look bro i just think you are confusing terms.
You are right, I was confusing terms, this is a new view for me and I haven't worked out all the details yet. Thanks for pointing out my error.
the scripture speaks of "resurrection" both implicitly and explicitly with reference to the raising from the dead of the body. what we have undergone in being born again is "redemption" -- spiritually, for now, while we wait for, as Romans 8 puts it, "the redemption of our bodies"
I agree, and the redemption of our bodies is The Resurrection.
Christ speaks of resurrection both of the saved and the damned; "resurrection" in God's definition is therefore not referring to the new birth, which only the believer experiences. it is specific to the raising of the body.
as what Paul wrote in Romans indicates, for those of us who believe and are being saved, the resurrection is part of our redemption: the final thing that we look forward to. it's no surprise then that there are parallels between our particular spiritual redemption and our particular physical resurrection.
This is the part that I got confused on. I was thinking that the death of the old man and the creation of the new man was The Resurrection but I agree that it's not although I would consider it a resurrection but not The Resurrection.
IMO you're calling 'resurrection' what is accurately called 'redemption'
you cannot be correct to say that 'resurrection' has nothing to do with the raising of the physical body, because Christ's rising from the dead, physically, is called resurrection. you further cannot be correct to describe resurrection as the spiritual renewing of our minds and hearts, because Christ says both the unredeemed and the redeemed will experience resurrection: the unbeliever resurrected to damnation, and the believer resurrected to inherit life.
Even though I was wrong on part of what I said, I wasn't wrong on all points. It is correct to say that the resurrection has nothing to do with raising the physical body and that was the point of the verses that I started this thread with. The Resurrection is the raising up of SEEDS, not bodies.
The same for the resurrection of the unjust. Those bad seeds (spirits) were and will be raised into new bodies.
your proof text in the OP is, as @CS1 pointed out, completely in the context of physical resurrection of the body. when Paul asks if there is no resurrection, why are some people being baptized for the dead? he's not talking about people being baptized for others who are spiritually dead but still alive in the flesh. that'd be nonsense: why not those people get their own living flesh baptized?? he's talking about people who have literally physically died, with some wahoos ((*cough* LDS)) being baptized ((again physically)) as a surrogate, hoping to secure redemption for them when they are eventually resurrected physically.
If the context is physical resurrection of the earthly body then what is "It" in this verse?
(1Co 15:42) So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:
What is the corruption that "it" is sown in? The corruption is this corrupt earthly body. So how can the corruptible body be sown in the corruptible body?
What is the incorruption that "it" is raised in? I think you would agree that the incorruption is the new body.
"It" has to be the spirit. The spirit is sown in these corrupt bodies, it is raised in the new incorruptible bodies.... The Resurrection is the raising of "it", not the corruptible earthly body.
i understand you aren't denying physical resurrection.
but, as i said in the opening of this post, to my understanding you are inappropriately calling 'redemption' resurrection. redemption is the broader term; the redeemed are resurrected later -- because all are resurrected, whether redeemed or not. Jesus says so. for the redeemed, resurrection is part of redemption. for the unredeemed, resurrection is to judgement. in either case resurrection is a term speaking of the physical body. for us, because our resurrection is to life, and is part of our redemption, it is to be expected that it is self-similar. but the resurrection of the unbeliever is not; it's different. i'm repeating it again because it's key to understanding why you're using the word wrong: the unredeemed are also resurrected.
I appreciate you bringing my error to my attention on this, you have helped me understand my own position (lol) much better. To summarize what I believe, I believe The Resurrection is when the spirits of men, both just and unjust, take on their new bodies. And just to be clear, I don't believe the unjust get the same glorified bodies that we get.