The usual answer for this is that we're all resurrected looking about 33 years oldthe aged if jesus was, i said, exactly. And also, aquinas says, it's the age where our intellects have matured and our bodies haven't started to decline yet. I got to say, i really liked being 33. Rit me too. Ok, next solution. So god resurrect both of us. He leaves a hole where my left hand and part of my right ear was. He goes back in time and he fills in the gap with the hand and ear of the younger me. Ha, so one of the main issues with that as it looks like you could end up
In our final episode on monsters, we investigate why people who eat people are the funkiest people in the afterlife. We talk to a man who has actually eaten parts of other people, many times, about why he thinks consuming human flesh should be normalized. We then consider the age-old question of how God is supposed to resurrect a cannibal and all of his victims when most of the flesh of the victims would also be a part of the cannibal. Some of the best minds in Western philosophy and Christian theology thought about this question, including Leibniz, Aquinas, and Augustine. Co-hosted by Christina van Dyke, featuring artist and cannibal Rick Gibson and philosopher Dean Zimmerman.
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