Hi LA
I think the 'spiritualist' view is more in sync with Paul's theology about the resurrection. Paul was more of a spiritualist with a gnostic bent, and his 'gospel' was essentially a 'mystery-religion' encapsulation of a spiritual Christ-figure who not only provides an atonement for sin, but is a spirit that indwells his believers as well, and gives them a spiritual resurrection. His beleivers are all part of a mystical Christ-body.
Note his sermon to the Corinthians in ch. 15....the resurrection body is spiritual, while the physical body is sown (buried) in the ground. He makes a clear dual distinction here, in line with the greek philosophical understanding. Christ has become a what?
a life-giving spirit. Christ dwells where? IN YOU. A flesh and blood body no matter how 'spiritualized' cannot indwell a human soul or body, but apparently the Jesus Christ he preached could be IN YOU. So, you've got a spiritualist gospel, with gnostic mystery-religion over-tones, and definitely a spiritual resurrection. When you physically die, your material body is buried and returns to dust,..while the soul is resurrected (it rises) with its spiritual body(form) and enters into the spirit-world. All souls then are resurrected this way via the natural course of physical death. Yes, this is a purely spiritualist point of view,...there is no physical resurrection as it were,...the material body is wholly discarded and NOT taken up again (that is, unless a soul is reincarnated
)
Don't forget, that no matter how physical or spiritual you assume any-BODY to be,....
you still reap what you sow ! - the law of karma is still in effect as long as there is 'action' of any kind and you are a conscious
responsible being.
So, you make your own 'heaven' or 'hell', by your own choice and actions. Isnt this so? How is it otherwise? This is
universal law, unless you can wholly transcend the law of karma, by being pure love itself....which transcends and absolves all sin. In pure love there is no sin....so no karma, except the fruit of right action fulfilling itself thru its own perfection. But perhaps I digress