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1 Corinthians 15:49-54

Greek Key Terms:

  • εἰκόνα (eikona) - "image" - exact representation (15:49; cf. Genesis 1:26)
  • φθορά (phthora) - "corruption, perishability" - mortality and decay (15:50, 52, 53, 54)
  • ἀφθαρσία (aphtharsia) - "incorruption, imperishability" - immortality (15:50, 52, 53, 54)
  • ἀλλαγησόμεθα (allagēsometha) - "we shall be changed" - radical transformation (15:51-52)
  • νῖκος (nikos) - "victory" - triumph over death (15:54)

Context: Climax of resurrection chapter's argument about resurrection body (15:35-58). Builds on Adam/Christ typology (15:45-48); moves to practical application and triumphant conclusion. Answers objections about how physical bodies can inherit spiritual kingdom.

Connections:

Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Forward-Looking), Promise-Fulfillment, Redemptive-Historical Progression — Believers bearing "the image of the man of heaven" consummates the Adam-Christ typology, fulfills Isaiah 25:8's promise that death will be swallowed up in victory, and marks the final redemptive-historical transformation from perishable Adamic humanity to imperishable Christomorphic glory.

Christological Connection: Christ's resurrection body is pattern for believers' resurrection bodies. "We shall bear the image of the man of heaven" (15:49) means Christomorphic transformation. Ultimate escalation: Adam's image was glorious but mutable, vulnerable to sin and death. Christ's resurrected image is immutable glory, immune to corruption. Philippians 3:21: Christ "will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself." From perishable to imperishable (15:53) is not mere quantitative extension (endless life) but qualitative transformation (new kind of life). The trajectory consummates: from Adamic dust → to Christomorphic glory. "Mortal must put on immortality" (15:53) uses clothing metaphor - exchanging old Adamic garments for new resurrection robes (cf. Revelation 6:11; 7:9). When this occurs, "Death is swallowed up in victory" (15:54, quoting Isaiah 25:8) - serpent's weapon (death, Genesis 3:19) finally destroyed. Christ crushed serpent's head (Genesis 3:15) through death and resurrection; believers share His victory corporately. Image-vocation fulfilled: glorified humanity reigning with Christ in new creation (Revelation 22:5), bearing the image of the heavenly Man forever. From damaged image → to perfect Image → to glorified image-bearers filling cosmos with God's glory.

Trajectory Table: 076 - Image of God (Priestly Vocation)