Reincarnation -- Excerpts from Chapter 13
Initially, this chapter was just a section in the previous chapter, but it became so large that it turned into its own chapter. A working understanding of reincarnation is second in importance only to exploring the nature of the soul itself, and is vital to interpreting events and the world around us. For without that understanding, nothing makes any sense. In a spiritual society, reincarnation would be considered an indisputable fact, and no one would question its reality. With the concept accepted as "the way things are," society would be fully engaged with its consequences for daily life:
- No one would be intolerant of another's race, skin color, gender or sexual orientation because everyone would know that their soul will incarnate, or has already incarnated, as someone of every race, skin color, gender and sexual orientation
- We would have enormous concern for the environment because everyone would know that their soul will reincarnate within a few years and will want breathable air, drinkable water, swimmable rivers and oceans, and freedom from radioactivity
- Richer nations would share with poorer neighbors, so that incarnating into a poorer nation isn't a living hell
- War would cease because we will need many future physical bodies that are not shot up or blown up, and still have some limbs left
- The level of compassion would increase so that the world will be a better place to live in when we return.
Given this, why isn't reincarnation uppermost on everyone's mind? Because ...
Incarnation Waves
- On a much larger scale, the phenomenon of Incarnation Waves involves hundreds, if not thousands, of souls incarnating together to work on some project of historical proportions. For example, author Marge Rieder tells of a group of Celtic priests who fled to Ireland from England following Rome's conversion to Christianity in 391 CE and Theodosius' edict that all citizens of conquered countries must also convert. The Roman Army pulled out of England in 406 CE, so the Celtic priests apparently fled during that 15-year period. This group got together again during America's Civil War, all living in the small town of Millboro, VA., where they ran an "underground railway" that smuggled Union soldiers and escaped slaves north behind Union lines, safe from the Confederates. Of course, such a risky endeavor would have required complete trust among the group, which would not be possible among "just a bunch of strangers."
- Many members of the group reunited in the late 20th century in southern California, where synchronicity brought them all to Marge Rieder, a regression therapist. One by one, her clients began to recall their lives in Millboro, and whole family trees emerged … along with a fascinating story of intrigue and danger. (See Marge's books, Mission to Millboro and Return to Millboro.)
- In Alive 5 times, Allen Eastman documents another wave of the people involved in Lincoln's intended kidnapping and eventual assassination, who also reunited 100 years later to do the same thing to President Kennedy. According to the author's sources, the co-incarnation correlations are:
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