51 Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
52 In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.
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Paul is sure that the final victory over death is impossible without the complete transformation of the human being, without a qualitative change of human nature itself. This change must make it possible for the person to live in that transfigured world which will become reality after the Savior's return at the end of time. The transfigured person will no longer remain under the power of sin; his nature, damaged by the fall, will be completely healed.
More than that: renewed human nature will change even in comparison with what the human being had before the fall, becoming like the human nature of the risen Christ. But this is impossible if a person does not become a living Torah. The point, of course, is not to memorize the text of the Pentateuch. Nor is it even only that the Torah should become for a person an absolute inner imperative, spiritual and moral; that is still only the inner Torah, whose existence every believing Jew in Gospel times knew.
The living Torah is a state of a person in which his every thought, every word, and every action are determined only by the inner Torah and by nothing else. For this to become possible, the person must be completely free from the power over himself of the sin that entered our life after the fall. It is no accident that the first and second generations of Christians saw the only example of the living Torah in the person of Jesus Christ Himself: apart from Him, no one was free from sin.
But for the first Christians, imitation of Christ was connected with the necessity of becoming oneself, with Christ's help and in Christ, the same living Torah; and this is possible only at the end of the path, at the end of time, with the complete transformation of human nature. Until then, the striving to become a living Torah will inevitably call forth in fallen human nature the resistance of the sin that rules it after the fall, and the more clearly the inner Torah manifests itself in a person, the more strongly the damaged condition of that human nature is revealed.
Thus the Torah gives strength to sin: as long as a person rolls along by inertia, not trying to live according to the inner Torah, the power of sin in him is scarcely revealed. But as soon as he tries to change the spiritual vector of his life, it manifests itself more strongly the more he strives to follow the inner Torah. The Torah reveals in a person the energy of sin, and the Savior helps overcome the sin thus revealed, transfiguring the person's nature together with him so that at the end of time the person is completely freed from the power of sin. Such is the dynamic of Christian life described by the apostle.