THE FIRST AND THE SECOND
RESURRECTION
By Blessed Guerric of Igny
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“Blessed and holy is he who has a share in the first resurrection”. “I am the
resurrection and the life”, Jesus said. He indeed is the first resurrection; he is
also the second resurrection. For rising from the dead as the first fruits of those
who sleep, Christ both brings about for us the first resurrection by the mystery
of his own resurrection and by the example of that same resurrection will bring
about for us the second. The first is that of souls, when he raises them together
with himself to newness of life; the second will be that of bodies, when he forms
this humbled body of ours anew, molding it into the image of his glorified body.
Christ does well then to proclaim himself the resurrection and the life
since it is through him and into him that we rise in order to live according to him
and with him; now according to him in holiness and justice, afterwards with him
in happiness and glory. Now the first resurrection of our Head, the Lord Jesus
Christ, is the cause and the proof of the second resurrection, which will be that
of his whole body. So also for each of us the first resurrection of the soul, by
which it comes to life again from the death of sin, is the proof and the cause of its
second resurrection, by which the body will be freed not only from corruption of
death but also from every tendency to corruption and death. That the one is the
proof and cause of the other St Paul shows clearly in the words: “If the Spirit of
Christ who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he will give life also to your
perishable bodies on account of his Spirit who dwells in you”.
It is well said then: “Blessed and holy is he who has a share in the first
resurrection”. Holy, that is, on account of the first, which he has already
obtained through the renewal of his soul; blessed on account of the second,
which he happily awaits when his body is restored. The reason for his
blessedness is indicated by the same passage of Scripture, which goes on: “Over
these (who have a share, that is, in the first resurrection), the second death has
no power, even if the first death has seemed to exercise its dominion over them
for a passing hour. For death has reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those
who did not sin according to the likeness of Adam’s transgression. But as with
Christ so with the Christian; rising from the dead, he dies no more; death has no
more dominion over him.
So over those blessed neither has the second death any power nor will the
first keep the power, which it had for a time. For the one death of Christ
triumphed over both of ours, setting free from the one those who were already
its captives, from the other, those who would be its captives. It prevented us
from falling into the one, from remaining in the other. How true, how devout
and at the same time how magnificent is that threat he uttered as he died: “I will
be your death, O death”. How fittingly and wonderfully he triumphed who
tasted death on behalf of all and so swallowed up his own death and all the dying
of all humanity. Free from fear he may mock at it, whomever that blessed man is
who has a share in the first resurrection: “Where is your victory, death? Where
is your sting, death?”