The firstfruit is our best assurance

The farmer handed buckets to us blueberry pickers. “You’re kinda early,” he said. “The main crop’s not ready yet, so you’re gonna have to be choosy. Pick only what is fully ripe. Leave the rest. The good part is, all of the biggest and best is still here.”

He was right. It took us a lot longer, but we got some of the best blueberries ever. The firstfruit is the best, but it signals a greater harvest to come.

To prove to some skeptics that the resurrection is not foolish, Paul ties our future rising to a sure event of the past: “Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruit of those who have fallen asleep” (1 Cor. 15:20).

Nicodemus and Joseph mourn as they wash and then wrap the lifeless, pale body. Just hours ago he was warm, animated, and healthy. Now he is cold, still, and dead. So sad. Yet on the third day that corpse was transformed. It was not just restored to life, but taken beyond resuscitation to an imperishable, immortal, and glorified state. God’s harvest thus began with the best of the best, raised from the dead.

Yes, he’s the best of the best, but some day--soon, we hope--will come the rest: a tremendous crop of resurrected human beings, joyfully finding their bodies metamorphasized into incorruptibility and spiritual vitality. The firstfruit has already been picked; the rest of the harvest will follow.

The firstfruit is its guarantee. Nothing is more certain. Meanwhile, the planting continues. As we commit body after body to the earth, God assures us that after the planting will come the harvest, rich and full. When you stare at death’s toothy smile, look over his shoulder at the smile of another--the Firstfruit. This is not the end, but only the beginning.

—Steve Singleton
DeeperStudy.com

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The Greek noun aparchē ("first-portion") can describe first-fruit of any kind, including animals, produce, and even bread dough (see Rom. 11:16, from Num. 15:18-21). Paul uses it to describe the first converts of the province of Asia (Rom. 16:5 and 1 Cor. 16:15). Chonological sequence is not the only element, but also quality, the very best, which seems to be its connotation in Rev. 14:4. Although priority of time is certainly in the context of 1 Cor. 15:20 (see v. 23), can we deny that quality is also a consideration?

spurgeon_resurrectionRecommended to purchase:

Charles H. Spurgeon. Spurgeon's Sermons on the Death and Resurrection of Jesus

Includes forty-eight sermons that together explore every event of Jesus' last week, including the Last Supper, Jesus' Passion and Death, and His glorious resurrection. Let this collection of Spurgeon's Sermons guide you in your thinking about the significance of Christ's willing death and glorious resurrection.

Recommended for online reading:

John Pring. "The General Resurrection and a Future State," sermon 7, 139-173 in his A Second Series of Kingdom Sermons (1838).

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