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Indeed, Paul does share definitively the inner spiritual sharing we have "in Christ", and this transformative process includes our death, burial, resurrection and ascension with-in Christ. Its just that some traditionalists here include or focus upon a literal physical resurrection of some kind,....'bodily', so such emphasizes some material modification of the flesh. This was noted in some early creeds, and while this was still being 'developed' in doctrinal matters,...one creed even changed Christ's resurrection from being "in the flesh", to the term "bodily" to be a bit more liberal, since the 'resurrection body' anyways is a bit peculiar, since it appears to have some form, yet 'spiritualized' to some degree. So, we have a broad spectrum of speculation of this 'resurrection body' from the more carnal dimensions...to the most celestialized, or some synthesis or compound therein

- again, back to figuring the mysterious details on the
metaphysics of it all.
This all transpires in the process of the
mortal putting on immortality, so its a fascinating subject. I glean from other schools that have their own views on what kind of 'bodies' we don or transform into along our souls journey Godward towards divine perfection. Paul did say like a seed our physical body is sown into the ground in death, and it is raised a
spiritual body. So as shared above, we have the
spiritual resurrection, the inward rising of God-consciousness, communion with the Christ within, the 'subjective' experience of co-identification with Christ. Then we have objective assumption of resurrection, whether individual or collective, the assumption of a mass resurrection at the last day, various roll calls at the end of a dispensation, etc. Fun stuff eh?