Hmmm, let's see here...
Grace and peace to you, Timtofly.
Yes they were... :)Adam and Eve were not in a physical Garden...
No, in their whole being, they were in uncorrupted spiritual union with God, alive to Him. Before the Fall of Genesis 3.They were only spiritually in a Garden in their relationship with God.
Died in spirit; and thus this spiritual union with God was broken....lost spiritual contact with God.
Spiritual condition... dead in their sin, at enmity with God, as the text says...According to Genesis they physically had to leave the Garden/Paradise because of their physical condition.
Agreed, Spiritually, but not physically. Thus they were still able to walk out of Eden (in obedience to God), and subsequently do, well, a lot of things, including having children... :)They were no longer in a state of life, but a state of death.
Well, his fleshly condition... of the flesh ~ dead in sin and therefore a slave to unrighteousness ~ rather than of the Spirit.It was Adam's dead flesh that was passed down from generation to generation.
Agreed. Except I would take issue somewhat with "born to be disobedient to God," because God certainly didn't create us for that purpose, but I think you agree with that. We are all born in this state of being, which I think is what you are meaning to say.All were corruptible and born to be disobedient to God. There is none who are righteous in God's sight.
Okay, sure.That is why we don't live in Paradise in permanent incorruptible physical bodies.
That's the second, and it is general in the sense that all are physically resurrected, but limited in the sense that that the "entering into a permanently incorruptible body" is not the case for all. Again, as Jesus Himself said, "...an hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear His voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment" (John 5:28-29). This is the second ~ final ~ resurrection, general to all, but the outcome of which is either one or the other... eternal life or judgment. This seems rather undeniable to me, but to each his own.The first resurrection can only be when the soul enters the permanent incorruptible physical body.
Ugh. Pass on this...You consider God a failure if all that can be hoped for is to leave Abraham's bosom and enter Adam's dead corruptible flesh.
Ugh... My goodness. No, I'm absolutely sure we'll see Lazarus and join him in the resurrection to eternal life at the end of the age... and thus in eternity in the new heaven and new earth... :) As for Lazarus himself, after he was called out of the tomb by Jesus (as John documents in John 11), Lazarus was eternally grateful, but what Jesus did there was really for the benefit of Mary and Martha and His disciples ~ and by extension us, foreshadowing to us the still-to-come, ultimate reality of our resurrection to eternal life. Maybe Lazarus, at that point, having been actually raised, had a stronger faith than most of us, because his faith had, for a short time at least, been sight, and that it would be again.Yet that is what you claim of Lazarus.
Uh, name one, Timtofly. Are you talking about, for example, people that have flatlined on an operating table but then were medically revived? If so, I mean, here I would use the same language that @Spiritual Israelite used and call this an "of a sort resurrection," if you will, but not related to either the first or second resurrections described in the Bible...There were already plenty of examples of dead people being brought back to life.
Do you mean to say you think Lazarus, when Jesus called him out of the tomb, even after four days, was not sinful anymore? If so, I would disagree, of course, but there is no Scripture that would back you up on this.Yet Jesus waited until Lazarus was already in Abraham's bosom for 4 days, not just as it is called a "near death experience", where the body is still healthy enough to restore life to. Sure Jesus could have changed the physical body as well. The point is that it was not the same dead corruptible flesh.
Absolutely. Yes, Jesus was ~ and is ~ God made flesh. Not sure why you felt compelled to say this...Jesus raised up his same body that was crucified on the Cross. Jesus did not have Adam's dead corruptible flesh. Jesus was physically born a son of God, without Adam's sinful baggage.... Jesus did not need the Atonement. Jesus was the Atonement.
Hm, interesting. Well, regarding the thief on Jesus's right, we don't know if this was his conversion-to-Christ story... we don't know if he was already a believer... because we are not told or given any indication either way, but that is certainly possible, that he was resurrected spiritually ~ experienced the first resurrection ~ on his cross, I would tend to think that he was already a believer, mainly because he didn't give any indication of repenting of his sin and believing at that moment, but merely said, "Remember me when you come into Your kingdom," (and Jesus answered in the way that He did). I disagree that he is physically in Paradise; his physical body remains in the grave to this day, but his Spirit is with the Lord in Paradise. Certainly, you're not alone in eschewing the idea with what we call the "intermediate state." If you are so inclined, you might read this little devotional.The thief on the cross did not need to wait as a soul for some future resurrection. He physically entered Paradise that very day, when his soul left Adam's dead corruptible flesh for God's permanent incorruptible physical body as a son of God. That is what a first resurrection is.
But for each of us Christians, as I've said, it happens somewhere and some way at some point in the course of our (physical) lives.The first resurrection is not a location nor time event.
Hmm, it is not that the first resurrection itself is blessed, but that the people who (as John says in Revelation 20) are blessed ~ in this life ~ because they have experienced... shared in... the first resurrection.The first resurrection is blessed because the soul leaves death behind and enters eternal life.
Agreed on this, except that it is appointed to every man (person) to die once ~ physical death, the first death ~ as the writer of Hebrews says ("...it is appointed for man to die once..." ~ Hebrews 9:27).A physical body no longer facing death either physically nor spiritually as in the second death, the LOF.
Inarguably true.Only God can cast a person's soul, body, and spirit into the LOF.
Inarguably false. But it'll certainly happen... :)Humans can only cause the soul to leave one's physical body.
Ah, free will... I should have seen this coming (and did)... I agree, but our choice, which we certainly make, and freely, is in the context of His choice ~ whether Has mercy/compassion upon the individual or not; as Moses and Paul both say, quoting God Himself, "(He) has mercy on whom He will have mercy, compassion on whom He will have compassion," and Paul fleshes it out, saying "it depends not on human will or exertion, but on God, who has mercy... He has mercy on whomever He wills, and He hardens whomever He wills" (Romans 9:14-18)God gave us the choice freely to accept or reject.
Grace and peace to you, Timtofly.