There is nothing in
Ezekiel 37 about God promising David the 12 tribes.
1. Nothing?
Eze 37:24 "David My servant shall be king over them, and they shall all have one shepherd; they shall also walk in My judgments and observe My statutes, and do them.
Who is the "them" which David (singular--one shepherd--Ezekiel 34:23-24--, not shepherds--Ezekiel 34:2) will be king over?
Eze 37:19 say to them, 'Thus says the Lord GOD: "Surely I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel, his companions; and I will join them with it, with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they will be one in My hand." '
Eze 37:21 "Then say to them, 'Thus says the Lord GOD: "Surely I will take the children of Israel from among the nations, wherever they have gone, and will gather them from every side and bring them into their own land;
Eze 37:22 and I will make them [12 tribes] one nation in the land, on the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king over them all; they shall no longer be two nations, nor shall they ever be divided into two kingdoms again.
David shall be king over all twelve 12 tribes. Do you see what happens when verses are read out of context?
The mention of David when talking about Judah is a reference to his Tribe promise that it would remain as a lamp in Jerusalem forever. (I Kings 11:36)
2. 1 Kings 11:36 is merely telling us someone from David's line will always rule over Jerusalem. This is confirmed by 1 Kings 15:4:
Nevertheless for David's sake the LORD his God gave him a lamp in Jerusalem, by setting up his son after him and by establishing Jerusalem;
It has nothing to do with David being Judah, but everything to do with God keeping His promise to David's ancestor Judah (Genesis 49:10).
I have nothing against bodily resurrection in the NT as long as it stays in the NT. Bodily resurrection was according to the gospel of Paul if you read II Timothy 2:8.
3. There was not NT when the gospel writers put pen to paper. The only resurrections the gospel writers could refer back to were the ones they witnessed (directly or indirectly) or the ones performed in the OT. It's no wonder some time after witnessing the resurrection in Luk 7, they thought Christ was Elijah. (Matthew 16:13-14)
In the cases of Elijah and Elisha they were cases of resuscitation due to sun-stroke which for the peasants, it was no different from being dead.
4. 1 Kings 17:17--"his breath (ruach) left him". When ruach leaves a man, he dies (Psalms 104:29), Elijah confirmed the son was "mooth" [dead] (vs 20), his nephesh (body) lives again (vs 21).
2 Kings 4:20 When he had taken him and brought him to his mother, he sat on her knees till noon, and then died [mooth].
No indication of sunstrokes or euphemisms. Those premises are being jammed into the text in order to mitigate the obvious.
I am already aware that bodily resurrection is a Christian doctrine. So, I have nothing to say. (II Timothy 2:8)
5. Christianity did not exist until "after" Christ's death. When the resurrection of the dead man in Luke 7:15 occurred, it was still exclusively a Jewish sect. One of the main reasons the people perceived Christ was Elijah (Mar 8:28) was due to the resurrection of the man in Luke 7:15. This act reminded the Jews of the resurrection back to life performed by Elijah in their scriptures. In other words, it was still a Jewish doctrine back in the first century.
Wrong! "Can I bring him back again?" David asked as a joke to his assistants. The truth of his words is in the following up. "I shall go to him; he will never come back to me."
6. That is your sages forced interpretation of the text. Nothing in the text or the grammar of 2 Samuel 12:23 or Psalms 16:10 even remotely implicates this.
The case of Lazarus must have been a parable
6a. Christ's parables were announced (Matthew 13:18,24;31;33;21:33;24:32:Mark 4:13,30; 7:17;12:12;Luk 5:36; 6:39; Luk 8:11; 12:16,41:13:6, and many more) and He always explained the meaning to his disciples (Mark 4:34). No such criteria exist in the account of Lazarus. All of the other events in the gospels, including the resurrection of Lazarus after four days in the grave, were literal.
Isaiah 26:19 is the same as
Ezekiel 37:12 about his vision of the "Dry Bones" aka the Jews in exile leaving the exile and returning to the Land of Israel.
7. It is abundantly clear Isaiah is making a comparison between God and His people's enemies who will not be resurrected (Isa 26:14) and His righteous people who will (Isaiah 26:15,19) as exemplified in Ezekiel 37.
The Suffering Servant of
Isaiah 53 is mentioned by name in Israel 41:8,9 and 44:1,2, 21 as being Israel the People. Then, if you want in the plural, you can read Psalm 44:11-24. That's the same servant in the plural.
8. Throughout Isaiah 52:13–53:12, the servant is depicted as completely righteous yet lowly and afflicted, despised and rejected (before his final exaltation). This cannot possibly apply to the people of Israel as a nation; otherwise, the Torah cannot be true. For the Torah plainly promises, again and again, that if, as a nation, we live righteously before God, we will be the head and not the tail, lifted high and not brought low, blessed and not afflicted, revered and not rejected. This is indisputably clear from Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28. If the people of Israel were righteous, as described in Isaiah 53, then they would be blessed and not cursed. This is referring to one individual as some of the prominent Rabbis conclude.
It does not help to distort the text by adding your words or the words of Paul.
Psa 49:6 Those who trust in their wealth And boast in the multitude of their riches, NKJ
Psa 49:13 This is the way of those who are foolish, And of their posterity who approve their sayings. Selah NKJ
Psa 49:14 Like sheep they are laid in the grave; Death shall feed on them; The upright shall have dominion over them in the morning; And their beauty shall be consumed in the grave, far from their dwelling.
Psa 49:15 But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave, For He shall receive me. Selah
9. God will redeem David's upright soul from the grave. The foolish and those who trust in their wealth will not. Those words were straight from the scriptures. No addition necessary. Paul??? What in the world does Paul have to do with this Psalm?
There is nothing about bodily resurrection in the book of Job. In my flesh I'll see God. It means that still alive then cured of his skin disease he would return to his relation with God. In fact, every thing got back as it was.
10.. Only if interpreted in isolation from the examples in the Tanach of bodily resurrections. You isolate a verse and contrive an interpretation, based on misinterpretations of other passages and proper name assignments. This leads to a gross misunderstanding of the text, as you conclusively demonstrated in points 1 and 2 above.