Christianity and Reincarnation
There are many who think Christianity and reincarnation to be an incompatibility, but I understood from my experience of going to Heaven that they are not and instances or references to incarnation or reincarnation can actually be found in the Bible. While I did not get a view into my past lives or anything of this nature, I came back from Heaven with a knowing or understanding that because we are souls who exist eternally or live forever (death is a lie), that our souls in Heaven, the afterlife, or the spiritual realm effectively need new experiences in order to help us grow and learn. Through incarnating into the physical realm into a physical body, we incarnate into the physical realm, in order to experience growth. There is a challenge to the soul in existing in the physical realm (especially within Earth’s level of density or low-frequency) in the sense of the level of pushback that is experienced here (think of going to the gym vs sitting on the couch), and our souls require this push-back experience in order to learn to be more loving and kind. When we choose love or kindness in the face of extenuating cirumstances or a lack of love, the light of our souls expand, (just like your muscles expand when you go to the gym).
There are many views of Christianity or the bible which hold a strictly linear view of time and life on Earth (outlined by ideas that you only live once), but this is not supported in the scriptures, and I will show you where as evidenced in the gospels by the search for Moses and Elijah, the reappearance of Moses and Elijah during the gospels, the prophecies of Malachi, and the return of Moses in the last days in the book of Revelation.
One of the easiest references to reincarnation is in the story when John the Baptist comes on the scene. When John the Baptist appears, the When John the Baptist appeared on the scene, this is not necessarily true and very constrictive.