Right in front of us this whole time. How did we miss it?
Matthew 17:9
As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus instructed them,
“Don’t tell anyone what you have seen, until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.”
Mark 9:9
As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus gave them orders not to tell anyone
what they had seen until the Son of Man had risen from the dead.
I think the evidence has been amply provided….you are reading into that phrase way more than was ever intended by its Jewish writers. I believe that people tend to forget that Jewish belief was not about immortal souls traveling in time between realms, but “raised from the dead” was a phrase that spoke to Jews about resurrection, which has nothing to do with spirits leaving the body at death.
To a Jew, resurrection was a return, or restoration of the life that was lost in death. Jesus showed his disciples what resurrection meant. (John 11:11-4) When he resurrected Lazarus, Jesus said he was “sleeping”. His sister expressed her belief in the resurrection by saying….
.”I know he will rise in the resurrection on the last day”. (John 11:24) As a disciple of Jesus, she knew what he taught about death…..and it was not the pagan belief in an immortal soul.
“The last day” is when Messiah rules in his kingdom and all the dead are raised back to life.
John 5:28-29…
”Do not be amazed at this, for the hour is coming in which all those in the memorial tombs will hear his voice 29 and come out, those who did good things to a resurrection of life, and those who practiced vile things to a resurrection of judgment.”
Jesus uses a different word here…not grave (hades) but “
mnēmeion” which Strongs defines as….
- any visible object for preserving or recalling the memory of any person or thing
- a memorial, monument, specifically, a sepulchral monument
- a sepulchre, a tomb.
So this is not “hades” which is “the abode of the dead”, (not hell) but specific burial places where the dead are identified individually. Because of their belief in resurrection, the Jews were careful to identify the deceased and to also include their lineage. (They still are) Jesus calls these individuals out of those tombs and renders judgment as to whether these ones were faithful Christians until their death, or were part of the world of former times when the God of Israel was unknown to those outside the Middle East. These will enter a period of judgment where they have an opportunity to hear about the true God and respond to the education.
Those who were not considered worthy of a decent burial (executed criminals and blatant lawbreakers) their bodies were often thrown into the city’s garbage dump for disposal. “Gehenna” became the symbol of eternal death, in that these ones were not considered worthy of a resurrection either.
The RCC ran away with many ideas that Christ never taught, when all they had to do was apply what the Jews were taught about death, because Jesus was Jewish….not Catholic.
So without the convoluted teachings of the Roman Catholic church, the Bible teaches that the dead are actually dead, and that resurrection is what we can expect to restore our lives….either in heaven as spirit beings for the elect, (of God’s choosing) who will rule with Christ in his kingdom (Rev 20:6)…..or a return to life in the flesh for those who will be the subjects of that kingdom. (Rev 21:2-4)
The phrase you kept repeating doesn’t mean what you are implying for all the reasons stated above….
”As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus instructed them,
“Don’t tell anyone what you have seen, until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.”
You see…”raised from the dead” simply means that a dead person is returned to life from the state of being “dead”. Nothing complicated about that.
It could also be rendered “from among the dead” since those who were resurrected in the Bible were specifically chosen to demonstrate what a resurrection actually was. Can we not just understand this in the context of what the whole Bible teaches about death itself? It is the opposite of life.