Something in this thread got me to thinking about the similarity between Catholic's purgatory and the CoC's "paradise" or "resting place" or, sometimes, "grave." I don't know what all churches of Christ teach on this, but I've always been taught that for those of us who die before the Last Judgment, we go to one of two resting places--the unpleasant one for those going to hell and the pleasant one, called Paradise, for those going to heaven. So, Stephanie, unlike what your father told you, I was never taught that we spend this time in a sleepy, unconscious state. When Jesus comes back, that is when we are freed from this grave/resting place and meet Jesus in heaven, etc.
When I read about purgatory, it really seems a lot like what we believe, although still different. I mean, in the CoC, when you die, you receive what Catholics would call a particular or individual judgment until the Last Day when you are resurrected and receive your full reward, something Catholics might call the general judgment, according to that article I linked to. I guess the big difference is mainly that in Catholicism, it's a (tortuous?) cleansing process.
But about the resurrection, yeah, it wasn't until recently that, despite whatever my church may have taught all along, I began to really believe in a truly bodily resurrection, and for some reason I used to think that when Christ arose from the grave, he was more of a ghost, but that is so ridiculous when I think about it now. I began to really learn about resurrection when I began reading some stuff by N.T. Wright, if any of you have heard of him. Smart dude. But yeah, I think my early thoughts on Jesus' and our own resurrections did have something to do with modern views of "physical" and "spiritual."









