Quote:Why do you say that life would be "pointless' without reincarnation? Perhaps, after one earth life, the novelty and fresh challenges of very different "worlds" in spiritual dimensions provide different, even better, opportunities for spiritual adventure and growth. Personally, I think the arguments AGAINST reincarnation are compelling. Might not reincarnationists often be too "earthbound" in their mentality?
Berserk
I used to be against the idea of reincarnation. Now I am open minded to it, and believe it probably happens at least in some cases.
One reason why I changed my mind is that there are so many people who simply don't live long enough to get anything whatsoever out of their one life in this world. For example, stillborn babies and babies who die in infancy. If they don't reincarnate, then it seems like they forever miss out on the full earth experience and whatever lessons it can provide.
Another reason is because I learned that reincarnation was a commonly accepted idea among many Jews of Jesus's time, and Jesus did not refute this view; in fact, it seems like he may have endorsed it, at least in one specific case.
Jesus said of John the Baptist, "he is Elijah, if you are willing to accept it." However, John the Baptist himself denied being Elijah when he was asked, but this doesn't really rule it out because Jesus's words override John's, and also people don't usually know their past lives. Luke's Gospel says that John the Baptist came "in the spirit and power of Elijah," which could mean reincarnation or something other than reincarnation.
There are two ways to interpret this issue. Either John the Baptist was the return only of characteristics of Elijah in some special way short of total reincarnation, or else his soul or spirit was actually the return of the same soul/spirit of Elijah. Traditional Christianity takes the first view, but many of the earliest Christians probably would have understood it the other way, as reincarnation. Reincarnation has been a popular belief historically among Jews, including at the time of Jesus. Even today, when Judaism has mostly purged itself of any belief in the afterlife, reincarnation is still taught among some Orthodox Jews.
I think it's an open question whether Jesus was saying that John the Baptist was the literal reincarnation of Elijah. I tend to believe he was. One thing that's for sure is that Old Testament prophecy required the reappearance of Elijah before the coming of the Messiah. That means if John the Baptist was not the reincarnated Elijah, then the prophecy could legitimately be considered false.
I do not think that the famously quoted verse in Hebrews that "man lives once, and then the judgment" necessarily rules out reincarnation. People who believe in reincarnation generally believe that the judgment occurs immediately after death for each soul, so it would be true that you only live one life before being judged -- it's just that you might live again on earth after that too, or else you might live in heaven or hell or any number of possibilities.
It's a difficult issue and I do not think the Bible is very clear about it, either affirming reincarnation or denying it. A lot of Jews in Jesus's time definitely believed in it, because they were expecting the return of dead Biblical prophets in the form of new people walking the earth -- we know this from historical and literary evidence. That is by definition, reincarnation. We may possibly have an example of Jesus giving credence to this belief with his comments about Elijah and John the Baptist.
For this reason, I think Christians should keep an open mind to the possibility of reincarnation. Also, common sense tells me that babies who died without getting to live a real life on earth would feel shafted if they never get another chance to tackle this world. And I don't believe God shafts anybody!
Freebird