The Ascension
Yesterday (or last Thursday), Liturgical Churches celebrated the Ascension; i.e., the point when 40 days after the Ressurection, Jesus ascended bodily into heaven. What do y'all think are the implications for that? Do you think of Jesus as still having His ressurected body? Do you think we'll have bodies in heaven?

"Same flesh ressurection"
"Same flesh ressurection" and "glorified body resurrection" ought not be understand as opposites. If the it isn't the same flesh that's glorified, it's not really my body, is it?
To follow up on jwmcmac, traditional Christianity has always been radically anti-dualistic, except for periodic heretical groups like gnostics or manicheans, and then movements following Erasmus, Luther, and Calvin. Soul and body aren't two separate things but different ways of talking about the same thing, a person. Catholics have always frowned down on cremation because the act of choosing to be cremated says "I'm not my body." Not that Catholics would say "I'm just body," but embodiment has always been very important in orthodox catholic Christian thought.
It's also been traditionally believed that whatever traits you have in this body you'll have in the resurrected, glorified body. If you're short now, you'll still be short in heaven because being short is part of who you are now. If you have one kidney now because you gave someone else that other kidney, then you'll very much only have one in heaven, particularly as it was the result of giving. Of course, this is more or less speculation, and it would be foolhardy to guess very specifically (what if you have a bad liver now from birth? from drinking? etc.).
Even if you can't say which group, could you say why it is they take that stance?