Reincarnation makes no sense to those who think it through. I think people adopt it simply because they like the idea that they used to be someone else, or they’ll come back as another person.
Logically, it makes no sense. When did your first “you” begin? When will you stop being reincarnated? For what purpose are people/animals/etc. being reincarnated? What happens when the reincarnation ends?
I have never heard of any Jews believing in reincarnation. This must be something new.
These questions can be answered, and Reincarnation DOES make sense, actually. While Catholics have the doctrine of Purgatory, the commonly held Protestant belief which rejects the idea of Purgatory in favor of a “1 life, 1 chance” policy is far LESS logical than Reincarnation if one actually worships what one believes to be a just God. The story I like to tell is thus:
Two children. #1 is raised by devout Catholic Parents who send their child to Catholic school The child has an aunt on one side who is a Carmelite, and his parents take him to visit her once or twice a year, where she lets him know she is praying for him to become holy. He also has an uncle who is a parish priest, and is given the chance to spend time with him, serve as an altar boy, and is shown how rewarding a celibate life of service can be. After graduating, he decides to become a Cistercian, spends his days in prayer and service, and becomes a Saint in Heaven when he dies.
#2 is born of unwed parents. His father abandons him in infancy. He is raised in a community where there are few positive male role models, as many are either in prison or well on their way to earning a ticket there in the future. This boy joins a gang, murders a few people, gets hooked on methamphetamines, and dies in a gun battle with the police, where his shoots a 6 year old kid who is caught in the crossfire. This boy never had the chance to hear God’s word in a heartfelt way, was raised in an environment where gang behaivor, drug use, and murder were par for the course.
My question is, if there is truly a just God, how can he judge these two men on the same scale, after their death? If there is Purgatory, there is the possibility of repentance and reparation for one’s sins after death. If not, Reincarnation is the only way there could be a just God.
Also, Reincarnation explains WHY these two kids are born into such different circumstances. They are so because the circumstances are consequences of choices made in past incarnations, which find their fruits in the current life.
As for the question of “when” one’s first life began, the answer is really “never”. Those who believe in Reincarnation believe that humans are the apex of consciousness, waiting to rejoin itself with God in eternity. That consciousness would lie sleeping in rocks,then begin to wake in plants, become slowly more and more awake in higher and higher animals, and finally pass the barrier into human incarnation. After ones last incarnation, ones individuality is dissolved into the unity of the divine.
As for the “reason” behind reincarnation, this requires a fundamentally different idea of what “the world” is which is completely different than the one held by mainstream Christianity. In many forms of Indian Spirituality, (there really is no such thing as “Hinduism”), The world is seen as a manifesation of God Himself. That in the beginning, God was alone, and wished for there to be smeone to have relationship with, so God created the world from his own essence, then allowed each “thing” in the world to forget that he was really himself, hiding from himself in a kind of cosmic hide and seek game. When one gets to the end, realizes that one’s sense of personal separateness is false, and rejoins the unity of God, then there is no longer reincarnation, because the individualized “self” ceases to exist.
I’m not arguing that this is true, nor do I believe it to be so. All I’m saying is that one shouldn’t start to make fun of someone else’s beliefs or call them “illogical” when one doesn’t understand them in context.