God gave through Moses the Commandment: "Thou shalt not kill." Why has this part of the Bible recently been falsified with the words "Thou shalt not murder?" The two Churches that have ...
God gave through Moses the Commandment: "Thou shalt not kill." Why has this part of the Bible recently been falsified with the words "Thou shalt not murder?"
The two Churches that have made this falsification are in favor of war. With the transformation of the fifth Commandment, they now have a biblical justification for it, because from their point of view, killing a person in war is "only" killing and not murdering. Since killing is now allowed, consequently wars can be waged without major concerns, as well as killing people in those wars.
If we consider in greater depth the relationships in these events, we will also recognize here the wheel of incarnation, reincarnation. In past times, the Catholic Church induced participation in the "holy" war, to forcibly Christianize or to kill those of other beliefs. Thus, for example, the Franconian armies marched in the first Crusade against the Jews in the Rhine Valley and in Christian Hungary and against the Saracens. The same happened to hundreds of thousands of Indians at the time of the discovery of America. This happened in the 20th century, when the Balkan states were only supposed to be inhabited by "Christians." There they killed and stole - and this supposedly in the name of Christ.
In the souls of the perpetrators of yesteryear, as long as they have not changed, there is still that massive potential of negative energy. Murder, that is, so-called intentional killing, massacre, was already subordinate to the commandment "Thou shalt not kill." What really happened? Why were millions of people of other beliefs put to death?
The wheel of reincarnation turns. The same souls come again in other human bodies. Where are they going? To where the burdens of the soul attract them. Let us once again ask ourselves the question: what was it then, killing or murdering? And what would we prefer: to be killed or murdered?
Known to all is the phrase: "What man sows, that shall he reap." If we sow death, intentionally killing our neighbor, we will also reap a similar death, unless we recognize our causes in time, purify them with the help and grace of God, and do not do them again. This is what Jesus taught us.
* Jose V. Cobo
Member of Universal Life








