The Hindu's sounds right to me.
Jesus referred to reincarnation in the buy-bull. when he introduced John the Baptist he explained that they knew him before as Elijah.
In Gnosticism, John the Baptist was a "personification" of the Old Testament prophet Elijah. As an Old Testament prophet, Elijah did not know the True God (the God of the New Testament), and thus had to be reincarnated in Gnostic theology. As predicted by the Old Testament prophet Malachi, Elijah must "come first" to herald the coming of Jesus Christ.
Modern anthroposophy, initiated by Rudolf Steiner, concurs with the idea that the Baptist was a reincarnation of Elijah, in line with the Synoptic Gospels (e.g. Mark 9:11-13,Matthew 11:13-14,Luke 7:27), although the Gospel of John explicitly denies this (John 1:21). Furthermore, after his beheading at Machaerus his soul is said to have become the inspiring group genius of Christ's disciples. According to Steiner the painter Raphael and the poet Novalis were more recent incarnations of John the Baptist.
2007-12-27 03:35:13
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answer #1
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answered by Gorgeoustxwoman2013 7
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The idea of reincarnation goes all the way back to the emergence of man himself. All primitive indigenous people have some concept of rebirth, either as a member of the tribe or as an animal spirit. Look at the beliefs of the religions that predated all civilizations and you can find reincarnation in some form. The real question is when did the idea of rebirth into the real world change into the idea of rebirth into another, spiritual world.
2007-12-27 03:34:42
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answer #2
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answered by ? 6
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Jewish answer: there are a number of perspectives because of the fact the afterlife isn't defined in Judaism. maximum Jews do no longer concentration on the afterlife, we enable G-d complication approximately that. Jews concentration on the right here-and-now: conserving G-d's commandments, interpreting Torah, looking after others and helping to repair the international. some Jews have faith that when somebody dies and that they are righteous, we flow to connect G-d at modern. If we're not righteous they spend a short while faraway from G-d. some Jews have faith that we enter a snooze-like state till the Messiah/Messianic age and then connect interior the hot international to return. some Jews have faith in reincarnation till the Messiah/Messianic age or till one turns into righteous sufficient to connect G-d. Jews have not got faith in an eternal torment/hell. that would not join the righteous plan of a loving G-d. there is not any communicate or description of “hell” interior the Jewish Tanakh. some have faith the utmost in evil souls merely give up to exist
2016-12-18 09:19:29
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Hinduism. Our scriptures which are more than 5000 yrs old have clear mention of re-birth and its laws
2007-12-27 03:51:32
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answer #4
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answered by ansuya 2
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I say Catholics. My mother was a Catholic who was raised by nuns, she believed in reincarnation and purgatory, yet I have found nothing about either in the bible.
2007-12-27 03:30:54
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answer #5
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answered by Shelly 2
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hinduism prolly
2007-12-27 06:35:23
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answer #6
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answered by itsmee(: 2
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not sure but i think it somthing to do with cows.
2007-12-27 03:29:54
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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