I see that you're struggling with a cogent response and I find that is usually God's grace manifested in revealing internal conflict with the 2nd enemy, the flesh. The resurrection has always been the hope of the saints, but always to be in God's presence. One of the oldest books in scripture is the book of Job. He had hope in the resurrection and says so. The entire sect of the pharisees shared that same hope, but only a few recognized Jesus as the Christ because they were confident in their works and He didn't match up to their carnal expectations. In being born again we are made alive spiritually and we could never exceed the righteousness of the pharisees except by receiving the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus. His righteousness imputed to us is the righteousness of God imputed to us. You don't get any righteousness greater than that of God. His Spirit does many things for us, but one very significant thing is that He is God's seal upon us and within us, a proof of our relationship as the Spirit of adoption, and the guarantor of our future redemption, the redemption of our bodies in the resurrection. I know that the spiritual birth, the new birth is "more important" to our salvation, but a new birth is a new creation, not a resurrection. This may sound a bit weird and Cultic, but before Christ appeared the worldly shadow of heavenly things, the objects of the tabernacle and temple as displayed by the law for example, proceeded the spiritual reality in Christ. After Christ's appearing the spiritual reality leads the worldly shadows. Eg: the kingdom of God is here in believers by His Spirit, but that physical or worldly reality hasn't come in its fullness. Our new life is accomplished in the spiritual sense, but our resurrection is still before us. We have everything in heaven even if we have nothing stored up here. We are inheritors without having ever seen the inheritance.
God in the person of Jesus Christ is at the center of history, the "sun of righteousness " shines in both directions into the past and into the future, from eternity to eternity. There's just no getting around that reality.
I agree with this but it doesn’t dispute our spiritual resurrection Paul clearly claims it. We are spiritually renewed but our body is still dying