Letter 50099: Augustine to Italica, greetings in the Lord.

Augustine of HippoItalica, Patrician|c. 405 AD|Augustine of Hippo
property economics

Augustine to Italica, greetings in the Lord.

Your letter, dearest daughter in Christ, reveals a mind troubled by questions that deserve serious answers. You ask about the nature of the resurrection body — what it will be like, whether it will be the same body we have now, whether its flaws and imperfections will be carried into eternity.

These are not idle speculations. The resurrection of the body is at the heart of our faith. Without it, as Paul says, our preaching is useless and your faith is in vain [1 Corinthians 15:14].

Here is what I believe Scripture teaches: the body that rises will be the same body that died — but transformed. The same, because identity matters to God. He did not create generic souls — he created you, with your particular body, your particular history, your particular scars. The resurrection does not erase you — it completes you. But transformed, because the body as we know it — fragile, mortal, subject to disease and decay — is not fit for eternity. "It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption" [1 Corinthians 15:42].

What about the deformities, the injuries, the marks of age? I believe they will be healed — not erased, necessarily, but healed. The risen Christ still bore the wounds of the nails, but those wounds were no longer sources of pain. They had become signs of victory. So our bodies will bear the marks of our particular lives, but those marks will be transfigured — no longer burdens but testimonies.

Do not be anxious about the details, daughter. The God who made you from nothing can certainly remake you from something. Trust him with the form of your eternity as you trust him with the substance of your faith.

Farewell in Christ.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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