W
water
Guest
He was a JewishDo we really know what He looked like the first time?
He was a JewishDo we really know what He looked like the first time?
Thanks. I might do that from time to time.:yup:Ohh, hehe, youāre tricky.
I hope one day we all have the same faith and belief. I am praying for it everyday.I am glad that you are believing in Christ. I probably read some info on the belief of āHindu Christianityā and hopefully we can have some more discussions - or I can welcome you to start a new thread on other Hindu beliefs that you hold.
That would be great, but if it takes you too long to start, I willThanks. I might do that from time to time.:yup:
Same here, Water.That would be great, but if it takes you too long to start, I will
It was nice discussing with you, Ahimsa.
I donāt think anything with either the Hebrew or Christian Scriptures would point towards reincarnation. If it does, it would have to be interpretted so losely so as to lose its meaning.Yes, the CCC says that there is just one birth and one death (that is, physical birth and physical death on earth). But is there a way in which reincarnation might be consistent with Catholic thought?
Hypothesis: Reincarnation existed in the pre-Christian world, and when Christ came, Christ ended the reincarnation process totally.
Could someone hold such a view, and be within the Catholic framework?
On the whole, Iām in agreement with G.K. Chesterton on thisā¦In the one case, the tenth is collected by men who die; but in the other case, by him who is declared to be living.
One might even say that Levi, who collects the tenth, paid the tenth through Abraham, because when Melchizedek met Abraham, Levi was still in the body of his ancestor.
But Reincarnation is not really a mystical idea. It is not really a transcendental idea, or in that sense a religious idea. Mysticism conceives something transcending experience; religion seeks glimpses of a better good or a worse evil than experience can give. Reincarnation need only extend experiences in the sense of repeating them. It is no more transcendental for a man to remember what he did in Babylon before he was born than to remember what be did in Brixton before he had a knock on the head. His successive lives need not be any more than human lives, under whatever limitations burden human life. It has nothing to do with seeing God or even conjuring up the devil. In other words, reincarnation as such does not necessarily escape from the wheel of destiny; in some sense it is the wheel of destiny. And whether it was something that Buddha founded, or something that Buddha found, or something that Buddha entirely renounced when he found, it is certainly something having the general character of that Asiatic atmosphere in which be had to play his part. And the part be played was that of an intellectual philosopher with a particular theory about the right intellectual attitude towards it.
Tell that to Hasidic Jews.I donāt think anything with either the Hebrew or Christian Scriptures would point towards reincarnation.
Iāve toyed with something like thisāmy version was that reincarnation is what happens if you have not decisively either accepted or rejected the Gospel. But I donāt think it works. There are probably a number of reasons, but the clincher for me is that it implies a body-soul dualism that I donāt think is compatible with orthodox Christianity. Souls are not the sort of thing that can just be plugged into a bunch of different bodies. The soul-body is a unique compound, and its separation is a temporary thing. A soul without a body is a ghost that yearns for its bodyānot any body but the body proper to it. I donāt think one can maintain strict soul-body dualism without making nonsense of orthodox Christian eschatology.Yes, the CCC says that there is just one birth and one death (that is, physical birth and physical death on earth). But is there a way in which reincarnation might be consistent with Catholic thought?
Hypothesis: Reincarnation existed in the pre-Christian world, and when Christ came, Christ ended the reincarnation process totally.
Could someone hold such a view, and be within the Catholic framework?
I am too, and I donāt think Chestertonās argument really pertains to the Eastern version. What Chesterton didnāt know about Eastern religions was pretty vast (Chesterton admitted this, though he added, illogically in my opinion, that he didnāt like what he knewāhe clearly didnāt know enough to have a meaningful opinion one way or the other). Chesterton did, however, have a lot of experience of British proto-New-Age circles (you can read about this in his Autobiography). New Agers do think reincarnation is a mystical idea.On the whole, Iām in agreement with G.K. Chesterton on thisā¦
But how does that pertain to reincarnation and Catholicism?Tell that to Hasidic Jews.![]()
You claimed that the Hebrew scriptures would not point to reincarnation. Just wanted to clarify on that particular point.But how does that pertain to reincarnation and Catholicism?
For that matter, many other Jews disagree with these Hasidic Jewish teaching-- so they certainly donāt speak for all Jews as far as I can tell.
The only other Catholic teaching that could even remotely be connected with reincarnation is perhaps the the idea of the bilocation of the saints. In this sense, moving purely in the Spirit, they are somehow, by Godās grace, able to be in more than one place at once.I am too, and I donāt think Chestertonās argument really pertains to the Eastern version. What Chesterton didnāt know about Eastern religions was pretty vast (Chesterton admitted this, though he added, illogically in my opinion, that he didnāt like what he knewāhe clearly didnāt know enough to have a meaningful opinion one way or the other). Chesterton did, however, have a lot of experience of British proto-New-Age circles (you can read about this in his Autobiography). New Agers do think reincarnation is a mystical idea.
I suppose it is insofar as it presupposes the existence of a soul, which is the truly mystical idea. But Hinduism and Buddhism donāt claim that thereās anything particularly special about having past lives in and of itself (as Chesterton suggests, this belief was just part of the cultural equipment of ancient India). What is mystical is the *transcendence *of the cycle of reincarnation and the achievement of Brahma or Nirvana (or more temporary states that are foretastes of this ultimate liberation).
Edwin
Yes. But this is apparently a teaching within Hasidic Judaism, a retrofit teaching at that which doesnāt seem to be very present within the earliest Jewish writings that Iām aware of.You claimed that the Hebrew scriptures would not point to reincarnation. Just wanted to clarify on that particular point.![]()
Actually, the idea that one soul can be in a heavenly realm, and also reincarnate on earth, is explicit in the Tibetan traditions; and, I would suggest, implicit in certain Hindu traditions. Certain West African traditions also have some idea of this double āreincarnation/non-reincarnationā after-death process ā one part of the soul reincarnates, another part does not.Again if all are alive in Christ, if Christ is indeed our very life, then this would indicate that one man was reincarnated into billions of lives throughout the ages-- and yet this one man is still alive so he was able to reincarnate into billions while still alive-- and in heaven even. This kind of thought does not appear to exist within the various forms of reincarnation that Iām aware of. If this were true, then it would imply that Christ himself is the living embodiment of The Absoluteā something which no doctrine of reincanation, except perhaps that of the āoversoulā, ever dared to teach let alone even think of.
Do you think Hasid is a valid expression of Jewish faith?Yes. But this is apparently a teaching within Hasidic Judaism, a retrofit teaching at that which doesnāt seem to be very present within the earliest Jewish writings that Iām aware of.
I think thereās many valid teachings within Hasdic Judaism. Reincarnation isnāt one of them though. It doesnāt seem to appear in Jewish literature until after A.D. 1000 as far as I can tell. Likewise, at one time is was beleived by some that one could be reincarnated into an animal for example. But this has since mostly dissapeared. For those Jews who do hold to some kind of reincarnation doctrine today, it seems to be a belief of strictly human to human enfleshment.Do you think Hasid is a valid expression of Jewish faith?
That makes no sense. You implicitly admit in your later post that many medieval Jews believed in reincarnation (you imply that Maimonides rejected it, which may well be true but Iād like to see a citation). These were obviously Orthodox Jews, because nothing else existed (except for the Karaites and Samaritans). Orthodox Judaism today, like most of the more liberal denominations, has become more rationalistic and has purged out many of the mystical elements that existed in the past.Yes. But this is apparently a teaching within Hasidic Judaism, a retrofit teaching at that which doesnāt seem to be very present within the earliest Jewish writings that Iām aware of.
Many people can reinterpret a particular passage in order to conform to later thoughts. But Orthodox Judaism (what I consider to be the modern form of Judaism which remains closest to the Pharisaic thoughts portrayed in Jesusā age) certainly does not allow such teachings. They never did as far as I can tell.
Absolutely not! Re-incarnation would make the Passion of our Lord and Saviour un-necessary. If re-incarnation were true, it would mean that we could save ourselves from damnation by our OWN efforts. Jesus didnāt die for the fun of it! Itās also beleived by many that Jesusā death wiped out a whole heap of Karma which again is utter nonsense.Yes, the CCC says that there is just one birth and one death (that is, physical birth and physical death on earth). But is there a way in which reincarnation might be consistent with Catholic thought?
It never did exist and so it never ended! Itās a doctrine of the devil!Hypothesis: Reincarnation existed in the pre-Christian world, and when Christ came, Christ ended the reincarnation process totally.
No!Could someone hold such a view, and be within the Catholic framework?