“Absent from the body” is an expression that, for the modern reader, may sound like a precise description of a metaphysical state after death. But to understand Paul correctly, we need to look at what he is saying throughout the entire fifth chapter.
The chapter context
In 2 Corinthians 5, Paul builds an argument about the hope of the resurrection. He compares the present body to a tent — temporary, and contrasts it with a “building from God” — the resurrection body. The main point is not what happens between death and resurrection, but that the resurrection is certain and desirable.
“Therefore we are always confident, knowing that while we are at home in the body we are absent from the Lord.” 2 Cor 5:6
“Absent from the body” is a rhetorical pair, not a doctrine
“Whether at home in the body or away from it” is a rhetorical device that covers two opposite states. Paul is saying: in any circumstance, we strive for one thing. He is not developing a teaching about the soul’s bodiless existence.
Moreover, Paul says that it is “better” for him to remain in the body for the sake of the church (Phil 1:24) and that he desires not to be “unclothed” but to be “clothed” with the new reality of the resurrection (2 Cor 5:4). This is not a description of wandering souls, but the longing of the heart for fullness with God.
What Scripture as a whole says about the state between death and resurrection
“For the living know that they will die; but the dead know nothing.” Eccl 9:5
Scripture describes death as a state of rest and waiting for the resurrection — not as a conscious experience outside the body.
Practical meaning
- The main point in 2 Cor 5:9 is not a theory of the intermediate state, but a call to the unchanging direction of the heart.
- Whether sick or healthy, young or old — the goal is one: to be pleasing to God.
- The resurrection is the ultimate hope, not a bodiless “heaven.”
Paul is not teaching here about “out-of-body experiences.” He is teaching about a heart directed toward God — in any state, in any circumstance. That is the center of his message.