MJ:
If you and i are to know the truth about Jesus, we should consider what He said about His body after rising from the dead. He said to His disciples after His resurrection:
They were startled and frightened, thinking they saw a ghost. He said to them, “Why are you troubled, and why do doubts rise in your minds? Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have.” *(Luke 24:37-39)*Will you at least agree that Jesus was showing them that whatever His glorified body is, it is a material, or physical, body?
when I read this portion of the gospel I do not react to it the same way you do, I think. The Apostles had never had the experience of
encountering a resurrected person…and yes, Jesus was a person
with a body that had flesh and bones.
I saw a website for a Christian artshow recently that was titled : skin, the wrapping paper of nature. I see the human person as flesh, blood, bone, all those things. But these things in themselves have a metaphysical nature…each one has a highter meaning in God.
Blood: traditionally was associated with the soul of a person or animal
Water: traditionally I believe is associated with Life 9 not sure but am thinking of baptism and the waters if genesis cration account)
Bone: I see this as a structural element, perhaps akin to the rafters in the church or in architecture. when my spiritual state rests on false principlas my “bones” are our of order…
I remember at one point in my spiritual journey feeling like all my structures were being collapsed by God so he could rebuild them.
That is my best attempt at being metaphysical for now…
The risen Christ could control His Body in ways we cannot because we live under the effects of original sin. Jesus took on our nature and lived under the effects of original sin too, but by His own Will, not because he ever needed to, nor was he ever bound to those effects as can be seen by the fact that he walked on water etc… The fact that he could have done much greater astounding wondes and did not because he wanted to reveal His love for the ordinary and did so by His great example, especially in the hidden life of Nazareth.
Jesus always was a Divine Person in a human body and after the resurrection he could still appear as a human person, not a ghost, when and if he wished. If Jesus wanted to he could come into my room right now and sit and talk with me, but I admit i would probably be frightened too, just like the apostles…because it is not my normal experience. But I believe he could appear here with His flesh and bones if it was His desire.
So I don’t know how to explain that in terms of science if that is what you need.
I believe the human body is meant to be a temple and as we live in our bodies, keeping them in a holy way by obeying God’s laws and when we suffer because of our bodies we can offer that up, then we are rewarded with a new kind of body that is ‘transfigured’.
Which brings up the “Transfiguration”…was Moses there as a 'ghost? When the Apostles saw Christ transfigured they were given a glimpse of Christ’s future glorigied body. Now they wanted to build tents and stay up on the Mountain with Christ and Elijah,
so they saw them as needing shelters, as being human…
Mayb we can think of the miraculous bread on our altars as a
‘shelter’, a ‘tent’ for the Glorified Christ who is totally present there.
But the tent is only the appearance of a tent, for Christ totlally abides in the place of the bread. What difference does it make?
The tent is only the shelter or cover and the main focus is the person in the tent anyway…
Physical bodies can be transfigured by grace…and I believe that means they can appear, disappear at the Will of the person who is blessed with such a body. Christ has a transfigured or glorified body with all that means…
I think material things, our work, our play can all be transfigured when we consecrate those things to God as in a morning offering… so they can become holy too. And then they belong to God and are part of His Kingdom.
So trying to live your life based on all that is living a Eucharistic life…everything becomes part of the bread on the altar.
God Bless, maryjohnz