REINCARNATION/PART 11
CHAPTER XI
Arguments
Against Reincarnation
The honest
consideration of any subject necessitates the examination of "the other
side of the case," as well as the affirmative side. We have given much
space to the presentation and consideration of the arguments advanced by those
convinced of the truth of Reincarnation, and before closing our work we think
it well to give at least a little glimpse of "the other side" as it
is presented by the opponents of the doctrine, together with the reply to the
same usually made by the Reincarnationists.
The first adverse
argument usually presented is that the advocates of Reincarnation have not
established the existence of a "soul" which may reincarnate; nor have
they proven its nature, if it does exist. The natural reply to this is that the
doctrine of Reincarnation is not called upon to establish the proof of the
existence of a "soul," as the idea of existence of the soul
practically is universal, and, therefore, "axiomic"—that is, it is a
truth that may be considered as an "axiom," or self-evident truth,
worthy of being assumed as a principle, necessary to thought on the subject, a
proposition which it is necessary to take for granted, an established principle
of thought on the subject. Strictly speaking, perhaps the fact of the existence
of the soul is incapable of material proof, except to those who accept the fact
of proven "spirit return," either in the shape of unmistakable
manifestation of the disincarnate soul by materialization, or by equally
unmistakable manifestation in the shape of communications of some sort from
such discarnate soul. Science does not admit that there are any real
"proofs" of the existence of a "soul" which persists after
the death of the body—but all religious, and at least the older philosophical
thought, generally agrees that the existence of such a soul is a self-evident
fact, needing no proofs. Many regard the statement of Descartes: "I think,
therefore I am," as a logical proof of the existence of an immaterial
soul, and others hold that the self-consciousness of every human being is
sufficient proof that the Ego, or "I," is a something immaterial,
ruling the material body which it inhabits. And so the Reincarnationists claim
that this demand upon them for proof of the existence of the soul is not a fair
one, because such discussion belongs to the more general field of thought; that
they are justified in starting with the idea that the soul does exist, as an
axiomic truth; and that their real task is to establish, not that the soul
exists, but that it reincarnates after the death of the body. As Figuier says,
"The difficulty is not to prove that there is a spiritual principle in us
that resists death, for to question the existence of this principle we must
doubt thought. The true problem is to ascertain if the spiritual and immortal
principle within us is going to live again after death, in ourselves or
somebody else. The question is, Will the immortal soul be born again in the
same individual, physically transformed—into the same person?" As to
the other objection, that the Reincarnationists have not proven the nature of
the soul, to which many of the advocates of the doctrine feel it necessary to
reply at great length and with much subtle reasoning, we feel that the
objection is not well taken. So far as Reincarnation is concerned, if it be
taken as an axiom that the soul really exists, that is sufficient as a
beginning for the argument in favor of the doctrine, and the proof or disproof
of any special theory regarding the nature of the soul is outside of the main
question, so we shall not consider it here. It is possible to think of the soul
as a reincarnating entity, whether it be a monad, duad, triad, or septenary
being.
The second objection
usually made is that Reincarnation cannot be true, else we would remember the
incidents of our past lives, clearly and distinctly, the fact that the majority
of persons have no such recollection, being held to be a disproof of the
doctrine. The reply to this objection is (1) that it is not true that people do
not remember the events of their past lives, the instances quoted by us,
and similar ones happening to others, together with the fact that nearly every
one remembers something of the past, showing that the objection is not
correctly stated. And (2) that the fact that we have but a very cloudy and
imperfect recollection is not an objection at all, for have we a clear
recollection of the events of our infancy and childhood in this life? Have we a
clear recollection of the events of twenty years ago, outside of a few
scattered instances, of which the majority are only recalled when some
associated fact is mentioned? Are not the great majority of the events of our
present life completely forgotten? How many can recall the events of the
youthful life? Old companions and friends are completely forgotten or only
recalled after much thought and assistance in the way of suggested
associations. Then again, do we not witness a complete forgetfulness in cases
of very old people who relapse into a state of "second childhood,"
and who then live entirely in the present, the past having vanished for them.
There are cases of people having grown old, and while retaining their
reasoning faculties, were as children, so far as the past was concerned. A
well-known writer, when in this state, was wont to read the books that he had
written, enjoying them very much and not dreaming that he was their author.
Professor Knight says of this matter: "Memory of the details of the past
is absolutely impossible.
"The power of
the conservative faculty, though relatively great, is extremely limited. We
forget the larger portion of experience soon after we have passed through it,
and we should be able to recall the particulars of our past years, filling all
the missing links of consciousness since we entered on the present life, before
we were in a position to remember our ante-natal experience. Birth must
necessarily be preceded by crossing the river of oblivion, while the capacity
for fresh acquisition survives, and the garnered wealth of old experience
determines the amount and characters of the new." Loss of memory is not
loss of being—or even loss of individuality or character.
In this connection,
we must mention the various instances of Double Personality, or Lost
Personality, noted in the recent books on Psychology. There are a number of
well authenticated cases in which people, from severe mental strain, overwork,
etc., have lost the thread of Personality and forgotten even their own names
and who have taken up life anew under new circumstances, which they would continue
until something would occur to bring about a restoration of memory, when the
past in all of its details would come back in a flash. The annals of the
English Society for Psychical Research contain quite a number of such cases,
which are recognized as typical. Now, would one be justified in asserting that
such a person, while living in the secondary personality and consequently in
entire ignorance of his past life, had really experienced no previous life? The
same "I" was there—the same Ego—and yet, the personality was entirely
different! Is it not perfectly fair and reasonable to consider these cases as
similar to the absence of memory in cases of Reincarnation?
Let the reader lay
down this book, and then endeavor to remember what happened in his twelfth
year. He will not remember more than one or two, or a half dozen, events in
that year—perhaps not one, in the absence of a diary, or perhaps even with the
aid of one. The majority of the happenings of the three hundred and sixty-five
days of that year are as a blank—as if they never had happened, so far as the
memory is concerned. And yet, the same "I," or Ego, persists, and the
person's character has certainly been affected and influenced by the
experiences and lessons of that year. Perhaps in that year, the person may have
acquired certain knowledge that he uses in his everyday life. And so, in this
case, as with Reincarnation, the "essence" of the experiences are
preserved, while the details are forgotten. For that is the Reincarnationist
contention. As a matter of fact, advanced occultists, and other
Reincarnationists, claim that nothing is really forgotten, but that every event
is stored away in some of the recesses of the mind, below the level of
consciousness--which idea agrees with that of modern psychologists. And
Reincarnationists claim that when man unfolds sufficiently on some higher
plane, he will have a full recollection of his past experiences in all of his
incarnations. Some Reincarnationists claim that as the soul passes from the
body all the events of that particular life pass rapidly before its mind, in
review, before the waters of Lethe, or oblivion, causes forgetfulness.
Closely allied to the
last mentioned argument against Reincarnation is the one that as the memory of
the past life is absent, or nearly so, the new personality is practically a new
soul, instead of the old one reincarnated, and that it is unreasonable and
unjust to have it enjoy or suffer by reasons of its experiences and acts in the
previous life. We think that the answers to the last mentioned objection are
answers to this one also. The "I," Ego, or Individuality, being the
same, it matters not if the details of the old Personality be forgotten. You
are the same "I" that lived fifty years ago in the same body —or
even ten years ago—and you are enjoying certain things, or suffering from
certain things, done or left undone at the previous time, although you have
forgotten the incidents. The impress of the thing is on your Character, and you
are today largely what you are by reason of what you have been in past years,
though those years are forgotten by you. This you will readily admit, and yet
the argument of the Reincarnationists is merely an extension of the same idea.
As Figuier says: "The soul, in spite of its journeys, in the midst of its
incarnations and divers metamorphoses remains always identical with itself;
only at each metempsychosis, each metamorphosis of the external being,
improving and purifying itself, growing in power and intellectual grasp."
Another argument against
Reincarnation is that it is not necessary, for the reason that Heredity
accounts for all of the facts claimed as corroborative of Reincarnation.
Answering this the advocates of the doctrine insist that Heredity does not
account for all the facts, inasmuch as children are born with marked
talents and genius, while none of their family for generations back have
displayed any such tendencies. They also claim that if Heredity were the only
factor in the case, there would be no advance in the races, as the children
would be precisely like their ancestors, no variety or improvement being
possible. But it must be remembered that Reincarnationists do not deny certain
effects of Heredity, particularly along physical lines, and to an extent along
mental lines, in the way of perpetuating "tendencies," which,
however, are and may be overcome by the individuality of the child. Moreover,
the doctrine holds that one of the laws of Rebirth is that the reincarnating
soul is attracted to parents harmonious to itself, and likely to afford the
environments and association desirable to the soul. So in this way the
characteristics likely to be transmitted to the offspring are those which are
sought for and desired by the reincarnating soul. The law of Rebirth is held to
be as exact and certain as the laws of mathematics or chemistry, the parents,
as well as the child, forming the combination which brings forth the
rebirth. Rebirth is held to be above the mere wish of the reincarnating soul—it
is in accordance with an invariable natural law, which has Justice and
Advancement as its basis.
Another argument
against Reincarnation is that it holds that human souls are reborn as animals,
in some cases. This objection we shall not discuss, for the reason that the
advanced ideas of Reincarnation expressly forbid any such interpretation, and
distinctly deny its legitimate place in the doctrine. Among some of the
primitive people this idea of transmigration in the bodies of animals has been
held, but never among advanced occultists, or the leaders in philosophical
thought favoring Reincarnation. Reincarnation teaches the Evolution of the soul
from lowly forms to higher, but never the Devolution or going back into animal
forms. A study of the doctrine of Reincarnation will dispel this erroneous idea
from the mind of an intelligent person.
Another favorite
argument is that it is repulsive to the mind and soul of the average
person. Analysis of this objection will show that what is repugnant to the
person is usually the fear that he will be born again without a memory of the
present, which seems like a loss of the self. A moment's consideration will
show that this objection is ill founded. No one objects to the idea of living
in the same body for, say, ten years or twenty years more, in health. But at
the end of that ten or twenty years he will be practically a different person,
by reason of the new experiences he has undergone. Persons change very much in
twenty years, and yet they are the same individuals—the same "I" is
there with them. And at the end of the twenty years they will have forgotten
the majority of the events of the present year, but they do not object to that.
When one realizes that the Individual, or "I," is the Real Self
instead of the Personality, or the "John Smith, grocer, aged 36,"
part of them—then will they cease to fear the loss of the personality of the
day or year. They will know that the "I" is the "Self"—the
same yesterday, today and tomorrow. Be the doctrine of Reincarnation true
or false, the fact remains that so long as YOU exist, it will be the same
"I" in you that you will know that "I am." It will always
be "I AM—HERE—NOW," with you, be it this moment, or a hundred years,
or a million years hence. YOU can never be SOMEONE ELSE, no matter what form
you wear, nor by what name you are known, nor what personality you may be
acting through, nor in what place you may have your abode, nor on what plane of
existence you may be. You will always be YOURSELF—and, as we have just said, it
will always be "I AM—HERE—NOW" with You. The body, and even the
Personality, are things akin to garments which you wear and take off without
affecting your Real Self.
Then we must note
another objection often made by people in discussing Reincarnation. They say,
"But I do not WANT to come back!" To this the Reincarnationists
answer that, if one has reached a stage in which he really has no desire
for anything that the earth can offer him, then such a soul will not likely
have to reincarnate again on earth, for it has passed beyond the need of
earthly experiences, and has worn out its earth Karma. But they hold that but
few people really have reached this stage. What one really means is that he
does not want any more of Earth—life similar to that which he has been
undergoing. But if he thought that he could have certain things—riches,
position, fame, beauty, influence, and the rest of it, he would be perfectly
willing to "come back." Or else he might be so bound by links of
Karma, acting by reason of Love or Hate, Attachment or Repulsion, or by duties
unperformed, or moral debts unpaid, that he might be brought back to work out
the old problems until he had solved them. But even this is explained by those
Reincarnationists who hold to the idea of Desire as the great motive power of
Karma, and who hold that if one has risen above all earthly desire or dislike,
that soul is freed from the attraction of earth-life, and is prepared to
go on higher at once, or else wait in realms of bliss until the race is ready
to pass on, according to the various theories held by the various advocates of
the doctrine. A little self-examination will show one whether he is free from
all desire to "come back," or not. But, after all, if there is
Ultimate Justice in the plan, working ever and ever for our good and advancements,
as the Reincarnationists claim—then it must follow that each of us is in just
the best place for his own good at the present moment, and will always be in a
like advantageous position and condition. And if that be so, then there is no
cause for complaint or objection on our part, and our sole concern should be in
the words of the Persian sage, to "So live, that that which must come and
will come, may come well," living on one day at a time, doing the best you
know how, living always in the belief that "it is well with us now and
evermore," and that "the Power which has us in charge Here will have
us in charge There." There is a good philosophy for Living and Dying. And,
this being true, though you may have to "come back," you will
not have to "go back," or fall behind in the Scale of Advancement or
Spiritual Evolution—for it must always be Onward and Upward on the Ladder of
Life! Such is the Law!
Another objection
very often urged against the doctrine of Reincarnation is that "it is un-Christian,
and derived from pagan and heathen sources, and is not in accord with the
highest conceptions of the immortality of the soul." Answering this
objection, it may be said that, insofar as Reincarnation is not a generally
accepted doctrine in the orthodox Christian Churches of today, it may be said
to be non-Christian (rather than un-Christian), but when it is seen that
Pre-existence and Rebirth was held as Truth by many of the Early Fathers of the
Church, and that the doctrine was finally condemned by the dominant majority in
Church Councils only by means of the most severe methods and the exercise of
the most arbitrary authority, it may be seen that in the opinion of many of the
most eminent early authorities there was nothing "un-Christian"
about it, but that it was a proper doctrine of the Church. The doctrine was
simply "voted down," just as were many important doctrines revered by
some of the great minds of the early church, in some cases the decision being
made by a majority of one vote. And, again, there have been many bright minds
in the Christian Church who persisted in the belief that the doctrine was far
more consistent with the Inner Teachings of Christianity than the prevailing
conception, and based upon quite as good authority.
So far as the charge
that it is "derived from pagan and heathen sources" is concerned, it
must be answered that certainly the doctrine was accepted by the "pagan
and heathen" world centuries before the dawn of Christianity, but, for
that matter, so was the doctrine regarding the soul's future generally accepted
by orthodox Christianity—in fact, nearly every doctrine or theory regarding the
survival of the soul was "derived from pagan and heathen sources."
The "pagan and heathen" mind had thought long and earnestly upon this
great problem, and the field of thought had been pretty well covered before the
advent of Christianity. In fact, Christianity added no new doctrine—invented no
new theory—and is far from being clear and explicit in its teachings on the
subject, the result being that the early Christians were divided among
themselves on the matter, different sects and schools favoring different
doctrines, each and all of which had been "derived from pagan and heathen
sources." If all the doctrines regarding the immortality of the soul are
to be judged by the test of their having been, or not been, "derived from
pagan and heathen sources," then the entire body of doctrine and thought
on the subject must be thrown out of the Christian mind, which must then
endeavor to create or invent an entirely new doctrine which has never been
thought of by a "pagan or heathen"—a very difficult task, by the way,
considering the activity of the pagan and heathen mind in that respect. It must
be remembered that there is no authoritative teaching on this subject—none
coming direct from Jesus. The Christian Doctrines on the subject come from the
Theologians, and represent simply the views of the "majority" of some
Church Council—or of the most powerful faction.
While the objection
that Reincarnation "is not in accord with the highest conceptions of the
immortality of the soul" is one that must depend almost entirely upon the
personal bias or opinion of the individual as to what constitutes "the
highest conceptions," still a comparison of the conceptions is not out of
the way at this place. Do you know what was the doctrine favored by the
dominant majority in the Church Councils, and for which Pre-Existence and
Re-Birth finally was discarded? Do you know the dogma of the Church and the belief
of masses of the orthodox Christians of the early centuries? Well, it was this:
That at the death of the body, the person passes into a state of
"coma," or unconsciousness, in which state he rests today, awaiting
the sound of the trumpet of the great Day of Judgment, when the dead shall
be raised and the righteous given eternal life IN THEIR FORMER BODIES, while
the wicked in their bodies may pass into eternal torment. That is the doctrine.
You doubt it? Then look over the authorities and examine even the current
creeds of today, many of which state practically the same thing. This belief
passed into one of the Christian Creed, in the words: "I believe in the
Resurrection of the Body."
The great masses of
Christians today, in general thought on the subject, speak as if the accepted
doctrine of the Church was that the soul passed to Judgment, and then eternal
soul life in Heaven or Hell immediately after the death of the body, thus
ignoring the dogmas of the Church Councils regarding the future Day of Judgment
and the Resurrection of the Body at that time. A little questioning of the
religious teachers, and a little examination of religious history, and the
creeds and doctrines of their respective churches, would astonish many good
church members who have been fondly thinking of their beloved ones, who
have passed on, as even now dwelling in Heaven as blessed angels. They would be
astonished to find that the "angels" of the churches are not the
souls of the good people who have been judged and awarded heavenly joys, but,
rather, a body of supernatural beings who never inhabited the flesh; and that
instead of their loved ones now enjoying the heavenly realms, the dogmas hold
that they are now in a state of "coma" or unconsciousness, awaiting
the great Day of Judgment, when their bodies will be resurrected and life
everlasting given them. Those who are interested in the matter, and who may
doubt the above statement, are invited to examine the records for themselves.
The doctrine of the Resurrection of the Body, which is of undoubted "pagan
and heathen" origin, was a favorite theological dogma of the Church in the
first thousand years of its existence, and for many centuries after, and it
still occupies a most important place in the church doctrines today, although
it is not so often publicly preached or taught.
David Kay says:
"The great distinguishing doctrine of Christianity is not the Immortality
of the Soul, but the Resurrection of the Body. That the soul of man is immortal
was a common belief among the Ancients, from whom it found its way at an early
period into the Christian Church, but the most influential of the early Fathers
were strenuously opposed to it, holding that the human soul was not essentially
immortal, but only, like the body, capable of immortality." Vinet says:
"The union of the soul and body appears to me essential and indissoluble.
Man without a body is, in my opinion, man no longer; and God has thought and
willed him embodied, and not otherwise. According to passages in the Scriptures,
we can not doubt that the body, or a body, is essential to human personality
and to the very idea of man."
John Milton said:
"That the spirit of man should be separate from the body, so as to have a
perfect and intelligent existence independent of it, is nowhere said in
Scripture, and the doctrine is evidently at variance both with nature and
reason." Masson, commenting on Milton's conception, says: "Milton's
conception is that at the last gasp of breath the whole man dies, soul and body
together, and that not until the Resurrection, when the body is revived, does
the soul live again, does the man or woman live again, in any sense or way,
whether for happiness or misery.... Are the souls of the millions on millions
of human beings who have died since Adam, are those souls ready either with God
and the angels in Heaven, or down in the diabolic world waiting to be rejoined
to their bodies on the Resurrection Day? They are not, says Milton; but soul
and bodies together, he says, are dead alike, sleeping alike, defunct alike,
till that day comes." And many Christian theologians have held firmly to
this doctrine, as may be seen by reference to any standard encyclopedia, or
work on theology. Coleridge said: "Some of the most influential of the
early Christian writers were materialists, not as holding the soul to be the
mere result of bodily organization, but as holding the soul itself to be
material—corporeal. It appears that in those days the vulgar held the soul to
be incorporeal, according to the views of Plato and others, but that the
orthodox Christian divines looked upon this as an impious, unscriptural
opinion." Dr. R. S. Candlish said: "You live again in the body—in the
very body, as to all essential properties, and to all practical intents and
purposes in which you live now. I am to live not a ghost, a spectre, a spirit,
I am to live then, as I live now, in the body." Dr. Arnold says: "I
think that the Christian doctrine of the Resurrection meets the materialists so
far as this—that it does imply that a body or an organization of some sort is
necessary to the full development of man's nature."
Rev. R. J. Campbell,
the eminent English clergyman, in his recent work entitled, "The New
Theology," says, speaking of the popular evangelical views: "But they
are even more chaotic on the subject of death and whatever follows death. It
does not seem to be generally recognized that Christian thought has never been
really clear concerning the Resurrection, especially in relation to future
judgment. One view has been that the deceased saint lies sleeping in the grave
until the archangel's trumpet shall sound and bid all mankind awake for the
great assize. Anyone who reads the New Testament without prejudice will see
that this was Paul's earlier view, although later on he changed it for another.
There is a good deal of our current, every-day religious phaseology which
presumes it still—'Father, in thy gracious keeping, leave we now thy servant
sleeping.' But alongside this view, another which is a flagrant contradiction
of it has come down to us, namely, that immediately after death the soul goes
straight to Heaven or Hell, as the case may be, without waiting for the
archangel's trumpet and the grand assize. On the whole, this is the dominant
theory of the situation in the Protestant circles, and is much less reasonable
than the Catholic doctrine of purgatory, however much the latter may have been
abused. But under this view, what is the exact significance of the Judgment
Day and the Physical Resurrection? One might think they might be accounted
superfluous. What is the good of tormenting a soul in Hell for ages, and then
whirling it back to the body in order to rise again and receive a solemn public
condemnation? Better leave it in the Inferno and save trouble, especially as
the solemn trial is meaningless, seeing that a part of the sentence has already
been undergone and that there is no hope that any portion of it will ever be
remitted. Truly the tender mercies with which the theologians have credited the
Almighty are cruel indeed!"
But, by the irony of
progress, the orthodox churches are gradually coming around to the one
much-despised Platonic conception of the naturally Immortal Immaterial Soul—the
"pagan and heathen" idea, so much at variance with the opposing
doctrine of the Resurrection of the Body, which doctrine really did not teach
the "immortality of the soul" at all. As Prof. Nathaniel Schmidt
says, in an article in a standard encyclopedia: "The doctrine of the
natural immortality of the human soul became so important a part of
Christian thought that the resurrection naturally lost its vital significance,
and it has practically held no place in the great systems of philosophy
elaborated by the Christian thinkers of modern times." But still, the
letter of the old doctrine persists on the books of the church and in its
creeds, although opposed to the enlightened spirit now manifesting in the
churches which is moving more and more toward the "pagan and heathen"
conception of a naturally Immaterial and Immortal Soul, rather than in a
Resurrection of the Body and an eternal life therein.
It is scarcely worth
while here to contrast the two doctrines—the Immortal Immaterial Soul on the
one hand, and the Immortal Body on the other. The latter conception is so
primitively crude, and so foreign to modern thought, that it scarcely needs an
argument against it. The thought of the necessity of the soul for a material
body—the same old material body that it once cast off like a worn out garment—a
body perhaps worn by disease, crippled by "accident" or
"the slipping of the hand of the Potter"—a body similar to those we
see around us every day—the Immortal Soul needing such a garment in order to
exist! Better accept plain Materialism, and say that there is no soul and that
the body perishes and all else with it, than such a gross doctrine which is
simply a materialistic Immortality. So far as this doctrine being "the
highest conception of the Immortality of the Soul," as contrasted with the
"pagan and heathen" doctrine of Reincarnation—it is not a
"conception of the Immortality of the Soul" at all, but a flat
contradiction of it. It is a doctrine of the "Immortality of the
Body," which bears plain marks of a very lowly "pagan and
heathen" origin. And as to the "later" Christian conception, it
may be seen that there is nothing in the idea of Re-birth which is inconsistent
therewith—in fact, the two ideas naturally blend into each other.
In the above
discussion our whole intent has been to answer the argument against
Reincarnation which charges that the latter is "derived from pagan
and heathen sources, and is not in accord with the highest conceptions of the
immortality of the soul." And in order to do this we have found it
necessary to examine the opposing theological dogmas as we find them, and to show
that they do not come up to the claims of being "the highest
conception," etc. We think that the strongest point against the dogmas may
be found in the claims of their advocates. That the Church is now growing away
from them only proves their unfitness as "the highest conception."
And Reincarnationists hold that as the Church grows in favor of the Immaterial
Immortal Soul, so will it find itself inclining toward the companion-doctrine
of Pre-existence and Re-birth, in some of its varied forms, probably that of
the Early Fathers of the Church, such as Origen and his followers—that the
Church will again claim its own.
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