What is the good of believing in the resurrection, unless your faith embraces the whole of it?
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If God raises not men entire, He raises not the dead. For what dead man is entire, although he dies entire? Who is without hurt, that is without life? What body is uninjured, when it is dead, when it is cold, when it is ghastly, when it is stiff, when it is a corpse? When is a man more infirm, than when he is entirely infirm? When more palsied, than when quite motionless? Thus, for a dead man to be raised again, amounts to nothing short of his being restored to his entire condition, —lest he, forsooth, be still dead in that part in which he has not risen again. God is quite able to re-make what He once made.
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Source: Tertullian, Second Part, VI On the Resurrection of the Flesh, Chapter LVII
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