There will be no one who will not be resurrected; everyone will be resurrected. Will all the dead rise at the Last Judgment? The time will come and everyone will be resurrected

Question for the priest. Will everyone be resurrected?

I am very interested in the question: will everyone be resurrected? The Church Slavonic text of the first psalm of the prophet David says: “For this reason the wicked will not rise to judgment,” and in the Russian translation (Synodal): “Therefore the wicked will not stand in judgment.” What does it mean? What is the teaching of the Church: will everyone be resurrected or not?

Answered by priest Mikhail Vorobiev, rector of the temple
in honor of the Exaltation of the Honest Life-Giving Cross of the Lord in the city of Volsk

Belief in the general resurrection of the dead is a dogma of the Orthodox Church. The basis for this dogma is not difficult to find in Holy Scripture. The Lord Jesus Christ, speaking about the last Last Judgment, which will determine the fate of man in eternity, points to the return to life of all people who have ever died: When the Son of Man comes in His glory and all the holy angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of His glory; and all nations will be gathered before Him(Matt. 25, 31-32). “All peoples” are all the people who have ever lived on earth: believers, atheists, righteous people, sinners, those who lived before the birth of Christ, and our contemporaries—absolutely everyone.

In His earthly life, Christ spoke more than once with the Sadducees, representatives of Hellenized Judaism, who formally professed the religion of their ancestors, but rejected many of its provisions, considering them outdated. Rejecting the possibility of a general resurrection, the Sadducees asked Christ provocative questions, trying to prove the logical inconsistency of belief in the resurrection. Answering them, Christ said directly: God is not the God of the dead, but of the living(Matthew 22:32). This means that the essence (human life) once created by God cannot be destroyed, and the image of God, the bearer of which is every person, is also the image of Divine immortality.

Christ speaks even more clearly about the general resurrection after the healing of the paralytic at the pool of Bethesda in Jerusalem: Truly, truly, I say to you: the time is coming, and has already come, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and, having heard, they will live... the time is coming in which all who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who have done good will come forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of condemnation.(John 5:25-29).

Christ convinced the people of the inevitability of the general resurrection not only with words, but also with real events. The resurrection of the daughter of Jairus (Matt. 9:18-26), the son of the widow of Nain (Luke 7:11-17) and especially Lazarus (John 11:1-46) were confirming examples in this regard. If doubts could still arise regarding the first two cases (severe fainting, lethargic sleep), then there could be no doubts about the resurrection of Lazarus, whose body, after four days spent in the tomb, began to decompose. The Church evaluates this miracle as being performed precisely to strengthen faith in the coming general resurrection. The troparion of Lazarus Saturday begins with the words: “Assuring the general resurrection before Your passion, You raised Lazarus from the dead, O Christ God...”.

The Apostle Paul, who had to preach the Gospel among the pagans, made a lot of efforts to convince them of the reality of the general resurrection. It is enough to quote one fragment from his message to the Corinthian community: If it is preached about Christ that He rose from the dead, then how do some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead?.. if we hope in Christ in this life only, then we are the most miserable of all people... But the last enemy will be destroyed - death(1 Cor. 15:12-26).

The dogma of the general resurrection is the main doctrinal principle of Christianity. IN Creed, finally adopted at the Second Ecumenical Council, this dogma is expressed in the words: “I look forward to the resurrection of the dead.”

The words of the first psalm in the Slavic translation “for this reason the wicked will not rise to judgment” should be understood to mean that the wicked will not rise to eternal bliss, their eternity will be an eternity with a negative sign. The Russian translation “the wicked will not stand (that is, they will not be justified) in judgment” is more accurate. In the era of the Old Testament, the truth about the general resurrection was not known to humanity, although there was confidence in the immortality of the human soul. There was an idea of ​​Sheol - a joyless place of eternal residence of human souls, and there was practically no difference in the posthumous fate of the righteous and sinners. However, even in this era, some prophets acquired knowledge of the coming resurrection. A number of such prophecies are found in the Psalter. King and prophet David knows about the coming resurrection: My heart rejoiced and my tongue was glad; even my flesh rested in hope; for You will not leave my soul in hell and You will not allow Your holy one to see corruption(Ps. 16:9-10). But the most striking prophecy about the coming resurrection belongs to Job. Deprived of everything, stricken with leprosy, rebuked by his wife, finding no compassion from his beloved friends, Job exclaims: But I know that my Redeemer lives, and on the last day He will raise this decaying skin of mine from the dust; and I will see God in my flesh. I will see Him myself; It is my eyes, not the eyes of others, that will see Him. My heart melts in my chest!(Job 19, 25-27).

Universal resurrection of the dead will take place on the great day of the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, at the end of the life of our world.

It will consist in the fact that the bodies of all the dead will unite with their souls and come to life. According to the Word of God, then “those who have done good will come forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of condemnation” (John 5:25, 29).

Even in the Old Testament, on the basis of Divine Revelation, the righteous had faith in the general resurrection of the dead.

Belief in the resurrection of the dead was expressed by Abraham, at the sacrifice of his son Isaac (Heb. 11, 17), by Job, amid his severe suffering: “And I know that my Redeemer lives, and on the last day He will raise from the dust this decaying skin of mine, and I will see God in my flesh" (Job 19:25-26); by the prophet Isaiah: “Your dead will live, your dead bodies will rise! Arise and rejoice, you cast in the dust: for Your dew is the dew of plants, and the earth will spew up the dead” (Is. 26:19), prophet Daniel, who predicted that the dead “will awaken, some to eternal life, others to everlasting contempt and disgrace. And those who are wise will shine like the lights of the firmament, and those who turn many to righteousness like the stars, forever and ever” (Dan. 12:2-3).

Prophet Ezekiel contemplated the very resurrection of the dead in a vision of a field strewn with dry bones, which, by the will of the Spirit of God, were united with one another, clothed tightly and animated by the spirit (Ezek. ch. 37).

Through the prophet Hosea, the Lord said: “I will redeem them from the power of hell, I will deliver them from death: Death! where is your sting? Hell! where is your victory? I will have no repentance for that (Hos. 13, 14).

Jesus Christ himself spoke more than once about the resurrection of the dead clearly and definitely: “Truly, truly, I say to you, the time is coming, and has already come, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and having heard, they will live... and those who have done good will come forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil in the resurrection of judgment" (John 5:25, 29).

The Savior confirms the sermon on the resurrection with the Sacrament of Communion: “Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day” (John 6:54).

Answering the unbelieving Sadducees to their question about the resurrection of the dead, Jesus Christ said: “You are mistaken, not knowing the scriptures or the power of God. Regarding the resurrection of the dead, have you not read what was spoken to you by God: I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? is the God of the dead, but of the living" (Matthew 22, 29, 31, 32).

When the Savior speaks about the purpose of His coming to earth, He points specifically to eternal life: “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:15-16 ).

During His stay on earth, the Savior raised the dead and Himself rose from the grave, becoming, according to the word of the Apostle Paul, the firstborn of the dead (1 Cor. 15:20).

The apostles put the truth of the resurrection of the dead above all doubt and proved it by the closest connection with the resurrection of Christ.

The Apostle Paul says: “Christ has risen from the dead, the firstborn of those who have fallen asleep. For as death came through man, so through man came the resurrection of the dead. As in Adam all died, so in Christ all shall live” (1 Cor. 15, 20, 21, 22 ).

In addition, the Apostle Paul points to phenomena in visible nature that convince us of the truth of the resurrection. "Someone will say: how will the dead rise? And in what body will they come? Reckless! What you sow will not come to life unless it dies. And when you sow, you are not sowing the body of the future, but a bare grain of wheat that happens , or some other; but God gives him a body as he wants, and to each seed his own body... So at the resurrection of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption; it is sown in humiliation, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in strength; a natural body is sown, a spiritual body is raised" (1 Cor. 15:35-44).

The Lord Himself says: “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit” (John 12:24).
The resurrection of the dead will be universal and simultaneous, both of the righteous and of sinners. “Those who have done good will go forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of condemnation” (John 5:29). “There will be a resurrection of the dead, just and unjust” (Acts 24:15).

The bodies of resurrected people will be essentially the same bodies that we now have, but in quality they will be different from current bodies - they will be spiritual - incorruptible and immortal. The bodies of those people who will still be alive at the second coming of the Savior will also change.

The Apostle Paul says: “a natural body is sown, a spiritual body is raised... 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 incorruptible, and we (the survivors) will be changed. "(1 Cor. 15, 44, 51, 52), "our citizenship is in heaven, from where we look for the Savior, the Lord Jesus, who will transform our lowly body into conformity with the body of His glory, as He is able by the working of His power" ( Phil. 3:20-21).

Venerable Barsanuphius and John write:

“... our bodies will rise with bones, sinews and hair and remain so forever; only they will be brighter and more glorious, according to the voice of the Lord, who says: then the righteous will shine like the sun in the Kingdom of Heaven (Matthew 13:43), thereby revealing the glory of the bodies of the Saints. … These same bodies will then rise, but only they will become incorruptible, immortal and glorious. ... The Lord will make our bodies light-like, similar to His body, as the Apostle John said: when He appears, then we will be like Him (1 John 3:2). For the Son of God is Light, and the righteous, according to the Apostle, are sons of God (2 Cor. 6:8) and sons of Light (1 Thess. 5:5); That’s why it is said that the Lord will transform (our bodies).”

The bodies of resurrected people will be completely free from exhaustion and from the infirmities of this life. They will be spiritual, heavenly, having no earthly bodily needs, life after the resurrection will be similar to the life of disembodied angelic spirits, according to the word of the Lord (Luke 20:3).

Rev. Barsanuphius and John:

“God said this about the future state that people will be equal to the Angels (Luke 20:36), eating neither food nor drink, nor having lust. And for God nothing is impossible; for He had already shown this to Moses, when He gave him strength for forty days and nights not to eat food. He who created this can also create that man will be in a similar state for all eternity.”

St. John of Damascus teaches that after the resurrection “those saved will receive an unchanging, impassive, subtle body, like the body of the Lord was after the Resurrection, passing through locked doors, not getting tired, not needing food, sleep and drink.”

St. John Chrysostom speaks:
“Since believers must be transformed in accordance with the lordship of Christ the Lord Himself, as the Apostle Paul testifies... then, without a doubt, this mortal flesh will be transformed in accordance with the lordship of Christ, the mortal will be clothed with immortality, what was sown in weakness will then arise in power.”

However image of resurrection the righteous will be different from the sinners.

People's bodies will apparently reflect the state of their spirit.

“Some will become like light, others like darkness,” St. thinks about this. Ephraim the Syrian (“On the fear of God and the final judgment”).

Lord Jesus Christ said about the resurrection of the saints: “then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father” (Matthew 13:43).

St. Apostle Paul says:
“(the body) is sown in humiliation, but is raised in glory” (1 Cor. 15:43), “there is another glory of the sun, another glory of the moon, another of the stars; and star differs from star in glory. So it is with the resurrection of the dead” (1 Cor. 15, 41-42).

Rev. Macarius the Great writes about the bodies in which people will be resurrected:

“...according to the Holy Scriptures, Christ will come from heaven and resurrect all the tribes of Adam, all who have died from eternity, and will divide them into two parts, and who have His own sign, that is, the seal of the Spirit, those, declaring them to be His own, He will place at His right hand . For he says: My sheep hear My voice (John 10:27); and I know My, and they know My Me (14). Then their bodies will be clothed with divine glory for their good deeds, and they themselves will be filled with that spiritual glory that they still had in their souls. And thus, glorified by the divine light and caught up into heaven to meet the Lord in the air, according to what is written, we will always be with the Lord (1 Sol. 4:17), reigning with Him for endless ages of ages. For to the extent that each person, for his faith and diligence, is worthy to become a partaker of the Holy Spirit, to the same extent will his body be glorified on that day. What the soul has now collected into its inner treasury will then be revealed and appear outside the body.

...if the soul is now pre-glorified and has entered into union with the Spirit, then the bodies will also be honored with a part in the resurrection.

And that the souls of the righteous are made into heavenly light - the Lord himself said to the Apostles about this: you are the light of the world (Matthew 5:14).

The resurrection of slain souls is still happening today, and the resurrection of bodies will take place on that day. But just as the stars established in the sky are not all equal, and one differs from the other in brightness and size, so in spiritual success the same Spirit occurs according to the measure of faith, and one turns out to be richer than the other.

And just as the kingdom of darkness and sin are hidden in the soul until the day of resurrection, when the darkness now hidden in the soul covers the very body of sinners: so the kingdom of light and the heavenly image - Jesus Christ now mysteriously illuminates the soul and reigns in the soul of the saints; but, remaining hidden from human eyes, with the sole eyes of our soul we truly see Christ until the day of resurrection, when the body itself will be covered and glorified by that light of the Lord, which is still now in the human soul, so that then the body itself will reign together with the soul, even now accepting the kingdom of Christ into herself, resting and illuminated by eternal light.

... the time of resurrection, in which their bodies will be glorified by the ineffable light, still hidden in them, that is, by the power of the Spirit, which will then be their clothing, food, drink, joy, joy, peace, clothing, eternal life. For then the Spirit of the Divine, which they have now been vouchsafed to receive into themselves, will become for them all the glory of the lightness and beauty of heaven.”

St. rights John of Kronstadt:

The moral law of God constantly operates in the world, according to which every good is internally rewarded, and every evil is punished; evil is accompanied by sorrow and tightness of the heart, and good is accompanied by peace, joy and space of the heart.
The current state of our souls prefigures the future. The future will be a continuation of the present internal state, only in a modified form relative to its degree.

Rev. Parthenius of Kyiv:

Just as in heaven there is heaven on earth, there is also hell, only invisible, since God is in heaven and He is also on earth; only here everything is invisible, but there everything is visible: God, heaven, and hell.

Rev. Ephraim the Syrian:

“The soul is superior in dignity to the body, superior to it is the spirit, and superior to its spirit is the hidden Divinity. But at the end, the flesh will be clothed with the beauty of the soul, the soul with the radiance of the spirit, and the spirit will be likened to the greatness of God...”

As for sinners, their bodies will rise in a new form, but having received incorruption and spirituality, they will at the same time reflect their spiritual state. The bodies of unrepentant sinners will reflect the passions that they indulged in during earthly life; they will be dark and terrible. According to the words of Blessed Theodoret, those worthy of heaven will be clothed with heavenly glory, and those unworthy, having only earthly things in their thoughts, “will take on a robe corresponding to their will.”

Their bodies, according to the word of Rev. Macarius the Great, will not have on themselves the seal of the Spirit, that sign by which the Lord “will set at His right hand” the righteous, proclaiming them as His own.”

“Let us also think about the shame that will overtake us even before the torment. Then, before our eyes, the saints will be clothed in a magnificent, indescribable robe, woven from their good deeds. And we will see ourselves not just naked and deprived of this brilliant glory, but dark, blackened and exuding a stench - as they have made themselves in this world by works of darkness, luxury and depravity."

The General Judgment is called the Terrible Judgment because the state in which a person appears before it will decide his eternal fate, and the sentence received at it can no longer be changed.

Blessed Theophylact(Archbishop of Bulgaria) writes:

“In the present century we can act and act one way or another, but in the future our spiritual powers will be bound, and we will not be able to do any good to atone for sins; “Then there will be gnashing of teeth” - this is fruitless repentance. “Many are called,” that is, God calls many, or rather, all, but “a few are chosen,” those who are saved, those worthy of election from God. Election depends on God, but to become chosen or not is our business.”

St. Right John of Kronstadt warns:

Many live outside of grace, not realizing its importance and necessity for themselves and not seeking it, according to the word of the Lord: “Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness” (Matthew 6:33). Many live in all abundance and contentment, enjoy flourishing health, eat, drink, walk with pleasure, have fun, write, work in various branches of human activity, but do not have the grace of God in their hearts, this priceless Christian treasure, without which a Christian cannot to be a true Christian and heir to the kingdom of heaven.

The dogma of the general resurrection is one of those Christian dogmas that are most difficult for rational perception. The omnipotence of death, its inexorability and irreparability seem to be such an obvious fact that the doctrine of the resurrection may seem to contradict reality itself. The decomposition and disappearance of the body after physical death seems to leave no hope for its subsequent restoration. In addition, the doctrine of the resurrection of the body contradicts most philosophical theories that existed in the pre-Christian era, in particular Greek philosophy, which considered liberation from the body, the transition to a purely spiritual, noumenal state, as the greatest good.

Already the apostolic sermon revealed a radical divergence between ancient thought and nascent Christianity precisely at this point. The Book of Acts contains a story about the sermon of the Apostle Paul in the Areopagus - a sermon that began very successfully, was accompanied by quotations from ancient poets and could have been quite convincing to the Athenian senators if Paul had not begun to talk about the resurrection. As recorded in Acts, when they heard about the resurrection of the dead, some began to mock, while others said: We will hear from you about this at another time. Paul had to leave the meeting (Acts 17:32-33). For preaching “Jesus and the Resurrection,” the Athenians called Paul “a vain talker” (see: Acts 17:18).

Meanwhile, the doctrine of the general resurrection is the core of Christian eschatology. Without this teaching, Christianity loses its meaning, just as without faith in the resurrection of Christ, according to the Apostle Paul, Christian preaching is in vain (see: 1 Cor 15:12-14).

The Christian doctrine of the resurrection of the dead is based primarily on the fact of the resurrection of Christ, on the words of Christ about the resurrection and on the apostolic sermon. However, already in the Old Testament there are numerous prophecies about the resurrection of the dead. The book of the prophet Isaiah says: Your dead will live, your dead bodies will rise! Rise up and rejoice, you cast down in the dust: for Your dew is the dew of plants, and the earth will cast out the dead (Isa. 26:19). It is characteristic that, as in the Christian tradition, we are talking specifically about bodily resurrection, and this resurrection is considered in a moral aspect - as reward for deeds committed during life: For behold, the Lord comes out of His dwelling to punish the inhabitants of the earth for their iniquities, and the earth will reveal the blood it has swallowed up and will no longer hide its slain (Isa. 26:21).

The theme of retribution also dominates in the description of the resurrection of the dead in the prophet Daniel: And many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth will awaken, some to eternal life, others to everlasting reproach and shame (Dan 12:2). The resurrection of the dead, according to Daniel, will take place at the end of time and times and half a time (Dan 12:7). This event will be preceded by a time of trouble, which has not happened since people existed (Dan 12:1). At the general resurrection, the wise will shine like the lights in the firmament (Dan 12, h), many will be purified, made white and refined, and will be in temptation; But the wicked will do wickedly, and none of the wicked will understand this, but the wise will understand (Dan 12:10).

The most striking prophecy about the resurrection of the dead in the Old Testament is contained in the book of Ezekiel - this prophecy is read in the Orthodox Church during services on Holy Saturday:

The hand of the Lord was upon me, and the Lord brought me out in the spirit and set me in the middle of a field, and it was full of bones, and he led me around around them, and behold there were very many of them on the surface of the field, and behold they were very dry. And he said to me: Son of man! will these bones live? I said: Lord God! You know it. And he said to me: Prophesy against these bones and say to them: “Dry bones! listen to the word of the Lord." Thus says the Lord God to these bones: Behold, I will put breath into you, and you will live. And I will cover you with sinews and make flesh grow on you, and I will cover you with skin and bring spirit into you, and you will live and know that I am the Lord. I prophesied as I was commanded; and when I prophesied, there was a noise, and behold a movement, and bones began to come together, bone to bone. And I saw: and behold, sinews were on them, and flesh grew, and skin covered them from above... and the spirit entered into them, and they came to life and stood on their feet - a very, very great horde. And He said to me: Son of man! these bones are all the scrap of Israel (Eze 37:1-8; 10-11).

In this prophecy, as in the book of Daniel, the resurrection of the dead is presented as the resurrection of the people of Israel. This has given rise to some interpreters to perceive the prophecy as an allegorical description of the restoration of the political power of the Israeli people. However, in the Christian tradition, Ezekiel's prophecy was clearly understood as referring to the general resurrection that would occur after the Second Coming of Christ. If Ezekiel speaks about the resurrection only of the house of Israel, then this can only be explained by the fact that the entire Bible is addressed to the people of Israel and tells about the history and fate of this people, as if leaving behind the scenes the fate of other nations. However, in the Christian tradition, the Bible is perceived as related to the fate of all mankind, and the prophecies about the people of Israel are given a universal meaning.

The fact that belief in the resurrection of the dead and eternal life was widespread among the Israeli people in the pre-Christian era is evidenced by the description contained in the 2nd book of Maccabees of the martyrdom of seven brothers and their mother, who refused to obey the command of the pagan king and violate the laws of their fathers. One of the brothers, dying, says to the king: You, tormentor, are depriving us of real life, but the King of the world will resurrect us, who died for His laws, for eternal life. Another, in response to the demand to give his hands to be cut off, held them out, saying: I received them from Heaven and for His laws I do not spare them, hoping to receive them again. Another of the brothers says: It is desirable for those who are dying from people to place their hope in God, that He will revive again. Strengthening her children, the mother said to them: I do not know how you appeared in my womb; I did not give you breath and life; It was not me who formed the composition of each. So, the Creator of the world, Who formed the nature of man and arranged the origin of all, will again give you breath and life with mercy, since you now do not spare yourself for His laws. All seven, subjected to severe torture, were executed. After her sons, her mother also died (2 Mac 7:1-41).

The resurrection of the dead is mentioned several times in the Gospels. In one of the conversations with the Jews given in the Gospel of John, Christ speaks about His Second Coming, the general resurrection and the Last Judgment:

Truly, truly, I say to you, the time is coming, and has already come, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and having heard, they will live. For just as the Father has life in Himself, so He gave to the Son to have life in Himself. And He gave Him authority to execute judgment, because He is the Son of Man. Do not marvel at this; for the time is coming in which all who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who have done good will come forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of condemnation (John 5:25-29).

During the time of Jesus Christ, belief in the resurrection of the dead was widespread among the Jewish people. This is evidenced, in particular, by the words of Martha, the sister of the deceased Lazarus: I know that he will rise again on the resurrection, on the last day (John 11:24). As for the teachers of the people of Israel, among them there were two opposing views on the resurrection of the dead: it was recognized by the Pharisees, but not recognized by the Sadducees - a small sect that appeared in the Hasmonean era (II century BC) and included some representatives of the aristocracy and the Levitical priesthood, the Gospel of Matthew contains a story about how the Sadducees, approaching Jesus, asked whose wife the woman who was married to seven brothers would be in the resurrection. To this Christ answered: You are mistaken, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God, for in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but remain like the Angels of God in heaven. And regarding the resurrection of the dead, have you not read what God said to you: I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living (Mt 22:29-32).

The Book of Acts mentions that the Sadducees also opposed the preaching of the apostles, being annoyed that they were teaching the people and preaching... the resurrection from the dead (Acts 4:2). When the Apostle Paul was summoned to the Sanhedrin, he, having learned that both Pharisees and Sadducees were present there, said: Men and brethren! I am a Pharisee, the son of a Pharisee; I am being judged for hoping for the resurrection of the dead. These words of the apostle caused strife between the Pharisees and Sadducees; finally, as the discord grew worse, the captain had to remove Paul from the Sanhedrin (Acts 23:6-10).

The Apostle Paul was the first Christian theologian who gave the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead the form of a system: all subsequent development of the Christian doctrine of the resurrection rests on the foundations laid by Paul. The resurrection of the dead, according to the teachings of the apostle, will occur at the Second Coming of Christ:

...If we believe that Jesus died and rose again, then God will bring those who died in Jesus with Him... For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the Archangel and the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first; Then we who are left alive will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord (1 Thessalonians 4:14-17).

The doctrine of the resurrection of the dead is most fully revealed by the apostle in the 1st Epistle to the Corinthians. Here he first of all links the resurrection of the dead with the resurrection of Christ, placing one event in direct dependence on the other:

If it is preached about Christ that He rose from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then Christ is not risen, and if Christ is not risen, then our preaching is in vain, and your faith is in vain. Moreover, we would also turn out to be false witnesses about God, because we would testify about God that He raised Christ, whom He did not raise, if, that is, the dead are not raised, for if the dead are not raised, then Christ is not raised; and if Christ has not risen, then your faith is vain: you are still in your sins. Therefore those who died in Christ also perished. And if in this life only we hope in Christ, then we are the most miserable of all people (1 Cor. 15, 14, 19, 20).

The resurrection of all humanity follows as obviously from the resurrection of Christ as the death of all people follows from the death of Adam. At the Second Coming, what was broken by the Fall of Adam will be corrected:

...Christ rose from the dead, the firstborn of those who died. For just as death is through man, so is the resurrection of the dead through man. Just as in Adam everyone dies, so in Christ everyone will come to life, each in his own order: the firstborn Christ, then those of Christ at His coming... The first man is from the earth, earthy; the second person is the Lord from heaven. As is the earthy, so are the earthy; and as is the heavenly, so are the heavenly. And just as we have borne the image of earthly, we will also bear the image of heavenly things (1 Cor 15:20-23, 47-49).

To prove the correctness of the belief in the resurrection of the dead, the Apostle Paul refers to Christian baptismal practice, as well as his own experience of confession, which, from his point of view, would be meaningless if there were no resurrection of the dead:

...What do those who are baptized do for the dead? If the dead do not rise at all, then why are they baptized for the dead? Why are we subjected to disasters every hour? I die every time I am lazy: I testify to this by your praise, brethren, which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord. According to human reasoning, when I fought with the beasts in Ephesus, what good is it to me if the dead do not rise? Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we will die! (1 Cor 15:29-32).

The expression “those baptized for the dead” leads some commentators to believe that in the ancient Church there was a practice of baptizing the dead, who were replaced by one of the living during the celebration of the Sacrament. Tertullian in this regard mentions “substitutionary baptism”, which “will benefit other flesh in the hope of resurrection,” but does not specify what this substitute baptism consisted of. John Chrysostom mentions the existence of the rite of “baptism for the dead” in the Gnostic sect of Marcion: when a catechumen dies in this sect, the baptized person supposedly lies under his bed, who, when baptizing the deceased from under the bed, is responsible for him. Chrysostom considers such a ritual “very funny.” According to Chrysostom, the words of the Apostle Paul about baptism for the dead should be understood in the context of the words of the baptismal symbol: “I believe in the resurrection of the dead.” Baptism for the dead is nothing more than a confession of faith in the bodily resurrection of the dead, for “if there is no resurrection, then why are you baptized for the dead, that is, bodies? After all, at baptism you believe in the resurrection of the dead body - that it will no longer remain dead.”

Another interpretation is also possible: baptism for the dead is baptism performed with the thought of reunification with relatives who died in the bosom of the Church, or baptism in memory of one or another deceased Christian.

The Apostle Paul examines in detail the question of the nature of the body in which the dead will be resurrected. This body, according to the teachings of the apostle, will be spiritual, incorruptible and immortal. Answering the question of how the dead will be resurrected and in what body they will come, the apostle turns to the image of grain, which will not come to life unless it dies. God gives this grain the body it wants, each seed its own body. So it is with the resurrection of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption; sown in humiliation, raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in strength; the spiritual body is sown, the spiritual body is raised. As the apostle emphasizes, this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality (1 Cor 15:35-53).

In his Epistle to the Philippians, the Apostle Paul says that at the Second Coming, Christ will transform our lowly body so that it will be consistent with His glorious body (Phil. 3:21). In other words, the bodies of resurrected people will be similar to the glorified body of Christ, that is, His body after the resurrection from the dead. This body, according to the Gospel testimonies, bore only some resemblance to the earthly body of Christ, due to which the risen Christ was recognized not so much by appearance as by voice or gesture. Mary Magdalene, seeing the risen Christ, mistook Him for a gardener and recognized Him only after He addressed her by name (see: John 20: 11-16). The disciples who met Jesus on the way to Emmaus did not recognize Him either by appearance or by voice, but recognized Him only when He broke bread before their eyes (see: Lk 24: 13-35). The resurrected Jesus walked through locked doors; at the same time, traces of wounds from nails and spears remained on His body (see: John 20: 25-27). As John Chrysostom emphasizes, Christ’s appearances to the disciples for forty days “had the purpose of notifying us and showing us how amazing our bodies will be after the resurrection. The body that is resurrected will need neither shelter nor clothing. Just as the most pure body of the Lord ascended during the Divine Ascension, so ours, which will be consubstantial with him, will be ascended on the clouds.”

In the post-apostolic age, the theme of the resurrection of the dead continues to play a leading role in the preaching of Christian authors and apologists. This sermon is based on the teaching formulated by the Apostle Paul, but this teaching was significantly developed and detailed in the works of church writers of the 2nd-4th centuries.

Clement of Rome places great emphasis on the theme of the resurrection in 1 Corinthians. Clement sees proof of the general resurrection in the life of nature:

Let us consider, beloved, how the Lord constantly shows us the future resurrection, of which He made the Lord Jesus Christ the firstfruits, raising Him from the dead. Let us look, beloved, at the resurrection that takes place at all times. Day and night represent to us the resurrection: the night goes to sleep - the day rises; The day passes and night comes. Let's look at the fruits of the earth, how the grains are sown. A sower came out, threw them into the ground, and the thrown seeds, which fell dry and bare on the ground, rot: but after this destruction, the great power of the Lord's Providence resurrects them, and from one grain brings forth many and produces fruit (1 Cor 15:35- 38).

As evidence of the general resurrection, Clement cites a legend borrowed from Herodotus about the phoenix bird. This same legend is subsequently used by Tertullian and many later Christian writers, for whom the phoenix becomes a symbol of resurrection to a new life.

The second-century Christian apologist Justin the Philosopher, speaking of the resurrection of the dead, insists that souls will be united with the same bodies that they possessed during life. It is in the doctrine of the resurrection of the body that Justin sees the true novelty of Christianity and the difference between the eschatological teaching of Christ and the teaching of ancient philosophers:

...Considering the foundations contained in the world, we do not find it impossible to restore the flesh. On the other hand, the Savior throughout the Gospel shows the preservation of the new flesh. After this, why should we accept a teaching that is contrary to faith and disastrous and recklessly turn back when we hear that the soul is immortal, and the body is perishable and incapable of coming to life again? We heard this before the knowledge of truth from Pythagoras and Plato. If the Savior had said the same thing and proclaimed the salvation of only the soul, then what new thing would He have brought us beyond Pythagoras and Plato, with all their choir? And now He has come to preach a new and unprecedented hope. A truly new and unheard-of thing is that God does not promise to keep the incorruptible incorruptible, but to grant incorruptibility to the corruptible.

Another Christian apologist of the same period, Athenagoras of Athens, discussing the same topic, emphasizes the inextricable connection between soul and body in man. In his opinion, the bliss of the soul, separated from the body, cannot be the true purpose of man, for man consists of both parts. The existence of a soul without a body is incomplete and temporary, and from this it follows that “there must certainly be a resurrection of bodies that have died and completely destroyed, and a secondary existence of the same people; for the natural law determines the goal neither for man in general nor for any of the people, but for those very ones who spent this life, and they cannot exist again as the same people unless the same bodies are returned by the same souls."

The decomposition of the body after the death of a person, from the point of view of Afi-nagor, is not an obstacle to the restoration of this body. For God “cannot help but know where each particle goes after the destruction of bodies and which of the elements received each particle that was destroyed and united with what is akin to itself.” Even if a person’s body was torn to pieces by beasts, the apologist clarifies, it is not difficult for the Creator to remove bodies from beasts and “rejoin them again to their own members and their compositions,” regardless of whether the body entered into one animal, or into many, or from one to another, or collapsed and decomposed along with those animals that swallowed it.

We find an equally emphasized naturalism in the description of the general resurrection in Tertullian’s treatise “On the Resurrection of the Flesh,” where the author examines in detail the Christian doctrine of the resurrection, polemicizing with ancient ideas about the posthumous fate of man. The treatise begins with the words: “The resurrection of the dead is the hope of Christians. Thanks to him we are believers.”

In his characteristic vivid rhetorical manner, Tertullian proves the bodily nature of the resurrection of the dead. According to Tertullian, “flesh and blood will be resurrected in their own nature,” although it will be transfigured and changed flesh and blood. “Exactly the body that was sown” will be resurrected, that is, the one that ended up in the ground after the death of a person. Like Clement of Rome, Tertullian sees evidence of the resurrection of the flesh in the cycle of nature:

Everything created is restored. Everything you have encountered has already happened, everything you have lost will return. Everything repeats itself, everything returns to its state, because it disappeared before; everything begins, because it stopped before. Everything ends precisely in order to be again, everything perishes for the sake of its preservation. So, this whole order of rotation testifies to the resurrection of the dead... And if everything really is resurrected for man and for his benefit and, resurrecting for man, is resurrected, of course, for the flesh, then could it be that the flesh, for the sake of which for the benefit of which nothing perishes, but itself perishes entirely?

Answering the question of whether people will rise in the form in which they died, that is, for example, blind, lame or paralytic, Tertullian argues that “if the flesh is restored from decay, then all the more it will be freed from injury.” Bodily injuries, Tertullian explains, are something incidental, accidental, and health is a natural property of a person. Even if damage occurs in the womb, the original healthy state precedes any damage. From here Tertullian draws the following conclusion: “As God gives life, so he returns it. The way we receive life is the same way we receive it again. We pay our debt to nature, not to violence, by being reborn in the form in which we are born, and not in the form in which we suffer. If God does not raise people alive, then He does not raise the dead.”

Following the Gospel (See: Matthew 22:30), Tertullian says that resurrected people will be like Angels. However, in his opinion, this does not mean that they will lose their bodies. Having taken on an angelic form, people will not depend on the “customs of the flesh”; their flesh will become spiritualized, but at the same time remain flesh. Human flesh is the bride of Christ, which will be returned to Christ in the resurrection.

This means that the flesh will be resurrected, and all flesh will be resurrected, both the same and not at all damaged. It is preserved everywhere by God with the help of the most faithful Mediator between God and people - Jesus Christ (1 Tim 2:5), Who will return God to man, man to God, spirit to flesh, and flesh to spirit. For He has already concluded an alliance between them in His Person, has already prepared the bride for the groom and the groom for the bride. But even if someone claims that the bride is the soul, then the flesh will still follow her, at least as a dowry. The soul is not a harlot for the bridegroom to receive it naked. She has outfits and her own jewelry - flesh that accompanies her like a foster sister. But the true bride is the flesh, which in Christ Jesus through His Blood has found her Bridegroom in the Spirit.

In the 3rd-4th centuries, a correspondence debate on the nature of resurrected bodies developed between Origen and St. Methodius of Patara. In the writings of Origen there is an opinion that the bodies of resurrected people will be immaterial, spiritual and ethereal, similar to the bodies of Angels. According to the teachings of Origen, the material bodies of people, in comparison with the new, spiritual bodies in which they will be resurrected, are like grain in comparison with the ear that has sprouted from it.

However, Saint Methodius, polemicizing with Origen, rejects the opinion that material bodies will be destroyed and that the nature of resurrected people will be similar to the nature of Angels, even if Christ says that in the resurrection the saints will be like Angels in heaven (see: Mark 12, 25; Matthew 22:30). The words of Christ, according to Methodius (coinciding with the opinion of Tertullian), should be understood not in the sense that in the resurrection the saints will lose their bodies, but in the sense that the state of bliss of the saints will be similar to the state of the Angels.

According to Methodius, God created man as a single being from soul and body, and the ultimate goal of human existence is not the separation of the body, but salvation along with the body:

...It cannot be assumed that God, having created man bad or made a mistake in his creation, decided to later make him an Angel, repenting, like the worst artists; or as if at first He wanted to create an Angel, but, not having the strength to do this, He created man. This is ridiculous. Why did He create man, and not an Angel, if He wanted man to be an Angel, and not a man? Was it because he couldn't? This is blasphemous. Or did you put off the best until the future and do the worst? This is ridiculous. He does not make mistakes in creating the beautiful, does not put it off, does not feel powerless, but has the opportunity to do as He wants and when He wants, since He is power. Therefore, wanting man to exist, He created man in the beginning. If, when He desires something, He desires the beautiful, and the beautiful is man, and man is a being made up of soul and body, then, consequently, man will not exist without a body, but with a body... For God created man, he says Wisdom, for incorruption, made him the image of His eternal existence (Wis 2:23). Therefore, the body will not be destroyed, because man consists of soul and body.

In the 4th century, Saint Gregory of Nyssa paid great attention to the topic of the resurrection of the dead. In his treatise On the Constitution of Man, he examines the same arguments against the resurrection of bodies that Tertullian considered. According to him, opponents of the resurrection of the dead “point to the destruction of the ancient dead, to the remains of those turned to ashes by fire, and in addition to this they also represent in the word carnivorous animals: fish, which, having taken into its own body the flesh of a shipwrecked person, itself also became food for people and through digestion it passed into the composition of the eater.” To this Gregory replies that even if a person’s body is devoured by birds of prey or beasts and mixed with their flesh, even if it passes through the teeth of fish or burns in fire and is turned into steam and ashes, the material substance of the body is still preserved. Everything in the material world, decomposing into its component parts, passes into what is akin to them, “and not only the earth, according to God’s word, decomposes into earth, but also the air and humidity turn into what is akin to them, and the transition takes place into the akin of everything that is in us.” For God, it is not difficult to accurately find those particles that are necessary to restore the human body.

What is the “mechanism” of the reunification of the soul with the body during the general resurrection and how do souls recognize the bodies that belong to them? Answering this question, Gregory puts forward an opinion about the mutual natural attraction of soul and body - an attraction that does not stop even after death:

Since the soul was naturally disposed by some kind of friendship and love towards its cohabitant - the body, then some kind of friendly connection and acquaintance is secretly kept in the soul as a result of merging with what is inherent, as if from some signs imposed by nature, according to which an unfused community remains in it , distinguishing its property. Therefore, when the soul again attracts to itself what is akin to itself and what actually belongs to it, then what, tell me, difficulty will prevent the Divine power from bringing about the union of what is akin, rushing towards its property according to some inexplicable attraction of nature? And that in the soul and after detachment from the body some signs of our union remain, this is shown by the conversation in hell, from which it is clear that although the bodies were handed over to the grave, Lazarus was recognized, and the rich man did not turn out to be unknown.

Each body has its own “eidos,” an appearance that remains, like a seal impression, in the soul even after separation from the body. At the moment of general resurrection, the soul will recognize this eidos and will be reunited with its body. In this case, the scattered particles that made up the material substance of the body will be reunited with one another, just as balls of spilled mercury are reunited. As St. Nyssa emphasizes, “if only God’s command follows for the corresponding parts to join themselves to those that are their own, then the Renewer of nature will not have any difficulty in this.”

In the dialogue “On the Soul and Resurrection,” Gregory of Nyssa says that “our body is now made up, and will be made up again, from the elements of the world,” and “for the same soul, the same body, combined from the same elements, will be made up again.” Gregory contrasts this teaching with the ancient teaching of reincarnation, the transition from one body to another. At the same time, he emphasizes that the matter of the resurrected body will differ from the rough matter of the earthly body: “For you will see this bodily veil, now destroyed by death, again woven from the same, but not in this rough and heavy composition, but so that the thread will fold into something light and airy. Therefore, what you love will remain with you, but will be restored again to a better and more desirable beauty.”

According to Gregory, “the resurrection is the restoration of our nature to its original state.” The pristine nature of man was not subject to either aging or disease: all this “invaded us along with the appearance of vice.” Having become passionate, human nature encountered the necessary consequences of a passionate life, but, having returned to a passionless life, it will not be subject to the consequences of vice. Carnal intercourse, conception, birth, nutrition, change of ages, old age, illness and death - all this is a consequence of the Fall. In the future life, “some other state will follow”, devoid of all the listed signs of a passionate nature. The Nyssa saint calls this state “spiritual and dispassionate.”

A similar understanding of the nature of the resurrected body is contained in John Chrysostom. According to him, people’s bodies will first rot, but then they will rise and be much better than the current ones, “they will move into a better state,” and “everyone will receive their own body, and not someone else’s.” In a resurrected person, “the body remains, but mortality and corruption disappear when it is clothed in immortality and incorruptibility.” Chrysostom persistently proves that, just as Christ was resurrected not in another body, but in the same one, only changed, so people will be resurrected in their own bodies, but renewed and transformed.

There is, according to the teachings of Chrysostom, a difference between the body and corruption: the first will remain, the second will be abolished. It is the body freed from corruption that will be immortal:

The other is the body, and the other is death; another is the body, and another is corruption; neither the body is corruption; neither corruption is the body; the body, it is true, is perishable, but the body is not corruption; the body is mortal, yet the body is not death; but the body was the work of God, and corruption and death were introduced by sin... The body is the mean between corruption and incorruption. It puts off corruption and puts on incorruption; casts off from himself what he received from sin, and acquires what was given by the grace of God... The life to come destroys and destroys not the body, but the corruption and death attached to it... The body is actually burdensome, burdensome and rude, but not by his own nature, but from the mortality that later attached to him; the body itself is not perishable, but incorruptible.

There are no barriers to the omnipotence of God, and therefore it is not impossible for God to recreate bodies that have undergone decomposition:

And don’t tell me: how can the body rise again and become incorruptible? When the power of God operates, then “how” should not take place... What is more difficult is whether to create flesh, veins, skin, bones, nerves, veins, arteries, organic and simple bodies, eyes, ears, nostrils, legs, from the earth, hands and impart to each of these members both a special and general activity, or make something that has undergone corruption immortal?..

According to Chrysostom, the denial of the resurrection of the body is the denial of resurrection in general: “if the body is not resurrected, then man will not be resurrected, because man is not only a soul, but a soul and a body.” If only the soul is resurrected, then the person will not be resurrected entirely, but only half. In addition, “in relation to the soul, it is actually impossible to talk about resurrection, since resurrection is characteristic of the dead and decomposed, and it is not the soul that decomposes, but the body.” Chrysostom emphasizes that the resurrection will be universal: “the Greek, the Jews, the heretic, and every person who comes into this world” will be resurrected.

If there is a resurrection for everyone in general - for the pious and the wicked, the evil and the good - then will it not happen that the pagans, the wicked and idolaters will enjoy the same honor as Christians? Chrysostom answers this question as follows: “The bodies of sinners will indeed rise incorruptible and immortal, but this honor will be for them a means of punishment and torment: they will rise incorruptible in order to constantly burn, because if that fire is unquenchable, then it also requires bodies that are never destroyed." This will be the resurrection of condemnation that Christ speaks about in the Gospel (John 5:29).

St. Ephraim the Syrian, discussing the general resurrection, emphasizes that during the resurrection of the dead, all those who died in infancy and even in the womb will be resurrected as “adults”:

Whoever is swallowed up by the sea, who is devoured by wild beasts, who is pecked by birds, who is burned in fire, in a very short time all will awaken, rise up and appear. Whoever died in his mother’s womb will be brought to adulthood by the same moment that will return life to the dead. A baby, whose mother died with him during pregnancy, at the resurrection will appear as a perfect husband and will recognize his mother, and she will recognize her child... The Creator will raise the sons of Adam equal, just as he created them equal, and so he will awaken them equal from death. In resurrection there are neither great nor small. And the one born prematurely will rise the same as the adult. Only in their deeds and way of life will they be high and glorious, and some will be like light, others like darkness.

In the “Spiritual Discourses” of Macarius of Egypt we find interesting discussions about the nature of resurrected bodies. Answering the question about whether all members will be resurrected, Macarius says that during the general resurrection everything will be transformed into light and fire, but the body will retain its nature and each person will retain his personal traits:

Nothing is difficult for God. Such is His promise. But to human weakness and human reason this seems impossible. How God, having taken dust and earth, created, as it were, some other nature, namely a bodily nature, unlike the earth, and created many kinds of natures, such as: hair, skin, bones and veins; and just as a needle thrown into the fire changes color and turns into fire, while the nature of the iron is not destroyed, but remains the same, so in the resurrection all members will be resurrected, and, according to what is written, a hair will not perish (Ac 21 , 18), and everything will become light-like, everything will be immersed and transformed into light and fire, but will not be resolved and will not become fire, so that the former nature will no longer exist, as some claim. For Peter remains Peter, and Paul remains Paul, and Philip remains Philip; each one, filled with the Spirit, remains in his own nature and being.

The evidence presented from the Holy Scriptures and the writings of Christian authors of the 2nd-4th centuries shows that the Eastern Christian tradition is completely unanimous in its understanding of the general resurrection. She claims that the resurrection will embrace all people, regardless of religion, nationality, moral state, but only for some it will be the “resurrection of life,” and for others it will be the “resurrection of condemnation.” The bodies of people will be resurrected, but these bodies will acquire new properties - incorruptibility and immortality. The body of a resurrected person will be freed from all the consequences of corruption, from all injuries and imperfections. It will be bright, light and spiritual, similar to the body of Christ after His resurrection.

In the resurrection of the dead, according to the teachings of the Orthodox Church, not only all of humanity will participate, but also all of nature, the entire created cosmos. This teaching is based on the words of the Apostle Paul about the participation of all creation in the glory of the risen man:

...The present temporary sufferings are worth nothing in comparison with the glory that will be revealed in us. For the creation awaits with hope the revelation of the sons of God: because the creation was subjected to vanity not voluntarily, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in the hope that the creation itself will be freed from the slavery of corruption into the freedom of the glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation groans and suffers together until now; and not only she, but we ourselves, having the firstfruits of the Spirit, and we groan within ourselves, awaiting adoption as sons, the redemption of our body (Rom 8:18-23).

According to this teaching, nature suffers along with man, but it will also be resurrected and transformed at the moment when people’s bodies are resurrected and transformed. The fate of nature and the universe is inseparable from the fate of man: this is the meaning of the New Testament eschatological teaching. After the Second Coming of Christ, the world and nature will not disappear, but will be transformed into a new heaven and a new earth (Rev 21:1). According to Cyril of Jerusalem, we await the resurrection not only for ourselves, but also for heaven. And St. Augustine teaches that “this world will pass away,” but “not in the sense of complete destruction, but as a result of a change in things.” Like the resurrected bodies of people, nature and the cosmos will become spiritual and incorruptible.

The dogma of the resurrection of the dead has deep spiritual and moral significance. From the point of view of many Church Fathers, this dogma opens up the eschatological perspective in the light of which the Christian moral law takes on meaning. Gregory of Nyssa believes that without the dogma of the resurrection of the dead, not only Christian morality loses its force, but also all morality and all asceticism in general:

Why do people try and philosophize when they neglect the pleasures of the womb, who love abstinence, who allow themselves only short-term sleep, who struggle with cold and heat? Let us tell them in the words of Paul: Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we will die! (1 Cor 15:32). If there is no resurrection, and death is the limit of life, then leave accusations and censures, give unhindered power to the murderer: let the adulterer destroy the marriage; let the covetous man live luxuriously at the expense of his opponents; Let no one stop someone who is swearing; let the perjurer swear constantly, for death awaits even the one who keeps his oaths; let another lie as much as he wants, because there is no fruit from the truth; Let no one help the poor, for mercy will remain unrewarded. Such reasoning creates disorder in the soul worse than a flood; they drive out every chaste thought and encourage every insane and predatory plan. For if there is no resurrection, there is no Judgment; if the Judgment is rejected, the fear of God is rejected along with it. And where fear does not control, there the devil rejoices.

“The time is coming in which all who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who have done good will come out to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment” (John 5:28–29).

When the history of mankind comes to its end, when, after many troubles and sorrows, our Lord Jesus Christ comes again to earth with glory to judge the living and the dead, then everyone who has ever lived on earth will be resurrected, both the righteous and sinners, Christians, will rise from their graves and the pagans who died thousands of years ago and died just before the second Coming of Christ. Not a single dead person will remain in the grave - everyone will be resurrected at the coming Last Judgment. It is very difficult, and perhaps impossible, to imagine these events, but, based on the dogmatic teaching of the Orthodox Church, we will still try to find answers to some questions regarding the general resurrection of the dead. This will help us teacher of the Saratov Orthodox Theological Seminary, Archpriest Mikhail Vorobyov.

Albrecht Durer. Engraving "The Chorus of the Righteous" from the "Apocalypse" series. A series of engravings on this topic were completed in 1498, when Germany was experiencing apocalyptic sentiments

- Father Michael, how do we know about the coming resurrection of the dead?

First of all, of course, from the Holy Scriptures. There are many places in both the Old and New Testaments that talk about the general future resurrection. For example, the prophet Ezekiel contemplated the resurrection of the dead, when the dry bones with which the field was strewn began to come closer to each other, grow overgrown with sinews and flesh, and finally came to life and stood on their feet - a very, very great horde (Ezekiel 37:10 ). In the New Testament, our Lord Jesus Christ Himself repeatedly speaks about the coming resurrection: He who eats My Flesh and drinks My Blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day (John 6:54). In addition, the Gospel of Matthew says that at the moment of Christ’s death ... the tombs were opened; and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were resurrected, and coming out of their tombs after His resurrection, they entered the holy city and appeared to many (Matthew 27:52–53). And, of course, the 25th chapter of the Gospel of Matthew, which speaks quite clearly and unambiguously about the general resurrection and the subsequent Last Judgment: When the Son of Man comes in His glory and all the holy Angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of His glory, and all nations will be gathered before Him (Matthew 25:31–32).

Yes, but these scriptures speak of the resurrection of only a few. So, maybe not everyone will be resurrected, but only the righteous or saints?

No, every person who has ever lived on earth will be resurrected. ...All who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who have done good will come forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of condemnation (John 5:28–29). It says "everything". The Apostle Paul writes: Just as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive (1 Cor. 15:22). Once an essence created by God cannot disappear, and each person, each person is his own special essence.

- It turns out that Seraphim of Sarov, and Pushkin, and even our relatives and friends will be resurrected?

Not only friends, but also enemies... And such historical figures as Hitler and Stalin... Even suicides will be resurrected, so suicide is completely pointless. In general, the resurrection will occur regardless of a person’s free will. Reality will change, a different existence will come, and the resurrection from the dead will be a consequence of the change in reality. For example, there was ice, but with increasing temperature the ice turns into water. There were dead, but reality will change - and the dead will come to life. Therefore, a person’s personal qualities do not play any role during the general resurrection; they will be considered at the Last Judgment following the resurrection.

- What kind of bodies will people have?

Well, you know... I'm afraid that no one will answer your question in such a formulation...

The only thing that is unconditional is that the coming general resurrection will be the resurrection of man in the unity of spirit, soul and body. The Orthodox Church does not profess the immortality of the soul, like many ancient religions, but rather the bodily resurrection. Only now the body will be different, transformed, free from imperfections, diseases, deformities that are the consequences of sin. The Apostle Paul convincingly speaks about this coming transformation: we will not all die, but we will all be changed (1 Cor. 15:51). At the same time, the Apostle Paul indicates an essential sign of a new transformed, deified, if you like, body. This sign is incorruptibility. The First Epistle to the Corinthians speaks about this clearly and unambiguously: But someone will say: how will the dead be raised? and in what body will they come? Reckless! what you sow will not come to life unless it dies... There are heavenly bodies and earthly bodies; but the glory of those in heaven is one, and that of the earth is another. There is another glory of the sun, another glory of the moon, another of the stars; and star differs from star in glory. So it is with the resurrection of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption; sown in humiliation, raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in strength; the spiritual body is sown, the spiritual body is raised. There is a spiritual body, and there is a spiritual body. So it is written: the first man Adam became a living soul; and the last Adam is a life-giving spirit. But not the spiritual first, but the spiritual, then the spiritual. The first man is from the earth, earthy; the second person is the Lord from heaven. As is the earthy, so are the earthy; and as is the heavenly, so are the heavenly. And just as we have borne the image of earth, let us also bear the image of heaven... For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality (1 Cor. 15:35-49, 53).

The transformation of the human world into re-existence is a consequence of the transformation of the whole world, of all creation. Since the world will be different, the person’s body will be different. The world will become more perfect, and the body-mental-spiritual state of a person will also become more perfect. And the fact that the transfiguration of all creation is its deification is also very clearly revealed by the Apostle Paul, who says that in the transfigured world there will be God all in all (1 Cor. 15:28). We especially note that the Apostle Peter, who can hardly be called a complete like-minded person of the Apostle Paul, speaks of the state of a person awarded the Heavenly Kingdom also as deification: ... Great and precious promises have been given to us, so that through them you may become partakers of the Divine nature ... for in this way a free entrance will be opened for you into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ (2 Peter 1:4, 11).

- At what age will people be resurrected - at which they died, or will everyone be resurrected young?

At any age, a person’s personality is enriched by relevant experiences. Even extreme old age with all the infirmities, with all the Alzheimer’s, also creates a certain experience (at least the experience of dying!), which, from the point of view of the individual, has its own value. An old man values ​​his childhood, his youth, his maturity, and even his old age...

NOT EVERYONE WHO SAYS “CHRIST IS RISEN!” AT EASTER AND “TRULY IS RISEN!”, THEY GUESS THAT THE RESURRECTION OF JESUS ​​CHRIST IS DIRECTLY CONNECTED WITH THE GREAT HOPE – THE COMING RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD.

"Your dead will live,

Dead bodies will rise!

Rise up and rejoice,

laid low in the dust:

for Your dew is the dew of plants,

and the earth will spew out the dead"

Bible. Isaiah 26:19

Not everyone who declares at Easter “Christ is risen!” and “Truly is Risen!”, they guess that the resurrection of Jesus Christ is directly related to the great hope - the intentions of the Almighty to one day bring about the resurrection of absolutely all people who have ever died with faith and hope in the Savior. Both Christ himself and His apostles spoke about this more than once.

The Christian's hope for future eternal life is based on faith in the resurrection of Jesus Christ and is closely interconnected with the grandiose event that awaits our world - the resurrection of the dead. Jesus Himself says of Himself that He is “the resurrection and the life” (Bible. John 11:25). These are not empty words. He demonstrates His power over death by publicly raising Lazarus from the dead. But it was not this stunning miracle that became the key to eternal victory over death. Only the resurrection of Jesus ensured that death would be swallowed up in victory. In this sense, the resurrection of Christ is a guarantee of the massive resurrection of believers promised by the Word of God at the moment of the approaching Second Coming of the Savior: “...The Lord himself, with a proclamation, with the voice of the Archangel and the trumpet of God, will descend from heaven, and the dead in Christ will rise first.” (Bible. 1 Thessalonians 4:16).

The meaning of faith

Any hope of a sincere Christian is based not so much on God's timely help in this sinful life as on the future resurrection, when he will receive the crown of eternal life. So the Apostle Paul wrote to his fellow believers about the Christian’s greatest hope for his resurrection: “And if in this life only we hope in Christ, then we are the most miserable of all men.” Consequently, if there is no “resurrection of the dead, then Christ is not risen... And if Christ is not risen, then your faith is vain... Therefore, those who died in Christ perished. But Christ has risen from the dead, the firstborn of those who have fallen asleep,” Paul urges (Bible. 1 Corinthians 15:13–20).

Awakening from death's sleep

People do not have natural immortality. Only God is immortal: “King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone has immortality.” (Bible. 1 Timothy 6:15–16).

As for death, the Bible calls it a temporary state of non-existence: “For in death there is no remembrance of You (God - author's note)“Who will praise You in the grave?” (Bible. Psalm 6:6. See also Psalm 113:25; 145:3, 4; Ecclesiastes 9:5, 6, 10). Jesus Himself, as well as His followers, figuratively called it a dream, an unconscious sleep. And the one who sleeps has a chance to be awakened. So it was with the deceased, and then with the resurrected (awakened) Lazarus. This is what Jesus told His disciples about his death: “Our friend Lazarus fell asleep; but I am going to WAKE HIM... Jesus spoke about his death, but they thought that He was talking about an ordinary sleep. Then Jesus said to them directly: Lazarus is dead." (Bible. John 11:11–14). It is worth noting that in this case there is no doubt that Lazarus died and did not fall asleep in a lethargic sleep, since his body had already begun to rapidly decompose after four days in the tomb (See John 11:39).

Death is not a transition to another existence, as some believe. Death is an enemy that denies all life, which people cannot defeat on their own. However, God promises that just as Christ was resurrected, so sincere Christians who have died or will die will be resurrected: “As in Adam all die, so in Christ all shall live, each in his own order: Christ the firstborn, then those who are Christ’s at His coming.” (Bible. 1 Corinthians 15:22–23).

Perfect bodies

As already mentioned, according to the Bible, the resurrection of the dead will occur at the Second Coming of Jesus Christ. This will be a visible event for all inhabitants of the globe. At this moment, those who have died in Christ are resurrected, and those believers who are alive will be transformed into incorruptible, perfect bodies. The immortality lost in Eden will be returned to all of them, so that they will never again be separated from each other and from their Creator and Savior.

In this new state of immortality, believers will not be deprived of the ability to have physical bodies. They will enjoy the bodily existence that God originally intended - even before sin entered the world, when He created the perfect Adam and Eve. The Apostle Paul confirms that after the resurrection the new glorified or spiritual body of saved people will not be immaterial, but a completely recognizable body, maintaining continuity and similarity with the body that a person had in his earthly life. This is what he wrote: “How will the dead be raised? and in what body will they come?.. There are heavenly bodies and earthly bodies; but the glory of those in heaven is one, and that of the earth is another. So it is with the resurrection of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption... the spiritual body is sown, the spiritual body is raised. There is a spiritual body, there is a spiritual body..." (Bible. 1 Corinthians 15:35–46). Paul calls the body of the resurrected “spiritual” not because it will not be physical, but because it will no longer be subject to death. It differs from the present only in its perfection: there will be no traces of sin left on it.

In another of his letters, the Apostle Paul states that the spiritual bodies of resurrected believers at the Second Coming will be similar to the glorified body of the risen Savior: “We also await a Savior, our Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body, so that it will be conformed to His GLORIOUS BODY, by power , by which He acts and subdues all things to Himself" (Bible Philippians 3:20–21). What Jesus' body was like after the resurrection can be understood from the narrative of the Evangelist Luke. The risen Christ, who appeared to the disciples, said: “Why are you troubled, and why do such thoughts enter your hearts? Look at My hands and at My feet; it is I Myself; touch Me and look at Me; for a spirit does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have. And having said this, he showed them his hands and feet. When they still did not believe for joy and were amazed, He said to them: Do you have any food here? They gave Him some of the baked fish and honeycomb. And he took it and ate before them." (Bible. Luke 24:38–43). Apparently, the resurrected Jesus tried to assure His disciples that He was not a spirit. Because the spirit does not have a body with bones. But the Savior had. To completely dispel all doubts, the Lord offered to touch Him and even asked to give Him something to eat. This once again proves that believers will be resurrected in incorruptible, glorified, non-aging spiritual bodies that can be touched. These bodies will have both arms and legs. You can also enjoy your food in them. These bodies will be beautiful, perfect and endowed with colossal abilities and potential, unlike today's corruptible bodies.

Second resurrection

However, the future resurrection of dead people who truly believe in God is not the only resurrection that the Bible speaks of. It also clearly speaks of something else - a second resurrection. This is the resurrection of the wicked, which Jesus called the resurrection of judgment: “All who are in the graves will hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who have done good will come forth into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of condemnation.” (Bible. John 5:28–29). Also, the Apostle Paul, once addressing the ruler Felix, said “that there will be a resurrection of the dead, the righteous and the unrighteous.” (Bible. Acts 24:15).

According to the biblical book of Revelation (20:5, 7–10) , the second resurrection or resurrection of the wicked will not occur at the Second Coming of Christ, but after a thousand years. At the end of the thousand-year reign, the wicked will be resurrected to hear the verdict and receive due retribution for their iniquities from the merciful, but at the same time fair Supreme Judge. Then sin will be completely destroyed from the face of the earth along with the wicked who did not repent of their evil deeds.

New life


The good news of the first resurrection of the dead at the Second Coming of Christ is much more than just interesting information about the future. It is a living hope made real by the presence of Jesus. It will transform the present life of sincere believers, giving it more meaning and hope. With confidence in their destiny, Christians are already living a new, practical life for the benefit of others. Jesus taught: “But when you make a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed because they cannot repay you, for you will be rewarded at the resurrection of the righteous.” (Bible. Luke 14:13, 14).

Those who live in the hope of participating in the glorious resurrection become different people. They can rejoice even in suffering because the motive of their lives is hope: “Therefore, being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in the hope of glory. God's. And not only this, but we also glory in sorrows, knowing that from sorrow comes patience, from patience experience, from experience hope, and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts by the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.” (Bible. Romans 5:1–5).

Without fear of death

Because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, the Christian believes in the coming resurrection of the dead. This living faith makes present death something of little importance. It frees the believer from the fear of death because it also guarantees him future hope. This is why Jesus could say that even if a believer dies, he has the assurance that he will be brought back to life.

Even when death separates loved ones among Christians, their grief is not filled with hopelessness. They know that one day they will see each other again in the joyful resurrection of the dead. To those who did not know this, the Apostle Paul wrote: “I do not want you, brothers, to be ignorant about the dead, so that you do not mourn like others who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, then God will bring those who died in Jesus with Him... because the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the Archangel and the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first.” (Bible. 1 Thessalonians 4:13–16). Paul does not console his brothers in the faith that their dead Christian loved ones are alive or somewhere in a conscious state, but characterizes their present state as a dream from which they will be awakened when the Lord descends from heaven.

“Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed”

It is not easy for a secular person who is accustomed to questioning everything to gain confidence in the hope of his own resurrection. But this does not mean that he lacks the ability to believe, because he has no obvious evidence of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus Himself said that people who have not seen the risen Christ with their own eyes are not in a less advantageous position than those who have seen Him. The Apostle Thomas expressed his faith in the risen Savior only when he saw Him alive, and Jesus said to this: “You believed because you saw Me, blessed are those who have not seen and believed.” (Bible. John 20:29).

Why can those who have not seen believe? Because true faith comes not from vision, but from the action of the Holy Spirit on the heart and conscience of a person.

As a result, it is worth noting once again that a Christian’s belief that Christ has risen makes sense only when he receives hope from God for his personal participation in the coming glorious resurrection.

Does this matter to you personally?

Share