The language is unlike that of Paul in other places, but it sets forth substantially
the same idea of the resurrection — that it marks the attainment of Christ's lordship, as Son of God with full powers.
Not exact matches
He argues that the current emphasis on the
resurrection of the body is incoherent without the
idea that the soul is immortal — «belief in the
resurrection of the body without the immortality
of the soul... fails to secure the
resurrection of the
same person» (p. 115).
The
same idea is expressed again later in Acts, where the divine pronouncement
of approval, «Thou art my son; this day have I begotten thee,» marking presumably the moment
of «adoption,» is associated with the
resurrection.