

- Reincarnation the missing link in christianity how to#
- Reincarnation the missing link in christianity free#
“For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive” (I Corinthians 15:22).
Reincarnation the missing link in christianity how to#
In other words, Jesus is showing us how to create our future by the use of the Law of Sowing and Reaping. The Golden Rule is usually thought of as a poetic ideal, but it is Jesus’ very practical teaching on karma: “All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them” (Matthew 7:12). The Jews of the Old Testament knew this well, for one tenet of the Mosaic Law states: “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth…” (Leviticus 24:20). If we send forth theft, it is theft that “comes home to roost”–nothing else. “Sowing” is the sending forth of the energy of the act, and “reaping” is our experiencing of its return. If we sow wheat of one variety, will we reap wheat of another variety? No. Someone who commits twenty murders will have to live twenty lives and be murdered exactly as he had murdered others. This is why it can take a chain of lives to repay our karmic debts. The supreme Tribunal demands that retribution be exactly “in the same coin” as that of the original debt.

Karma is not lumped together and paid off by some blanket event or experience, as we can do with our debts through finance companies. And his mental and physical suffering will be exactly like that which he caused to the one he previously harmed. For example, if he broke a friend’s leg and made him a cripple, a friend will break his leg in the future, resulting in his being crippled. The esoteric Christian view, however, is that he who harms another will in the future have the exact thing done to him in the same degree–in a veritable mirror image of his past action. Or that a serious illness, accident, or misfortune may occur to clear up many karmic debts of varying causes. Many hold that karma is a “payment” in general, rather than an exact “payment in kind.” For instance, the karmic repayment of physically injuring another may manifest as an illness or a negative mental state such as depression. It might be more appropriate for a Christian to use the term “sowing and reaping,” but karma is much shorter! Saint Paul warns, “Be not deceived God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap” (Galatians 6:7). In Christianity we speak of karma as the Law of Compensation, or Retribution. I have mentioned karma, so we should consider just what is meant by that term in the Christian context.

We reach the end of the rebirth cycle on this earth plane when all our karmic debts have been paid and we have evolved to that state of perfection in Christ where we no longer need to return to earth. It then chooses which of the vast array it will deal with in the next life and accordingly selects the parents, location, race, sex, religion, etc., that will allow it to accomplish all it has decided with maximum efficiency and benefit. Though we may forget it, we are at all times masters of our destiny and not being swept along blindly by karma–which is really our own creation.īefore a soul reincarnates it is made aware of the sum total of its previous lives: what debts remain to be paid, and what credits may be collected.
Reincarnation the missing link in christianity free#
We reap what we sowed in them through the exercise of our free wills. Each life is the result of the ones preceding it and is shaped accordingly–not in the sense of reward or punishment, but as precise mathematical reaction to our actions in those previous lives.

Contrary to popular thought, reincarnation is very much a Christian belief–first having been an orthodox Jewish belief.īut what is the purpose of reincarnation? The purpose of reincarnation is for us to grow and evolve spiritually until we return to the Godhead from whence we originally came.
