yoUR Psychic - George P. Butler
Reincarnation and Karma in the Bible
by Jeanine Miller
Generally speaking, people are unaware that there are definite references in the
New Testament that unequivocally imply reincarnation. In fact, many ask why, if
the subject of reincarnation is so important from the religious point of view,
there is so little mention of it in the Bible.
One obvious answer is that the reality of reincarnation, at least in the New
Testament, was simply taken for granted, just as we take for granted that a
healthy tree, which has lost its leaves for the winter, will get a new crown of
leaves in the following spring. Let us examine the evidence which leads to this
conclusion.
The first sign of a taking for granted of the doctrine is found in Matthew,
11:13- 14; 16:13. Jesus is asking his disciples Whom do men say that I, the son
of man, am, (Matt. 16:13) and the disciples answer Some say that thou art John
the Baptist, some Elias and others Jeremias or one of the prophets. How could
Jesus be thought to be any of these except in a past life? Elias and Jeremias
lived centuries before. As for John the Baptist, since he had recently been put
to death, there could not have been a reincarnation, but it seems that some
people thought that his spirit could have inspired Jesus. If people could speak
in this way they obviously took the doctrine for granted. That Jesus is actually
asking the question shows he is aware of the doctrine and considers it valid.
Jesus himself tells his disciples who John the Baptist really was in the past:
For all prophets and the law prophesied until John. And if ye will receive it,
this is Elias which was for to come. He that hath ears to hear let him hear.
(Matt. 11:13-14)
So Elias, according to Jesus himself, came back to earth in the personality of
John the Baptist. This is repeated or confirmed in Matt. 17:12: But I say unto
you that Elias is come already and they knew him not, but have done unto him
whatsoever they listed. Likewise shall also the son of man suffer of them. 13.
The disciples understood that he spake unto them of John the Baptist.
The third reference comes as a question concerning a blind man. The disciples
ask Jesus: Who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind?" (John
9:2-3) How could a man sin before he was born, unless the sin was committed in
another life? The apostles are not asking what kind of sin resulted in
blindness, but *who* sinned, taking for granted that the act of sinning itself
brought about this dire result.
Furthermore, the sin could have been committed either by the man in a previous
existence, or by his parents. This implies both that the sins of the parents are
visited upon the children, which is a biblical doctrine, and that the soul
exists and therefore pays for the transgressions of previous lives.
Jesus does not rebuff the apostles for asking such a question. If the doctrine
had been alien to his mind, he would have told them that they were talking
nonsense. He simply takes a different attitude. His answer: Neither hath this
man sinned nor his parents, but that the works of God should be made manifest in
him, (John 9:3) implies that the doctrine of karma (and therefore its corollary,
reincarnation) is not always understood rightly and that the calamities that
befall humans should not necessarily be laid at its door.
Superficially we might take the meaning that the works of God should be made
manifest as referring to his own healing ministry; that it can be shown that he,
as God incarnate, can heal all, even blindness from birth. But I would tend to
think that his answer has several levels of much deeper meaning, one possibly
being that the man's blindness (if we take it as a literal physical blindness)
was not brought about by sin but by a deliberate choice by the soul for a
certain crucial experience necessary for its development. Out of that experience
the soul would emerge triumphant through its perfect faith and trust in the
Christ, by which could have been meant the external Jesus Christ or as the inner
divinity to which Saint Paul referred when he said: My little children of whom I
travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you. (Galatians 4:19)
Transformation of the Inner Man
That the doctrine of karma (and reincarnation) is all too often used as a crude
palliative, to resolve problems that appear unresolvable, may have been
understood to some extent in biblical times, even as it is nowadays in certain
cultures and communities. This may be gathered from Leviticus where we find the
following: And if a man cause a blemish in his neighbor as he hath done, so
shall it be done to him. Breach for breach, eye for eye, tooth for tooth; as he
hath caused a blemish in a man, so shall it be done to him again. (Lev.
24:19-20; cf. Ex. 21:24. Deut. 19:21)
In this Jewish expression of the law there seems to be no room for the
transformation of the man, the change of heart and mind that would automatically
bring about a different reaction. Jesus seems to have tried to counteract this
notion of an inexorable law that leaves no room for human change of attitude in
his new commandment: that ye love one another. This commandment superseded all
the others, and is the law of laws which conveys compassion, forgiveness and
grace, and implies the possibility of transformation.
With regard to karma, an interesting passage is found in Luke concerning the
Galileans whose blood Pilate has shed in the midst of their sacrifices. (Luke
13:1) In his commentary, Jesus says: Suppose ye that these Galileans were
sinners above all the Galileans because they suffered such things? I tell you
nay; but except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish." (Luke 13:2-3)
The implication is that calamity does not occur to some because they have sinned
more than others, but that all of us have wrong attitudes, and wrong attitudes
lead us into misfortunes of one kind or another. To change one's attitude, to
transform one's self, is the whole purpose of the many parables by which Jesus
taught his disciples.
The important point of the Gospels' teachings is the transformation of the inner
man, the psychological man.
In its esoteric sense Jesus' remark to Nicodemus: Thou must be born again,
cannot be interpreted as referring to reincarnation, but to that inner
transformation of man, equivalent to a new birth. That alone can transmute us
into new beings capable of entering into that spiritual state called the kingdom
of heaven. This is the main concern of the Gospels and of Jesus' teachings.
This article is from the files of   Share International
© Jeanine Miller
Changes last made on: Sat Jan 3 16:30:00 2004