Conclusions
With the condemnation of Origen, so much that is implied in
reincarnation was officially stigmatized as heresy that the possiblity of
a direct confrontation with this belief was effectively removed from the
church. In dismissing Origen from its midst, the church only indirectly
addressed itself to the issue of reincarnation. The encounter with
Origenism did, however, draw decisive lines in the matter of
preexistence, the resurrection of the dead, and the relationship between
body and soul. What an examination of Origen and the church does
achieve, however, is to show where the reincarnationist will come into
collision with the posture of orthodoxy. The extent to which he may wish
to retreat from such a collision is of course a matter of personal
conscience.
With the Council of 553 one can just about close the book on this
entire controversy within the church. There are merely two footnotes to
be added to the story, emerging from church councils in 1274 and 1439.
In the Council of Lyons in 1274 it was stated that after death the soul
goes promptly either to heaven or to hell. On the Day of Judgment all
will stand before the tribunal of Christ with their bodies to render
account of what they have done. The Council of Florence of 1439 uses
almost the same wording to describe the swift passage of the soul either
to heaven or to hell. Implicit in both of these councils is the
assumption that the soul does not again venture into physical bodies.
Origen of Alexandria Table of Contents