terms of what it isn't. Can you describe what, exactly, spirit is?
And if God allows us to see into the Heavenly dimension it is by His touching our spirit by His Spirit,
How do two immaterial, non-physical things "touch each other"? Isn't this to speak of the spiritual in fleshly, physical terms? It seems so to me.
many are confused about this when they shouldn't be.
Many, too, speak of the subject of spirit without really knowing what, precisely, they are talking about.
And Apostle Paul, when trying to describe these differences between the two dimensions, still used material things of this world as tools to try and describe it, which still one needs to rightly divide between the things of this earthly dimension and those things of the heavenly dimension.
Well, if the divinely-inspired Paul could not adequately define what spirit is, resorting to the physical in an effort to do so, what hope have the rest of us in doing any better? Not much, I think.
Paul's subject is what TYPE OF BODY is the resurrection body.
Paul then uses the material germination of seed to try and explain. Think about that era and people's understanding then. How could Paul try and explain a spiritual dimension matter using something they could relate to? He chose seed germination, which still helps some, but still falls short of what really happens per the rest of God's Word.
Actually, in
1 Corinthians 15:35-36, Paul wasn't talking about the nature of the resurrected, "spiritual" body we'll have but the means by which we obtain it. Like a grain of wheat must die in order to become more than it is, we, too, must die in order to become more than we are.
Paul is thus preparing them to understand that bodies in the Heavenly dimension of Spirit have their type of bodies too. He is not saying those are made up of flesh like this material world.
Yes, this is quite plain in Paul's words.
Lot of IT's, eh? I'd say the KJV translators were very careful to bring all those It's into English like that.
Can you figure that out?
Yes, it's quite straightforward.
If something unknown called IT... is what is sown in corruption, how then can IT... also later be raised in incorruption?
How is a seed transformed into a plant? In the same way, our physical bodies are the "seed" of our transformed, glorified bodies.
Do you see that the corruption body (flesh) is ONE type of body, and the body of incorruption (spirit body) is ANOTHER type of body??
Yes. It's not hard to see... The oak tree is vastly different from the seed-nut from which it grew. So, too our bodies in their resurrected, glorified condition.
That "It" part is actually about our 'person', our soul.
Not in context it isn't. Paul is clearly speaking of our bodies, not our immaterial souls in
1 Corinthians 15:42-44, and explaining how those bodies will be changed, putting on characteristics of incorruption, power and glory it never before possessed.
45 And so it is written, 'The first man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit.'
Lord Jesus' flesh body was never found. It was transfigured to a spiritual body keeping the marks of His crucifixion.
??? This isn't what Scripture tells us. And it isn't what Paul says about our own resurrected bodies, either. Like Christ, we shall, in The Resurrection, rise from the grave in a bodily form that may be touched, and heard, and seen. Such a body is a material one; for a thing that is entirely spirit is like the unseen wind, without form, imperceptible to sight and touch.
But like I said, our flesh body is not what is 'quickened'. In 2 Corinthians 5, Paul showed that we already have the spiritual body dwelling inside us today. It simply steps out of our flesh body at flesh death.
Yes, our soul/spirit leaves our physical body at death. But it is intangible and incapable of the physical interactions of which Christ's resurrected and glorified body was capable. No one's soul, rising from their dead body, has a short farewell with loved ones, shaking hands, giving hugs and kisses and then flying off, heavenward. But the resurrected Christ could be touched and seen, spoken to and heard.
How difficult is it to understand that the "image of the earthy" means a flesh body?
Has someone said it's difficult to understand? I haven't.
Likewise, it ain't difficult to grasp that the "image of the heavenly" means a different type of body than our earthly body,
Yes, but our glorified bodies will have a materiality to them as well as a heavenly character, as Christ's body did. This, too, isn't hard to grasp.