REBIRTH AND HEREDITY 117 



that may be applicable in a more concrete form to the daily 

 requirement of life. 



With this introduction I will now endeavour to explain the 

 laws of re-creation as expounded by my hypothesis. In the 

 primary stages of disintegration the products of motion, light 

 and heat, the result of the combinations of the return of the 

 first attributes of God the Father and of God the Mother 

 (don't leave the power or influence of God's control out of con- 

 sideration ; that is where science is inclined to go astray in 

 atheistical hands), produces chemical action, with the result 

 that rebirth or re-creation follows as a natural result, and 

 Matter, the by-product of reconstruction, is created as the only 

 possible outcome of material not required for present use. A 

 finite portion then becomes dormant, that is to say devoid 

 of the active influences of God's Trinity, a state of inactive 

 existence we call death; but, as Christ expresses it, "he is 

 not dead, but sleepeth," for the science of radio-activity clearly 

 demonstrates that no Matter is possessed of life, which exists 

 either active or dormant, in the spaces that impregnate all 

 material existences by the ions of electricity that creates its 

 motion. 



Hence death necessitates rebirth or re-absorption, re-creation 

 or reconstruction, according to the matter that is to be recon- 

 structed, or the manner in which it is to be reconstructed. 

 But as God runs evolution on a fixed line of a complete and 

 comprehensive plan, by the separation and intermingling of 

 the attributes of His Trinity, subject to certain rules of 

 heredity and variation. It follows that life can only be re- 

 created in the same manner and by the same forms by which it 

 has been previously created. That is to say, it must be a 

 re-creation of a variation of the same hereditary evolution from 

 which it springs, or that preceded it. That is to say it must be 

 a reproduction of those portions of existence of which it con- 

 tains the maximum component parts subject to the laws of 

 the survival of the fittest. This will be decided by its here- 

 ditary abilities for reconstruction under specific limitations of 

 reconstruction, influenced, often visibly, sometimes invisibly, 

 but more in appearance than in reality, to a limited degree by 

 its environments, subject to which conditions it re-accumulates 

 and re-absorbs portions of the surrounding matter most suited 

 to its forward advancement or retrogression, as the case may 

 be; in proportion to the energy and motive power of the 



