
“They are not dead, but sleeping.” — Luke 8:52
In an age ruled by cold procedure and institutional thinking, we have lost touch with sacred knowledge. Today, the moment a person draws their last breath, a cold system takes over—one that is clinical, procedural, and spiritually blind. But what if death, as we know it, is not the end? What if it’s not even death—but sleep?
What if the body is resting, and the soul is simply transitioning?
The Spirit Never Dies
From ancient wisdom to the mission of Christ, one truth echoes through time: the human spirit is eternal. Jesus, when told of a dead child, replied, “She is not dead, but sleeping.” His words weren’t poetic metaphor—they were a revelation. All across spiritual traditions, death is not the end. It is a reset, a doorway to higher awareness and return.
The spirit does not die—it departs, only to return.
Reincarnation is not a myth; it is a divine cycle. The soul often returns within days, weeks, or months, continuing its sacred journey toward conscious awakening, bringing forth unfulfilled assignments, buried talents, and divine wisdom meant to bless the family and the earth. The body can go through certain situations that might be too much to survive at that time because the sprirt might not be strong enough at that given time to give the body the needed strength to withstand, and therefore, can give up but not completely dead.
But herein lies a modern tragedy: our treatment of the body after death is disrupting this sacred process.
The Soul’s Journey and the DNA Code
The human body is not merely flesh and bones—it is a vessel of energy, frequency, and divine memory encoded in its DNA. Even after the spirit departs, a spiritual tether remains for a short period, allowing the soul to complete its passage or prepare for return.
DNA is not just genetic material—it is a divine script. It carries the blueprint of the soul’s journey, the record of ancestral agreements, spiritual imprints, and future potential. To tamper with this code is to interfere with the soul’s roadmap.
Which is why the mortuary system must be reexamined or abolished.
The Problem With Modern Mortuaries
Today, we rush to place the deceased into morgues—cold chambers that preserve the body artificially using chemicals and refrigeration. While the intention may seem dignified or hygienic, the spiritual consequences are often overlooked.
Cold storage and synthetic embalming fluids sever the body’s energetic field and can distort or erase the DNA imprint. In doing so, we block the reincarnating soul’s ability to return with clarity and continuity. The soul’s reentry point is confused. Its light, its task, its potential—interfered with.
This interference isn’t just theoretical—it is spiritual sabotage.
When we delay natural burial or tamper with the body’s divine code, we risk silencing future prophets, healers, visionaries, and nation-builders. In clinging to the dead, we hinder the living.
Ancient Wisdom: Egypt’s Herbal Preservation
In the olden days, civilizations understood this deeply. Ancient Egypt, one of the most spiritually advanced cultures, never stored their dead in morgues. They treated the body with the utmost reverence—not with ice and synthetic chemicals, but with natural herbal extracts, sacred resins, oils, and minerals.
This ancient embalmment was not to delay death—but to protect the soul’s energetic map, to preserve the DNA and frequency of the departed so the Ka (life force) and Ba (soul) could return, rise, or ascend.
Their burial rituals were sacred technologies—spiritual science and ancestral medicine—designed to preserve the body’s divine memory while allowing the soul to pass on undisturbed. Their practices were not superstitions but encoded knowledge of life’s multidimensional cycle.
Modern mortuaries have lost this wisdom. Instead of herbal sanctity, they offer chemical violence. Instead of spiritual release, they create spiritual blockages.
Christ and the Restoration of Life’s Cycle
Jesus Christ did not just die and rise to prove His divinity—He came to demonstrate that death is an illusion, a passage, not an end. His resurrection was not symbolic alone—it was instructional.
He was not frozen. He was not embalmed with chemicals. He was wrapped in linen and spices and returned to the womb of the earth—natural, sacred, undisturbed.
On the third day, He rose—not only to fulfill prophecy but to declare to all creation: You are meant to return. Life does not end. The soul continues. Divine purpose never dies.
His words—“In my Father’s house are many mansions…”—speak not of a distant heaven, but of dimensions, lifetimes, and spiritual evolution. Christ came to restore what humanity forgot: the soul is eternal, and death is merely a breath between lifetimes.
The Call to Awaken: Rethink Death and Burial
We must awaken.
We must stop handing the sacred over to systems that do not understand spirit. We must stop freezing, delaying, and interfering with the natural return of divine souls.
By keeping bodies in morgues for weeks or months, we disrupt transitions. We block reincarnation. We bury light. We postpone justice. We silence brilliance meant to be reborn.
Let us return to wisdom:
In ancient times, the dead were buried within days, treated with herbs and spiritual reverence. The soul was respected. The DNA was preserved. The future was protected.
Today, in our fear of death, we cling to bodies and lose souls.
Let the Dead Sleep, So They May Rise
Let us declare again:
Death is not the end—it is sleep. The spirit is not gone—it waits to return. DNA is not just data—it is the soul’s gateway. Ancient herbal embalming preserved the soul’s map. Modern chemicals destroy it. Christ did not conquer death to be stored in a mortuary—but to show us how to rise.
We must reclaim sacred burial. We must honor the body and release the soul with speed, humility, and spiritual awareness. We must stop blocking the rebirth of those who carry the light of healing, truth, and change.
When someone dies, say not “they are gone,” but “they are sleeping.”
And when you bury them, do so with the wisdom of the ancients and the hope of Christ—so they may rise again, and return.
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