Waldorf and Sauron wrote:Actually, that doesn't sound so far-fetched to me. Our resurrected bodies will look like our bodies, not our premortal spirits. Jesus, in his perfectly resurrected form, was recognizable to his disciples. Moroni had white skin before and after resurrection (and surely you don't believe everybody will be turned into white people in the resurrection—a far more difficult proposition). Sure, concepts of "race" will be irrelevant, but that doesn't mean all the distinctive parts of our appearances will be gone.
"every limb and joint shall be restored to its body; yea, even a hair of the head shall not be lost; but all things shall be restored to their proper and perfect frame." - Alma 40:23
Now, is it possible we will have perceptions that transcend the way light waves bounce off something? The frequent descriptions of resurrected beings radiating flame and light seems to suggest so.
Jesus also had wounds in his side, hands, and feet, even though he was resurrected. At least one apostle has opined that this is temporary (I want to say it was Elder Holland, but for the life of me I can't find the quote). President Smith in
Doctrines of Salvation, was of the opinion that resurrected bodies wouldn't rise in perfection. Rather, a person who'd lost an arm would slowly regrow it. If that is true, then someone who was recently resurrected could initially look like they did in life and still have to lose certain characteristics (warts, birthmarks, a cleft palate, a given skin color, &c.) before they achieve a celestial body. And to some degree our current bodies resemble our spiritual bodies (
sources), though differences (even drastic differences in some cases) due to heredity, lifestyle, and genetic mutations certainly occur. There are plenty of appearance-determining genetic conditions which, I think, most people would agree will disappear in the resurrection--dwarfism, gigantism, polydactyly, Down Syndrome, kyphosis, intersexuality, microcephaly, &c. Why should other mutations (such as unusual hair color, eye color, or skin color) be be preferentially maintained? They've only arisen as a result of earthly (e.g. Fallen) conditions and have no eternal purpose. I think they'll be purged in the resurrection just like nevi, phocomelia, Proteus syndrome, hypertrichosis, &c. And in the resurrection I don't think we'll even
care that we've lost those traits. We know that resurrected bodies won't have blood in them, so why should it matter if we gain or lose some pigmentation as well?
The relevance of Alma 40:23 to this discussion is the end: "to their proper and perfect frame". Our bodies are currently neither proper nor perfect! Just google 'design flaws human body' and you'll find lists of engineering problems with the human body. Thus Alma 40:23 isn't suggesting that we'll be getting our physical bodies back, just like they were. Rather, that we'll be getting upgrades (i.e. Celestialized bodies). And I think the upgrades will all have a uniform skin color. Every limb, joint, and hair will be restored
and improved. Yes, Moroni was white when he appeared. But, as you point out, words usually fail when describing resurrected beings. Thus Moroni's resurrected whiteness could be literal or a manifestation of his glory. What is the universal resurrected skin color? I have no idea. I'm inclined to say "bright", which isn't a color at all, it's a magnitude.