From Dust To Glory: No More Cracks, Only Eternal Glory
1 Corinthians 15:35
But someone will ask, "How are the dead raised? With what kind of body do they come?"
These weren’t innocent, neutral questions. They carried a tone of skepticism or outright denial about the resurrection of the dead. Some in the Corinthian church were influenced by surrounding Greek culture and philosophy, making the idea of a bodily resurrection seem absurd or even undesirable. For most the human body was like a prison to escape. In Platonian philosophy the physical human body was viewed as a prison for the soul. Something to escape at our deaths, not hoping to revive at all. The notion of corpses coming back to life sounded crude or foolish to them. And yet they accepted the resurrection of Christ himself.
Paul calls this thinking "foolish" because it undermines the gospel’s hope. And he draws upon various birth/creation patterns in nature (seeds, fish, birds, stars) to illustrate how the resurrection from the dead is God's natural order.
As a science major, and a horticulturalist, when I read these verses I of course immediately start thinking about the natural processes of earth science and life. And how these processes truly work in light of what Paul is saying. I'm intrigued by the seed analogy because from my understanding, a seed is a complete living organism. It's got its own unique DNA. As do bird embryos and fish.
I can't speak to stars, I haven't really ever thought of them as living organisms that have lifespans in the truest sense. Though I suppose it is possible.
But what do I know about the seed?
As I said earlier, a seed is a complete living organism with its full genetic blueprint (DNA). It appears to be "dead" in dormancy, but burial in the earth triggers transformation. Or more specifically, making contact with the earth, since some are not buried at all. I know that the fish and bird, seed and human beings all need the same 17 elements in order to survive.
All this living beings require suitable temperature, oxygen, and light in order to grow and thrive. The "bare seed" appears to be lifeless, but God-ordained conditions to unleash its glorious new form, and He established continuity. All life depends on the same foundational elements for proteins, DNA, enzymes, bones, etc. All of it is as God has ordained. And from the earth God created mankind. That same earth into which the seed is buried. "From the dust" (the elements of earth) God forms all life; plants, animals, humans, all interconnected. And seeds supply these elements to birds/fish/humans via food chains. And God gave them all life giving light, the stars.
Just as God crafts heavenly bodies with differing glory (brightness, color, size)...though all serve to give light...so He will give resurrection bodies varying splendor, perfectly suited, imperishable, and radiant like the "heavenly man" Christ.
The first man, Adam was earthy, fleshy. The second man, Jesus, was heavenly, spiritual.
(v. 45) "The first man Adam became a living being; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit"
Adam was formed from the elements of the earth, all 17. And his body was designed to thrive on the earth. To process oxygen in his lungs, to withstand the pressure and gravity. He was designed for this place. God shaped him like a potter, breathing life into a body of shared elemental building blocks. This "natural" body is perishable, weak, mortal; bearing the image of dust, subject to decay and death after sin entered, and bearing the image of God.
Jesus, the "second man" and "last Adam," inaugurates the new humanity. His resurrection body is the prototype, spiritual, incorruptible. Not immaterial, but animated and empowered fully by the Holy Spirit, imperishable, glorious, powerful. Created and suited for new life in glory.
Because, "Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God" (v. 50).
Not because our earthy bodies are bad, but because our current earthy versions are perishable.
And so, at the trumpet, we’ll be changed instantly into spiritual bodies like His. Jesus upgrades His design. The image of the invisible God.
Today we're good, but fragile. Both in our bodies and our spirits. We're masterpieces of elemental design, but vulnerable. Though we're alive in Christ, we weary from trials, doubts, grief, and the weight of this fallen world.
Paul captures this perfectly in 2 Corinthians 4:7
"But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us."
And our fragility isn’t a flaw to hide; it’s the point. Our weakness magnifies God’s strength. Paul says we carry "the death of Jesus"in our bodies so "the life of Jesus" may be revealed (v. 10). Cracks let the light out.
This isn’t defeat, it’s the setup for resurrection power. The very places of our "death" become portals for Jesus’ life to manifest.
(v. 12) "So death is at work in us, but life in you."
When we carry the gospel to others we are bringing His life to those who are dying. Bringing life in broken jars of clay and His life (light) shining through our cracks. And then...one day, no more cracks, just imperishable glory.
Closing Prayer:
Creator God, who forms us from the dust of the earth, and promises glory like Christ’s, thank You for embedding resurrection hope in seeds, stars, and our shared life giving elements. In our fragile jars today, we carry Jesus’ death through us that His life may shine to others. At the final trumpet, transform us fully; imperishable, radiant, and bearing Your holy heavenly image forever. Amen. 🙏🏼