-What becomes of the spirit of a child who dies in infancy?
"He recommences a new existence."
If man had but a single existence, and if, after this existence, his
future state were fixed for all eternity, by what standard of merit could
eternal felicity be adjudged to that half of the human race which dies
in childhood, and by what would it be exonerated from the conditions of
progress, often so painful. imposed on the other half? Such an ordering
could not be reconciled with the justice of God. Through the reincarnation
of spirits the most absolute justice is equally meted out to all. The possibilities
of the future are open to all, without exception, and without favour to
any. Those who are the last to arrive have only themselves to blame for
the delay. Each man must merit happiness by his own right action, as he
has to bear the consequences of his own wrong-doing.
It is, moreover, most irrational to consider childhood as a normal
state of innocence. Do We not see children endowed with the vilest instincts
at an age at which even the most vicious surroundings cannot have begun
to exercise any influence upon them? Do we not see many who seem to bring
with them at birth cunning, falseness, perfidy, and even the instincts
of thieving and murder, and this in spite of the good examples by which
they are surrounded? Human law absolves them from their misdeeds, because
it regards them as having acted without discernment and it is right in
doing so, for they really act Instinctively rather than from deliberate
intent. But whence proceed the instinctual differences observable in children
of the same age, brought up amidst the same conditions, and subjected to
the same influences? Whence comes this precocious perversity. if not from
the inferiority of the spirit himself, since education has had nothing
to do with producing it? Those who are vicious are so because their spirit
has made less progress and, that being the case, each will have to suffer
the consequences of his inferiority, not on account of his wrong-doing
as a child, but as the result of his evil courses in his former existences.
And thus the action of providential law is the same for each, and the justice
of God reaches equally to all.
Sex in Spirits
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the header]
200. Have spirits sex?
“Not as you understand sex; for sex, in that sense, depends on the
corporeal organisation. Love and sympathy exist among them, but founded
on similarity of sentiments."
201. Can a spirit, who has animated the body of a man, animate the
body of a woman in a new existence, and vice versa ?
"Yes; the same spirits animate men and women."
202. Does a spirit, when existing in the spirit-world, prefer to
be incarnated as a man or as a woman?
"That is a point in regard to which a spirit is indifferent, and
which is always decided in view of the trials which he has to undergo in
his new corporeal life."
Spirits incarnate themselves as men or as women, because they are of
no sex and, as it is necessary for them to develop themselves in every
direction, both sexes. as well as every variety of social position. furnish
them with special trials and duties, and with the opportunity of acquiring
experience. A spirit who had always incarnated itself as a man would be
only known by men, and vice versa.