Inaugurated Resurrection in Earliest Christianity
By (Author) Dr. Daniel W. Hayter
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
2nd October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Christianity: sacred texts and revered writings
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Daniel W. Hayter explores the concept of inaugurated resurrection within earliest Christianity; the view that believers have experienced a present resurrection with Christ, in advance of their final resurrection at his return. He argues that belief in inaugurated resurrection is already discernible in Pauls own writings, in large part due to the influence of Scripture, suggesting that the influence of Ezekiel 3637 on Pauls understanding of the gift of the Spirit helps to explain this belief: Paul saw inaugurated resurrection as a way of speaking of receiving the Spirit.
Hayter thus examines the reception of Ezekiel 3637 in Second Temple Jewish literature, in order to situate Pauls own understanding of these chapters in the wider Jewish context, and follows with an extensive exploration of Ezekiel 3637 in Pauls own writings. He argues that Paul understood Ezekiels vision of the resurrection of dry bones to have been fulfilled in the present in the gift of Gods Spirit to those in Christ, that Pauls understanding of Ezekiel is then brought to bear on a close exegesis of Romans 6.114, and that Pauls view of the Spirit in light of Ezekiel 3637 helps to explain the strong connection between inaugurated resurrection and baptism.Hayter concludes that, far from being non-bodily, inaugurated resurrection, by baptism in one Spirit, implies incorporation into the resurrected body of Christ.
Daniel W. Hayter was awarded his PhD from King's College London, UK.