Changing the semantics, doesn't change the meaning. If you 'bury' something like that, you are abolishing it.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/abolish
If something contradicts, it's not true.
I think you have the wrong verse? 2Co 1:9 Indeed, we had the sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves but in Elohim who raises the dead, 2Co 1:10 who rescued us from so great a death, and does rescue, in whom we trust that He shall still rescue us, 2Co 1:11 you also helping together in prayer for us, that thanks shall be given by many on our behalf for the favour bestowed upon us through many.
Your arrogance is kiked out to the max. He didn't abolish it, he finished it. All things return to dust, and the old covenant, which the Hebs broke, has returned to dust. Christ realized it in the most perfect way that it ever could be in His own person. Who do you think you are to say that the divine can't put aside anything He wants to? He put aside the consequence of cleansing the Earth with floodwaters and said He'd never do it again with the promise placed in the sky in the form of, something new, a rainbow.
Your arrogance is kiked out to the max.
Do you have a tendency to project a lot? You believe your perspective is Christ's, when in reality you are an outsider trying to understand ancient texts just as everyone else is.
If it's returning to dust then it's being abolished. Fulfilment doesn't equal abolishment. Everything else you mentioned is truly irrelevant and fallacious.
What does dust do? It feeds new growth. It gets transformed into things that are alive.
Keep kiking on though.
(post is archived)