Jeff Ragan’s Reviews > The First Epistle to the Corinthians > Status Update
Jeff Ragan
is on page 895 of 1044
"Because 'death could not hold its prey, Jesus our Savior,' neither will it be able to hold its further prey when the final eschatological trumpet is blown that summons the Christian dead unto the resurrection and immortality. What a hope is this" (894).
— Jul 02, 2026 11:41AM
Like flag
Jeff’s Previous Updates
Jeff Ragan
is on page 903 of 1044
"What is significant here is the very matter-of-fact way the issue is taken up. On a weekly basis they should set money aside, as the Lord has prospered them. No pressure, no gimmicks, no emotion. A need had to be met, and the Corinthians were capable of playing a role in it" (903).
— Jul 06, 2026 09:24AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 880 of 1044
"Believers are said to share both kinds of existence, that of Adam through their humanity, that of Christ through their resurrection. They do not share Christ's heavenly existence because, as he, they are from heaven, but because at the resurrection they will receive a heavenly body that is just like his" (877).
— Jun 28, 2026 10:46AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 870 of 1044
"The transformed body, therefore, is not composed of 'spirit'; it is a body adapted to the eschatological existence that is under the ultimate domination of, and animated by, the Spirit. Thus for Paul, to be truly pneumatikos is to bear the likeness of Christ (v. 49) in a transformed body, fitted for the new age" (869-70).
— Jun 25, 2026 10:45AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 858 of 1044
"Here he means that if there is no hope in the resurrection, then his life-or-death struggle against the opponents of his gospel is carried on at the merely human level - he is nothing more than a 'mere man' among other 'mere humans,' with nothing better than merely 'human hopes'" (854).
— Jun 22, 2026 10:08AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 842 of 1044
"Death is the final enemy. At its destruction true meaningfulness is given to life itself. As long as people die, God's own sovereign purposes are not yet fully realized. hence the necessity of the resurrection - so as to destroy death by 'robbing' it of its store of those who do not belong to it because they belong to Christ!" (838).
— Jun 17, 2026 07:32AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 826 of 1044
"It was the resurrection after all that made it possible for them to say, 'Christ died for our sins.' And it was the resurrection, as he will go on to argue (vv. 20-28), that guarantees our own future as the people of God. To deny the objective reality of Christ's resurrection is to have a faith considerably different from Paul's. One wonders whether such faith is still the Christian faith" (817).
— Jun 10, 2026 12:18PM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 812 of 1044
"Paul's point seems emphatic The resurrection of Jesus from the dead was not a form of 'spiritual' existence. Just as he was truly dead and buried, so he was truly raised from the dead bodily and seen by a large number of witnesses on a variety of occasions" (808).
— Jun 05, 2026 08:02AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 802 of 1044
"If for Paul, and therefore for us, there is an element of mystery to the concept of a 'spiritual body', there can be little question that for him Christ's resurrection is central to everything. It is the ultimate eschatological event. By raising Christ from the dead God set in motion the final overthrow of death itself. Hence the inevitable fact and nature of our own resurrection" (796).
— Jun 02, 2026 10:38AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 793 of 1044
"The problems with seeing this as authentic are obvious. If Paul himself is responsible for such a 'corrective,' it is surprising that he should add it here, yet earlier...affirm that women should both pray and prophesy...in the gathered assembly. What is also surprising is the sudden shift from the problem of disorder in the congregation in Corinth to a rule that is to be understood as universal..." (790).
— May 29, 2026 07:15AM
Jeff Ragan
is on page 780 of 1044
"Paul's response to all this has been twofold. First, they are to broaden their perspective to recognize that being Spirit people by its very nature means a great variety of gifts and ministries in the church (chap. 12). Second, the whole point of the gathered people of God is edification, the true expression of love for the saints" (775).
— May 23, 2026 11:11AM

