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2006-11-01 19:37:48 · 17 answers · asked by greeneyegirl8 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

17 answers

I don't know if the reincarnation exist but i do know that i was born before this life and i am very sure that i will have more lives after this one. When i have the DEJA-VU or when i see somebody for the first time and i am sure i know him from somewhere it has a reason!!!!

2006-11-01 19:53:28 · answer #1 · answered by suzy 2 · 2 0

I believe in reincarnation, there are a few cases I have met and they can remember about as to the place they were born and to which family and to the extend that the family still exist.

2006-11-01 19:43:26 · answer #2 · answered by salam a 2 · 1 0

I, personally, do not believe in reincarnation.....

I do, however, believe we came from a place and are born here from that place.... Consider Ephesians 1....

Yet, I also believe when we die here, we are born again, there....

We are, according to 1 Corinthians 15, going to get a new body when we are born again.....

I believe this.... Just as I believe the conscious is a body in itself waiting to be free of the structure which God created for this life.


Your sister,
Ginger,
gmcfayden@yahoo.com

2006-11-01 19:46:59 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Christ Jesus adamantly pointed out that it is appointed Man ONCE to live and ONCE to die. Hence, reincarnation is a ruse, a lie, a falsehood of Eastern Mysticism that is not real, nor does it, or did it ever, actually exist. It is entirely rooted in demonic deception, having the sole purpose to convince you NOT to work out the Salvation of your soul in this current lifetime (since you, supposedly, have many lives yet to live to accomplish this aim). In this way upon your death, the Demonic Realm and Satan are victors over your soul, and your spiritual fate is eternally sealed into their hands. It's sheer Evil Genius. Countless of unwitting people have entered, and continue to enter the Jaws of Hell because of reincarnation.

Reincarnation has its origin in the progressive stellar phases of the star Sirius B that was revered in ancient times. It is called the Great Begetter God. Sirius B was first a Blue Supergiant, then it shrank into an F-1 class star due to a cometary impact event, then after it depleted its hydrogen it hyperdilated 100 times its mass into a Red Giant Star, and then it depleted its helium and exploded into a nebula, shrinking into a White Dwarf Star. These stellar metamorphic phases were perceived by the Ancients as the great deity undergoing “reincarnation”. This phenomenon was then adopted in emulation and copied by ignorant man and infiltrated into Eastern Mysticism, but the fact is it simply does not exist as a genuine condition or process in the human spiritual experience. It's entirely bogus.

2006-11-01 20:38:07 · answer #4 · answered by . 5 · 0 2

Reincarnation is a truth and if a book denies it...truth does not change.

Our soul starts its journey in chemicals...and after each awakening find itself in plants, animals and finally human beings.

As humans we have to learn millions of lessons of pains and joys, richness and poverties, cruelty and kindness, killing and be killed, ...till we reach our next mind evolution i.e. Divinity.

One life is not sufficient for all these lessons. hence our soul after death goes to another body to learn other sets of lessons

The paradoxes as to why some are born rich some poor, some without mind or without limbs...some from poverty going to utter richness...some spiritual from childhood... can not be explained without Reincarnation


Many during the hypnotic state have remembered their last birth.

Why we dont remember past birth? Because Nature does not want us to get entangled to our last relations...so that we can freely learn new lessons...that z why She takes away the gross memory at death..and leads soul to new body with the resultant progress earned during last births.

2006-11-01 20:48:16 · answer #5 · answered by ۞Aum۞ 7 · 1 0

Life after death - certainly - but not through reincarnation! We were created with a spirit, while the body can die the spirit cannot, therefore life continues. The real question is where?

The Bible teaches us that our final destination is determined by whether we accept God's gift that was offered through the sacrifice of His Son.

2006-11-01 19:46:34 · answer #6 · answered by Tony S 2 · 0 2

As a Hindu I believe that reincarnation is part of the cycle of our being. Samsara (the process of birth, death, birth, death, birth, death) occurs all the time all around us. Karma is the fuel of samsara. Moksha (mukti/nirvana) is the aim of all Hindus : to end samsara and be united with God. Ultimately all souls will return to God.

2006-11-01 21:07:06 · answer #7 · answered by gabriel_zachary 5 · 1 0

I believe that most people reincarnate, and the wicked ones get destroyed. I believe we can be reincarnated as animals, humans, humaniods(Elves, lizardmen etc) I believe some people reincarnate to other planets because this one is no longer fitting for thier evolution. to larry: early christians believed in reincarnation

So if reincarnation was an idea in currency with early Christians, why have all traces of it disappeared from the Christian religion we know today?

By the early fourth century, strong Christian factions were vying with each other for influence and power, while at the same time the Roman Empire was beginning to fall apart. In A.D. 325, in a move to renew the unity of the empire, the absolute dictator Emperor Constantine convened the leaders of the feuding Christian factions at the Council of Nicaea. He offered to throw his imperial power behind the Christians if they would settle their differences and agree on a single creed. Decisions made at this first council set the foundation for the Roman Catholic Church. (Soon after, the books of the Bible were fixed too.) For the sake of unity, all beliefs that conflicted with the new creed were banished; in the process the factions and writings that supported reincarnation were thrown out.

Then, with the applause and support of the Christian leaders, Constantine moved to eliminate competing religions, and to make his personal grip on the Empire even more absolute. The result of the marriage between church and imperial state was a new Church made in the image of the autocratic Roman Empire. This is why, according to some historians, the Church exalts unquestioned central authority, imposes a singular dogmatic creed on its followers, and works so hard to stamp out divergent ideas. This is important, because reincarnation fell outside the official creed.

Apparently some Christians continued to believe in reincarnation even after the Council of Nicaea, because in A.D. 553 the Church found the need to single out reincarnation and condemn it explicitly. At the Second Council of Constantinople the concept of reincarnation, bundled together with other ideas under the term "pre-existence of the soul", was decreed to be a crime worthy of excommunication and damnation ("anathema"):

If anyone assert the fabulous pre-existence of souls, and shall assert the monstrous restoration which follows from it: let him be anathema.

Why would the Church go to such lengths to discredit reincarnation? The implicit psychology of reincarnation may be the best explanation. A person who believes in reincarnation assumes responsibility for his own spiritual evolution through rebirth. He does not need priests, confessionals, and rituals to ward off damnation (all ideas, incidentally, that were not part of Jesus' teachings). He needs only to heed his own acts to himself and others. A belief in reincarnation eliminates the fear of eternal hell that the Church uses to discipline the flock. In other words, reincarnation directly undermines the authority and power of the dogmatic Church. No wonder reincarnation made the Defenders of the Faith so nervous.

Despite the decree of 553, belief in reincarnation persisted among the rank and file. It took another thousand years and much bloodshed to completely stamp out the idea. In the early thirteenth century, the Cathars, a devout and enlightened sect of Christians who believed in reincarnation, flourished in Italy and southern France. The pope launched a crusade to stop their heresy, a half million people were massacred whole villages at a time, and the Cathars were totally wiped out. This purging set the tone for the brutal Inquisition that began soon after. Not only was a belief in reincarnation cause for persecution, but so was belief in any metaphysical idea that fell outside the bounds of Church dogma.

The murderous efficiency of the Inquisition proved effective. The persecution by the institutional Church has scarred our collective psyche and surrounded us with an invisible fence dividing what is safe from what is dangerous to believe. Since then, people who harbor forbidden ideas have learned to keep their thoughts to themselves. Our cultural memory still carries the fear of reprisal for publicly associating with any occult practices, the use of psychic powers, or a belief in reincarnation.

Here it is, the source of the double standard. No wonder so many people today believe in reincarnation privately but are afraid that if they come out publicly, they will be attacked for being weird�the modern word for heresy. Maybe by understanding where this fear comes from we can negate its hold on us and turn off the invisible fence. So when our children speak of past lives, we can follow our hearts and not our fears�and believe them.

2006-11-01 19:44:56 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I'll let you know when I meet someone that's been reincarnated, OK?

2006-11-01 19:40:22 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Some believe in reincarnation. I don't- the bibles pretty clear that its mans destinty to die once, then the judgement from God.

2006-11-01 19:42:04 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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