A Guide to Reconstructing Christian Faith Part 5–The Body

Faith may be immaterial, but it is bounded up with the material. Not only did Jesus sum up all things within himself by taking on a human body, but his doing so codified the very essence of faith itself: it is the meeting place of Heaven (the immaterial) and Earth (the material). The Story of God did not happen merely in people’s imaginations, but rather in recorded eye-witnessed history. The Holy Spirit does not merely repair immaterial wounds, but by His life animates the solid and tangible to life in a mystery still being unravelled by the ever-out-stretching rubber band of science. And the direction of the Christian’s life is not merely a gnostic prizing of the immaterial over the material, but the bringing of the material to its end, and making something new and alive in a material sense by the imperishable immortal power of His Life. The Christian faith is not a disembodied faith, but rather it is embodied.

In one sense, it is practical: “For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.” (James 2:26) One might say not only that the body is meeting place of Heaven and earth, like a temple, but it is the very home in which the glory of the invisible is made visible. The body is where the image of God is stamped just as much as the immaterial parts of us. Therefore, it is in our physical presence, our physical touch, our physical actions that the glory of God impacts the tangible world around us. This gives us the borrowed power to bodily impact the world for His glory that His life and goodness can flourish.

In another sense, it is archetypal. The body is not only a mystery in itself in how God in His Heavenly power makes the material come to life and grow and by its departure brings about death, but also a revelation of His intention for all reality. He intends that the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord. This is seen in a group of people functioning so in sync with one another that the best metaphor to describe them is a body. Is it just a metaphor?

Faith without a body is an idea, but with a body, it is a power to effect real change in the world. The presence of God in us gives life to our mortal bodies on the other side of death, and a repurposing of every broken thing in our bodies on this side of death. And the body of this death, though sin has reigned and wreaked all sorts of havoc, has been transformed into something new: a temple of the Holy Ghost. See 1 Corinthians 6.

Let our bodies be the instruments of righteousness to God that they were created to be, (Romans 6:13) and so demonstrate how Heaven and earth are indeed going to be one again, beginning with the Holy Sprit’s abiding presence in us.

He who has ears let him hear.

Thoughts?

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