Sometimes wishful thinking can lead to odd ideas. Would your parents and their parents not feel similarly as you, that is age differentials that reflected relationships in our earthly life.
Jesus never promised us this sort of outcome in heaven nor does the church teach this. All we can be assured of is a happy existence with our creator in eternity in or outside of time.
As the creed teaches us “the resurrection of the body and life everlasting”.
Rebirth or reborn in a mortal sense is not catholic teaching or belief, but rather new age belief!
Cheers
Gerry
Hello Gavanhe,
In searching for the meaning of life, I developed a model to explain how God might be present in what we experience as reality. (thread: God exists, but How?) In addition to searching for the meaning of life, my motivation for investing as much time as I have in the last twenty-some years, was to find answers that my grandchildren could use in arguments with non-believers.
Non-believers come in three flavors: cynic, skeptic, and materialist. The cynic believes that God doesn’t exist because the presence of evil and suffering argues against a benevolent supreme being. The skeptic believes that God doesn’t exist because there is no proof. The materialist believes that God doesn’t exist because matter alone defines reality and since the laws of physics define matter, there is no reason to invoke a supernatural agency. There are strong arguments supporting each of the positions of non-belief. Of the three, materialism presents the most vociferous and powerful argument against the existence of God, primarily because it is based on the success of science. Consequently, I developed a model of dual reality that describes how God might exist at a deeper reality than the reality science describes and argues that all matter has a spiritual component.
To answer the cynic and the skeptic I called on the scientific theory of parallel worlds (universes) to create answers to some of the most difficult questions that are not normally answered by theology in a way that a cynic or skeptic would accept, hence my view of the nature of heaven. Yes it might be wishful thinking, but wishful thinking is the seed of hope and hope is a Christian virtue.
My parents never gave Heaven (or Hell) a thought. Of course, Jesus never described nor the church taught such an outcome. Parallel world theory is, and certainly was, not common knowledge and most of those that ascribe to it are in the non-believer camp and if such persons realized that it could be used in a religious sense, it would die a quick scientific death.
Personally I can imagine only one happy existence and that is the one I am living right now. The idea of multiple lifetimes is not so much for my benefit as for those that haven’t found the joy, awe, and peace that I have and I would like to think that they could have another shot at it. For example, I would hope that in a subsequent lifetime the child born with spinal bifida or those with any number of other maladies would be born with the same body but without the malady. Being reborn into the same body I believe is called resurrection; be reborn in a different human or non-human body is called reincarnation. Since I begin my prayers each morning with the Apostle’ Creed I believe in the resurrection of the body and life everlasting. And that, of course, is a Catholic teaching and not “new age”.
I am a devout Catholic, and if I thought anything I wrote or write is in error, I would immediately renounce it. I have not been prompt in answering your post because it encouraged me to go back and read Pope John Paul II’s encyclical letter, “Fides Et Ratio” on the relationship between faith and reason. I only got halfway through before my eyes glazed over, but I found nothing in what I read that would give me pause about what I think, in fact, there is a lot of encouragement in that document for individuals to think and reason as long as it gives precedence to faith. Here are just three of the many quotes I gathered:
- “The human mind plans the way, but the Lord directs the steps.” This is to say that with the light of reason human beings can know which path to take, but they can follow that path to its end, quickly and unhindered, only if with a rightly tuned spirit they search for it within the horizon of faith. Therefore, reason and faith cannot be separated without diminishing the capacity of men and women to know themselves, the world and God in an appropriate way.”
- Although each individual has a right to be respected in his own journey in search of the truth, there exists a prior moral obligation, and a grave one at that, to seek the truth and to adhere to it once it is known”.
- Moreover, the first absolutely certain truth of our life, beyond the fact that we exist, is the inevitability of our death. Given this unsettling fact, the search for a full answer is inescapable. Each of us has both the desire and the duty to know the truth of our own destiny. We want to know if death will be the definitive end of our life or if there is something beyond—if it is possible to hope for an after-life or not.
Once again, thank you for your response,
Yppop