Chosen in His Service

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Reincarnation

Reincarnation can be defined as the belief that the spirit of a creature or human can enter into a different creature or human after death. Many New Age groups, Eastern Mystics and occultists believe in reincarnation.

Many in Christendom too adhere to this wrong belief system. They say that John the Baptist claimed to be Elijah reincarnated, and that being ‘born again’ refers to reincarnation.

Luke 1.17 says that the Baptist came ‘in the spirit and power of Elijah’. In the Bible the word spirit has a variety of meanings. It does not always refer to the soul of a human or a demon spirit. In this context the word spirit signifies character. So we can understand Luke 1.17 to mean that John the Baptist came in a character or a personality that was similar to Elijah. In John 1.21, the Baptist himself categorically denied being Elijah.

The born-again experience has nothing to do with reincarnation. Jesus flatly denied that people can be born a second time in a womb (Jn 3. 3-8). The born-again experience is a spiritual regeneration not a physical experience.

The Bible teaches resurrection, not reincarnation. Death is real and we die physically once. After death we are judged and sentenced to either heaven or hell for all eternity. (Heb 9.27; Jn 5.28-29; 1 Cor 15.20-26, Rev 20:4-6, 11-15)

Reincarnation is incompatible with Christianity. Reincarnation knows nothing of divine forgiveness because it presupposes the law of karma. Karma means getting what we deserve. According to karma, a murderer, even if he repents, will have to suffer being murdered in his next life. If one follows this logic, why should anyone help a drowning child or a blind beggar? Aren’t they suffering for their misdeeds in their previous life? If we help them, are we not interfering with their karma?

Instead of alleviating the problem of sin, reincarnation perpetuates it. There is no final forgiveness or final judgment, only endless recycling of karma.

No comments: