Reincarnation
The link to specific Reincarnation Verses is below the Gospel of the Holy Twelve Disclosure
Jesus often addressed reincarnation throughout His Gospel recorded by Apostle John, and below you will find complete disclosure regarding its history. Reincarnation was preached by those in the Jewish Christian Movement, but it had not been part of Pauline Christianity. Initially, the Jewish Christian Movement had been made up of Jesus’ followers, which evolved after His resurrection, and some of them had personally known Jesus.
During the 4th Century, history reveals the Arians preached the doctrine of the Jewish Christian Movement, while the orthodox Nicene Bishops supported Pauline Christianity. The First Council of Nicaea, 325 AD, organized, convened and presided over by Roman Emperor Constantine, adopted Pauline Christianity as the authorized church doctrine, and deemed the doctrine of the Arians’ to be heretical.
The lessons Jesus preached regarding reincarnation, which were of the Jewish Christian Movement, are not found within the New Testament, a/k/a Pauline Christianity, and you will learn the reason behind that fact, within the disclosure below.
The Gospel of the Holy Twelve
The Gospel of the Holy Twelve, Jesus’ Gospel, translated from the Aramaic, is one of the most ancient and complete fragments of the Jewish Christian Movement. Based upon historical records, Apostle John recorded his Master’s Gospel while incarcerated. Once completed, he made it known to the other Apostles, and then to protect it from falsification, a trusted disciple took the Gospel to hide it in a Buddhist Monastery in Tibet. Proof the Apostles would have taken such a precaution is in Chapter II of Apostle Peter’s epistle to Jesus’ brother, Apostle James, that is within The Clementine Homilies.
Historical records disclose Friar Placidus, when visiting the Buddhist Tibetan Monastery during the 1870’s, where the Gospel had been hidden, asked if he could bring the fragments to Church Authorities in Rome, and they agreed. Placidus, in the time it took him to travel back to Rome, translated some of the Gospel into Latin, which he read to a gathering of Cardinals.
However, when the Cardinals became aware of the fact the Gospel contained doctrine that had not been approved by the First Council of Nicaea, 325 AD, they chose not to make it known; the reason being: they feared it would have an adverse affect on the Church, and decided the scroll should be secreted within Vatican archives.
Fortunately, numerous fragments, over a period of time, were passed on by Emmanuel Swedenborg, Anna Kingsford, Edward Maitland, and Friar Placidus, and per a biography written by Samuel Hopgood Hart, Reverend G. J. R. Ouseley, structured the Gospel of the Holy Twelve from the translated fragments.