Over the years, reincarnation has gained a voice
in today's pop cultural community. Pat speaks out
against this New Age belief by disclosing the origins
and theoretical underpinnings of this mystical teaching.
Reincarnation is an Eastern concept that speaks of
the transmigration of the human soul. In certain cultures
it is believed that the souls of those who die come
back as dung beetles, or as the rain or the dew. In
Nepal they teach that evil men come back as dogs,
so they beat the dogs unmercifully. In India cows,
rats, and grasshoppers are viewed as people who have
been reincarnated.
The overarching concept of reincarnation comes from
the Hindu belief that life and death make up an eternal
wheel. Each individual is attached to the wheel, and
attached to each individual is a karma, or fate. People
supposedly purge their karmas by successive incarnations.
There is no end, only bad incarnations or possibly
good incarnations. There is no understanding, no rules,
no reason; just mindless fate and hopeless attempts
at the cleansing of guilt.
The Bible does not teach this at all. The Bible says,
"It is appointed for men to die once, but after
this the judgment" (Hebrews 9:27). In the story
of the rich man and Lazarus, when the rich man died,
he went to Hades. When Lazarus died, he went to paradise,
called by the Bible "Abraham's bosom." There
was no thought of coming back.
When Jesus Christ was on the Mount of Transfiguration,
He met with Moses and Elijah and He talked with them
(see Matthew 17:1-3). Moses had been dead for years,
but he was still Moses. Moses did not come back as
King Tut or Marie Antoinette. Moses was Moses. He
never lost his identity. The Bible teaches that when
you are born you have the identity you will have for
all eternity (see Matthew 17:1-8, Mark 9:2-8, Luke
9:28-36).
You are never going to lose that identity. You are
absolutely accountable for what you do in this life.
There is no second chance and no opportunity to come
back and purge yourself of the sins and wrongs you
have done. Reincarnation vitiates the major teachings
of Christianity about responsibility and judgment.
There are those who claim that reincarnation is a
Christian concept, but it is not. It is a Hindu concept
that has been totally discredited. It gives people
a false hope, a false expectation, or a false despair
-- false because thinking about what awaits you in
the next life makes it very hard to bring about any
kind of moral reformation in this one. When you have
this concept of karma (the same thought is found in
the Mohammedan concept of kismet), then you say, "Well,
these people are the lower classes and that is their
karma." You do not have to worry about feeding
them, educating them, uplifting them, because they
have that karma. They are where they belong. You will
never find social justice and social progress in countries
where the doctrine of reincarnation has a strong hold.
In comparison, the Bible says we are responsible
for our brothers. We must be kind and good to the
poor and the needy. The Bible teaches that all people
are beloved by God and that they all have an equal
chance, but the chance lasts only during this lifetime.