There was a man who was working at the World Trade Center minutes before the entire world witnessed the two towers completely collapse once two airplanes crashed into them on the morning of September 11, 2001. His floor was full of smoke and fire, and he couldn’t escape. Eventually, he ended up jumping out the window to his death in order to avoid being burned.
Some fifteen or so years later, a boy named Cade was born, and by the age of three, he started having nightmares about being in a room full of smoke and trying to escape. He remembered seeing the Statue of Liberty before ultimately falling down a tall building to his death. He was obsessed with airplanes and feared tall buildings, and he repeatedly faced bullying at school because his peers didn’t believe him.
His mother was initially skeptical but soon realized that the details of his stories matched the life and death of a 9/11 victim. Cade had also remembered his name from his previous life, so his mother looked it up online and found the man’s obituary. She learned that the man who Cade claimed to had been, in fact, died in the WTC on 9/11.
Exodus 34:7 says: Keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the children’s children, unto the third and to the fourth generation. Once a person dies, he or she will stand before YAHAWAH, who the world falsely and ignorantly calls God, to receive his or her judgment, and he or she will play out that judgment on Earth three to four generations later. In the case of Cade, the LORD brought him back one generation later for committing suicide, and suicide is, in fact, a grievous sin.
Exodus 20:13 says: Thou shalt not kill. Simple and straight to the point. One is forbidden to kill as stated in the ten commandments, and this includes killing oneself. Cade had killed himself in his previous life by leaping out of the WTC to his death, and the LORD brought him right back here with the memory of that tragedy as a punishment.
Ecclesiastes 1:11 says: There is no remembrance of former things; neither shall there be any remembrance of things that are to come with those that shall come after. This is the natural order of things—you live your life, you die, your receive your judgment from the LORD, and you live out that judgment in your next life without any memories of your previous lives. However, the LORD chose to bring Cade back with the memory of what he’d done, thus proving that reincarnation exists.
1 Corinthians 6:20 says: For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s. What this verse is essentially saying is that you don’t own your body, and you don’t have the right to take a life, especially your own life, because it belongs to the LORD. Cade had to learn this lesson the hard way, and this verse completely obliterates the feminists’ ideology of ‘my body, my choice.’
This is just another quick lesson in the spirit. Cade is one of numerous cases of children who claim to have memories of a past life that are currently being studied, and simply put, these are merely examples of reincarnation that can be backed up by scripture. Furthermore, there’s no burning in hell for eternity. All praise, honor, and glory go to Yahawah Bahasham Yahawashi. Shalawam.
