Romans 6:5 – “united with Him in a resurrection like His”

POST OVERVIEW. An exegesis of Romans 6:5 seeking to obtain a correct interpretation of Paul’s use of “resurrection.” The case is made that “resurrection” here must be understood not as referring to our future glorification but as speaking of our figurative “resurrection” to new life in Christ.

Part of the Appendix for my upcoming book, “The Resurrection: when the church is glorified.”

For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his. – Romans 6:5 (ESV)

DEATH AND RESURRECTION IN ROMANS 6:5: LITERAL OR FIGURATIVE?

In this article we are going to be examining Romans 6:5 to determine whether the “resurrection” of this verse is to be understood literally, as referring to the final glorification of the saints at the end of the age, or to be understood figuratively.

THE BASIC TEACHING OF 6:1-11. Before we dive into the details of Romans 6:5, we will step back and ask, “What is the essence of Paul’s teaching here in Romans 6:1-11?” Briefly stated, Paul is declaring that the believer cannot continue in sin because, in Christ, they have died to sin and have been raised to a new life of holiness. So, as we take an initial high-level view of the passage, it is apparent that Paul is using died and raised figuratively when he speaks of the believer.

THE CONTEXT OF 6:5. Then, as we look at the immediate context of Romans 6:5, it becomes clear that Paul is not speaking here of our literal death but is using death and died in a figurative sense.

In 6:2, “we died to sin.”

In 6:3, “we have been baptized into His death.” (Christ’s death is literal, but our death is figurative.)

In 6:4, “we were buried with Christ into death.” (Christ’s death and burial are literal, but our death and burial are figurative.)

BAPTISM AS FIGURATIVE DEATH AND RESURRECTION. There is no clearer display of the believer’s figurative death to his old life of sin and figurative resurrection to his new life of righteousness than we see in water baptism. The believer is plunged under the water as a picture of his death and burial to sin and then he is raised up out of the water to walk in new life.

LITERAL DEATH AND RESURRECTION OF CHRIST. We must also notice that, in this passage, Paul is drawing an analogy between the physical death and resurrection of Jesus Christ and the figurative death and resurrection that the believer experiences when they first trust Christ as Lord and Savior. His argument goes, “As Christ physically died and was resurrected, so the believer has figuratively died to sin and has been made alive to God.” In this analogy, the literal, physical resurrection of Christ provides the “stage” for all that happens figuratively in the believer. This analogy between Christ’s physical experience and the believer’s figurative experience is crucial to Paul’s teaching in this passage.

ROMANS 6:5. Now as we turn our attention to Romans 6:5 itself, we realize that much of the interpretive work has already been done. First, we have already seen that, when referring to a believer, death and resurrection are figurative, so we would expect that, in 6:5, death and resurrection would likewise be figurative.

But second, there is another point here that removes the possibility of this verse referring to literal resurrection. Since in Romans 6:3 and 6:4, Paul has presented the believer’s death as figurative, he cannot now be speaking of the believer’s literal resurrection in glory. Further, since it is certain that the “death” of this verse (6:5) is a figurative death, we know that the resurrection must likewise be figurative. Remember the analogy, that as Christ’s physical death resulted in a physical resurrection, so the believer’s figurative death must result in a figurative resurrection. Since the death here is figurative, the resurrection is also figurative.

CONCLUSION

The evidence presented leads to the conclusion that the “resurrection” of Romans 6:5 does not refer to the literal final glorification of the saints on the last day but refers to a figurative resurrection of the believer to new life in Christ.

Soli Deo gloria            rmb                 3/8/2024                     #697

Figurative uses of “resurrection” in the New Testament

POST OVERVIEW. An examination of four New Testament verses where “resurrection” is used figuratively, not literally.

This article will be part of my upcoming book on the resurrection called, “The Resurrection: when the church glorified.”

WHAT DO WE MEAN BY “THE RESURRECTION?”

The events of the end of the age are not only a matter of great discussion among believers but these events are also the focus of much teaching in the New Testament. Perhaps the most prominent of these eschatological events is the resurrection of the saints. Many questions exist about this mysterious event when we believers, whether dead in Christ or alive and remaining, will, in the twinkling of an eye, be changed and glorified. For this is the true meaning of “resurrection,” when all those who are in Christ are raised immortal on the last day with their eternal glorified bodies. This is what we will refer to as the “true resurrection.”

FIGURATIVE USES OF “RESURRECTION”

While the term “the resurrection” is only literally applied to that event at the end of the age when all the righteous are instantly glorified, the Bible does use the word “resurrection” figuratively to describe other events in which people come to life. In this article we will look at four prominent examples of this figurative use of resurrection.

How do we know whether a given usage of  “resurrection” is literal or figurative? There are two essential elements of true or literal resurrection: True resurrection 1) involves only the righteous (i.e., believers, the elect, those in Christ, other synonyms) and 2) must include the receiving of a glorified, eternal body. We will see that these four examples lack one of these essential elements and so must be figurative uses of resurrection.

The four examples are as follows:

  • John 5:28-29. “resurrection of judgment”
  • Romans 6:5. “the likeness of His resurrection”
  • Hebrews 11:35. “received their dead back by resurrection.”
  • Revelation 20:5, 6 “the first resurrection”

We will consider these four texts now.

JOHN 5:29. In John 5:29, Jesus teaches that “those who committed the evil deeds will come forth to a resurrection of judgment.” This is a figurative use of resurrection because this “resurrection” involves the unrighteous, and we know that the unrighteous are not participants in the true resurrection.

For clarification, the “resurrection of the unrighteous,” as in John 5:29 (above), is that event on the last day after the death of all the unrighteous (Rev. 19:21) when the souls of the unrighteous are raised out of their various temporary prisons to appear before the great white throne (Rev. 20:11-15) for final judgment in the lake of fire.

ROMANS 6:5. In Romans 6:5, Paul speaks of the believer as being united with Christ “in the likeness of His resurrection.” From the context it is evident that Paul is not speaking of the final glorification of all believers at the end of the age but is speaking of the individual believer’s “resurrection” to newness of life (6:4) as a result of his initial faith in Jesus that was evidenced in his baptism. Our old self was crucified with Christ (6:6; “crucified” is also figurative) and now “we shall also live with Him” (6:8). Paul is drawing a parallel between what Christ experienced physically and what the believer experiences spiritually. As Christ was physically crucified and resurrected, so the believer is figuratively crucified (6:6) to his old life and resurrected (6:5) to his new life in Christ.

HEBREWS 11:35. The text says, “Women received back their dead by resurrection.” The author of Hebrews simply means that, by faith, some who had physically died were miraculously restored to physical life. In these “resurrections” there is nothing stated or implied about glorification, so these are merely figurative resurrections. These who were “resurrected” certainly died again.

REVELATION 20:5, 6. This vision that John saw takes place in heaven (“thrones” is conclusive evidence that this scene is unfolding in heaven) during the thousand years. John sees the “souls” of those who had been beheaded, etc. The fact that the saints exist as “souls” (disembodied spirits) means that the resurrection (glorification) of the saints has not occurred but is yet future. Thus we can say with confidence that “the first resurrection” in Rev. 20:5, 6 is a figurative use of “resurrection” because the saints (believers) here have not received their glorified, eternal body. (See also the separate article in this book that explains Rev. 20:4-6 in greater detail.)

SUMMARY

As a result of our exegesis, we discovered that these four New Testament verses represent figurative uses of “resurrection” and are not speaking literally of the glorification of all believers at the end of the age.

Soli Deo gloria            rmb                 2/22/2024                   #695