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  Christ's Body 
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            [June 24, 2011]  
            
             --"Listen, I will tell 
			you a mystery!  We will not all die, but we will all be changed, in 
			a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.  For the 
			trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we 
			will be changed.  For this perishable body must put on 
			imperishability, and this mortal body must put on immortality." | 
			
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				We all like to know secrets, and one of the Church's best kept 
				secrets is that these bodies of ours aren't going away.  
				Instead, they will be changed.  And change is an important thing 
				to consider.  The theology of the afterlife has become 
				convoluted and somewhat un-biblical, but this very Biblical 
				notion, that we will have eternal bodies, and that our mortal 
				bodies will be transformed, is significant for several reasons.  
				First, the preservation and resurrection of the body reminds us 
				that, even in this life, we are closely connected to God through 
				our bodies.  Our bodies are a part of  God's good creation, and 
				Genesis tells us that we were created in God's image.  Further, 
				as Paul sets out to seal the Church's identity, we are called 
				Christ's body.  Christianity is not just a practice of the mind, 
				but it involved very real and very physical fidelity.  Our 
				bodies keep us connected to God as we remember that they are of 
				God's design, and used to do God's work and enjoy the life we 
				have been given.
 But they will be changed, and this is also important.  As we 
				live in the light of Christian hope, we understand that things 
				are not as they should be, and while these bodies connect us to 
				God, they also separate us from God.  As Paul goes to pains to 
				point out in Corinthians and elsewhere, these bodies are 
				imperfect and flawed.  But the ones we receive will be perfect 
				and flawless.  The new body, which will be given to us, will 
				connect us to God in a powerful new way, because it will be 
				draped in immortality, and it will no longer burden us.  
				Instead, it shall empower us.
 
 I realize these are somewhat heady concepts, but the purpose of 
				this sermon series, and this e-votional, is to broaden our 
				understanding of who we are in relation to God.  And who we are 
				is a people who are a body, and who will be a physical body, 
				united in the love of Jesus Christ. So do not take this body of 
				yours lightly, but know that it too is part of God's eternal 
				plan.
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            Prayer:  Holy God, we thank you for the gift of our 
			bodies. Help us to care for them as your good creation, but also 
			instill within us the hope in Jesus Christ that our bodies will be 
			transformed and take on immortality.  We pray in Jesus' name, Amen. 
             [Phil Blackburn, First Presbyterian Church] 
            
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