Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened, except it die:
Come on, think about it, when you plant a seed, it has to completely break down and die before it can grow into something new and alive.
Sometimes you have to let something die for something better to be born.
📚 Historical Context
In the first century AD, the Apostle Paul wrote his first letter to the Corinthians to address divisions and misunderstandings in the early church, including skepticism about the resurrection of the dead. In Chapter 15, Paul is responding to those who questioned bodily resurrection by using a simple agricultural analogy, explaining that just as a seed must be buried and die to produce a new plant, human bodies must undergo death for resurrection. This argument was meant to affirm the hope of eternal life based on Christ's own resurrection.
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