A study designed for people who hunger for truth; students seeking God's
way will want to read this.
If reincarnation is correct, this is how you got into this world:
This body arises from sexual intercourse. It passes to development in
darkness. Then it comes forth through the urinary opening. It is built up
with bones; smeared over with flesh; covered with skin, filled with feces,
urine, phlegm, marrow, fat, grease, and also with many diseases.
If the Bible is correct, we have a conflict, for it differs from the above
account, saying "For you (God created my inmost being; you knit me together
in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully
made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.
Psalm 139.13
Can you see the conflict? People have tried to reconcile the two, but
Hinduism and Christianity are not alike. They disagree in how we were
formed to enter this world, and they disagree over what happens to us in
death as we leave it.
Hinduism says we come into this new world burdened with "karma"—the just
punishment of an old, past life. Here on earth we must pay for the sins
and mistakes we made in forgotten lives long ago. At death we leave our
bodies to be reincarnated into another body to live another life,
repeating the process hundreds of times. Hindus teach that the repetition
continues until we purify ourselves to perfection—thus obliterating the
personality. Then we get off the wheel of life and go to Nirvana—the
nothingness of total annihilation.
Christianity disagrees. The Bible teaches that God places a brand new soul
in a new body at conception as a sparkling, brand new thing. We pass
through life only once, and while here, we live life as best we can,
following the example of Jesus. We follow the commands God gave us in the
Bible.
At death we leave our bodies to return to that loving God who judges us for
our deeds. The righteous are granted a wonderful place called heaven—the
eternal paradise of the soul where only wondrous love, joy and peace
abide.
So which is correct? Do we go through life once, and then go to judgment
as the Bible teaches? Or do we go around again and again in many lives,
trying to right our wrongs as the Hindu Vedas teach?
The Claim of Reincarnation
On the surface, the doctrine of reincarnation sounds most appealing. It
seems an honest attempt to answer the problem of "God's relationship to
evil." (How could a good God allow innocent people to suffer?) When I am
suffering, reincarnation does a good job of answering my questions: "Why?"
or "Why me?" This is why people find it appealing.
What does reincarnation say? It claims that a soul living in the world can
do good or bad as it chooses. If that personality chooses to do evil in
his life, he does not die and return to God. There is no judgment and no
hell for the wicked. The person enters death with the "seeds of new life"
in his grasp.
In that mystical world between the old life and the new, the soul meets
the natural law of the universe called "Karma." Karma imposes punishment
upon the soul for the sins of that last life. The evil that the person did
is noted, and he prepares to begin paying for it in his upcoming life.
Perhaps he doesn't pay all at once, but somewhere in this process of going
round and round on the wheel of life—one reincarnation after another—he
has to suffer for his old wrongs, purging the wrongs, (even if he doesn't
remember them).
The Hindus say that a man is "working out his karma" when he faces disease,
birth defects, misery, pain and injustice in this life. That person
suffers alone with his fate until his old karma is exhausted. The sufferer
keeps dying and coming back again and again and again. Each time he burns
off (pays for) more karma. The next lives are filled with less and less
misery until he perfects himself and is merged into nothingness.
That nothingness is called "Nirvana"—the dissolution of the personality.
In reincarnation, that is the goal of life: to extinguish the personality
completely and forever.
So that is the reason you have misery in this life—you did some evil in a
past life. That is an easy answer. It sounds good, and at first seems to
satisfy. But now we have to ask, is it true? Is reincarnation the factual
answer? Something that is right is not always easy; and something that is
easy is not always right.
One day years ago as a young child, I was hungry. I saw some food that
looked good to me. It was near at hand and met my needs at the moment,
so I ate it. It went down easy, and seemed to satisfy. An hour later,
however, I was sorry I had eaten it. There was something wrong with the
food. The next two days I was forced to take horrible tasting medicine to
keep my stomach calm.
The same is true with reincarnation. It seems like a good answer. It is
easy to swallow, and at first makes sense. But later, we find ourselves
having to swallow more and more silly and bitter things just to justify
what we have already ingested. When that happens, we have to conclude
that the teaching is bad.
A personal quest
This writer is a Christian. I believe the Bible's message; that Jesus
Christ is God's Son who forever answered the reincarnation question.
However, I am also curious. My study of "life after death" has been
life-long. I did not merely search the Bible. I have read the
Bhagavad-Gita with great interest, and studied the writings of people,
both for and against reincarnation. The view of "reincarnation" held by
Hindus and Buddhists sounded enticing. It has the easiest answers.
After studying it, I have concluded that, if reincarnation is correct, it
is fine to be a Christian. Even if it is wrong, Christianity is a good
life—much more disciplined than the way of the worldly. It will take
one higher on the process of reincarnation.
But if reincarnation is wrong, it is a very, very dangerous doctrine. Let
me show you why with this story:
Captain Lang Smith of Canada had dreamed for years of sailing alone around
the world. Months had been spent in final preparations. His 11 1/2 foot
sailboat had been checked and double checked. The sails were new and
tested. The captain had new maps and the finest compass.
Just south of Vancouver, British Columbia, Smith cast off for his 50,000
mile journey. He planned on it taking him two and a half years. He thought,
"Nothing can stop me now. I'm on my way to adventure." Smith was half
right. It was going to be an adventure. He was 55 miles out when he hit
a submerged log. His boat sank and his plans were ruined.
The same kind of disappointment is facing millions of devotees of
reincarnation. If we plan on re-living hundreds of lives, but die to find
that there is no reincarnation, our one life is wasted and our souls are
doomed. If we plan for 50,000 lives in reincarnation, but discover at
death that our journey is over, what a shock that will be! What a deadly
mistake!
If the Bible is true: "It is appointed unto man once to die and after
that, the judgment," I would be very unwise to waste this one life thinking
I have the promise of many more lives and opportunities.
Thus in giving it serious and sober thought, I have to conclude that not
only is reincarnation wrong, it has to be said even stronger: it cannot
be correct. I say that for the following reasons:
I. Reincarnation is Unworkable.
The goal of reincarnation is to work off all bad karma until the "sound of
silence," (the primordial state of the universe) returns once more.
But there is a problem here. To believe that souls are working off their
bad karma and gathering good karma, assumes that people are learning and
improving. Things are getting better and each succeeding life is more
enriched. By every rotation of the wheel, souls are getting closer to
Nirvana. That is false.
To forever disprove that theory, all we have to do is visit India. That is
the nation where reincarnation has been taught so forcefully for the
longest period of time. There is where bad karma has been worked off and
good karma has been building for centuries. Millions of people should be
living easier and easier lives as they climb to higher life forms. Are
they? No. India bears tragic witness to the failure of such a
philosophy.
Instead of being a glowing light for the world, India agonizes in rampant
poverty, starvation, suffering and chaos. Its suffering increases daily.
Millions of poor souls quietly despair and prepare to die, hoping that
something better will be found in the next life.
Hindu followers defend the failure in India. They say that we should not
"equate reincarnation with progress." They argue that reincarnation "only
provides the opportunity for progress."
That is disappointing. The very religion that calls for progress toward
Nirvana does not guarantee progress? Why? Because there is no incentive
to improve.
One cannot improve on a mistake he can't remember. If a person doesn't
have any recollection of his past in the next life, he has no reason
whatever to improve. Reincarnation sends you around again and again, but
teaches you nothing. You remember nothing and improve none at all.
Also, if you believe you are going around again and again, there is no
motivation to change or improve anything right now. Generations come and
go without progression in such a system. That is why the social order of
most Hindu nations is below standard. The poor and uneducated languish in
misery, generation after generation.
Karma can work only if people are getting better. And the truth is, people
are not. If I do evil in life number one, I must pay for my bad Karma when
I reincarnate. But if, in life number two, I do more wickedness when I am
supposed to be burning off the bad from my first life—then I have to pay
for that new evil in life number three. But there I do more wickedness—the
cycle is endless and degenerates as it turns. I get further and further
away from perfection, not closer.
II Reincarnation is Illogical.
One young man proudly announced to an older man, "I am a firm believer
in reincarnation. It has all the answers for me."
"Really?" asked the older man. "Tell me about it so I can believe it
too. How many times have you been reincarnated?"
"Uh, I don't know," stammered the youth.
"What were you before you got to this point?"
"I don't know."
"What will you be next time."
"I don't know."
"How many more times must you go around before you are perfected?"
"I don't know."
"Where can you go to get the answers?"
"I don't know."
"Then how can you say it has all the answers?" asked the older man.
"It doesn't have any answers. I will just stay with the Bible. Its
truth is clear, plain and invites investigation. It has all the answers
for everyone."
In reincarnation there are no answers. And where is the proof? The
explanations that it offers us are totally lacking. The brain just
cannot logically accept some of the things it teaches.
For example, reincarnationists teach:
(1) That the world's population is basically stable. One Hindu writer
said, "As one dies, another is born to take his place."
(2) Even when war or natural disaster reduces the population in one
place, other places are experiencing prosperity and population growth.
Thus overall, the world's population remains stable.
(3) There will, therefore, always be just enough souls to be reborn
into all infant bodies, for there is a corresponding number of deaths
and births.
(4) The human soul is not created but is eternal. Thus no new souls
are being created to enter the cycle of rebirths.
(5) When a soul is sufficiently purified, it is absorbed back into
"being" (out of our world into Nirvana).
The problems in such teaching are obvious: First, if no new souls are
being created, yet the number of old souls are being absorbed back
into "being," it should follow that the world population is decreasing.
This is not true. Instead there are more people alive in this present
generation than in any previous one.
If you don't believe that population is increasing, consider the
following statistics of growth in the world:
A.D. 1575 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 500 Million people
1825 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1 Billion people
1925 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2 Billion people
1975 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Almost
4 Billion People
Second, since the world's population is increasing so rapidly, it is
only obvious that there are not enough old souls to fit these new
bodies. Where are they to come from? Does that mean that there are
bodies walking around with no souls?
To answer this dilemma, many Hindu devotees claim that Karma is
changing -- sending the needed souls up from insects and animals,
evolving them into humans. They agree the world has more humans
today, but claim we have less insects. However, that is not true
either. And even if it were, why should the law of Karma change to
accommodate the need for extra souls? And if karma changed, it cannot
be a law at all. Personalities change, laws don't.
III. Reincarnation is Unjust.
A mother brought her son to school for the first day of instruction.
She went to the headmaster and said, "My son John is very shy, so if
he misbehaves, just slap the student next to him, and John will learn
his lesson and behave."
Everybody knows that her suggestion was silly. Such could not be
practiced because it is unjust. John has to face his own mistakes
and take his own discipline.
And that is the huge problem with reincarnation: it is unjust.
Adolph Hitler ordered the deaths of at least six million Jews in his
lifetime. It could be said that he was responsible for the death of
60 million people all over the world; not to mention the evil he
inflicted on those who survived. When he died in 1945, can you
imagine the karma built up against him? Perhaps he has 60 million
reincarnations of suffering to go through before getting back to where
he was before he killed the Jews or started World War II.
Let's assume that in 1960 (after a few short lives as a bug, a snake,
three mice and a dog) Hitler is reincarnated as a crippled baby girl
in New York City named Ruth Jones. Ruth has no idea that she is really
Adolph Hitler reincarnated or that she is suffering for the crimes of
the Nazi Fuhrer.
It is at this point that karma justice breaks down completely. Hitler
is gone, and his personality actually ceased to exist in 1945. Little
Ruth now bears the massive burden of Hitler's karmic debt. She did nothing
wrong, but karma strikes here anyway.
And little Ruth is only the first in a series of 60 million miserable
lives spawned by the evil of Hitler. Ruth has to die in distress to let
the next body pay for more karma. Now Hitler has affected the lives—not
just of 60 million who died in the war, but 60 million reincarnated people
who are paying for the past deeds of their predecessors.
We are up to 120 million people now, and that is not even considering the
sins committed by these 120 million that they must pay for later. And
where is Hitler in all this? He hasn't paid for anything. Do you begin
to see the injustice?
Reincarnation says that, in life, each of us is responsible for our own
actions. Yet we are not. In death, the personality is extinguished, and a
new personality comes back into the world to pay the burden or karma. The
new personality knows nothing, but has to pay for everything. This is
unjust.
Here is Ruth—the poor child born with a horrible defect that will limit or
shorten her life. Let's go into her room. We walk over to the bed where
she lies. We look at her and then at her mother suffering along with Ruth.
We offer a good word of comfort: "This child is working off Hitler's
karma." Ruth has no chance because she cannot do any good or evil. Ruth
dies without knowing what she did or how to improve. This is totally
unjust.
But enough about the evil man. What about the righteous man? His lot in
life is also unjust.
Consider Rasheeb, a Hindu who gives himself totally to righteousness. He
is promised in the Bhagavad-Gita:
For one who worships Me, giving up all his activities unto Me and being
devoted to Me without deviation, engaged in devotional service and always
meditating upon Me, who has fixed him mind upon Me, O son of Perth, for
him I am the swift deliverer from the ocean of birth and death. Just fix
your mind upon Me, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and engage all your
intelligence in Me. Thus you will live in Me always, without a doubt
(12:6-8).
But the problem is this: Rasheeb dies. Between one live and the next,
every single observable characteristic that defines Rasheeb is destroyed.
When he is reincarnated to the next life, the next body and mind reaps the
reward. What good did it do the righteous Rasheeb if only a blank mind and
soul comes into the world again to enjoy the good karma of the past?
If reincarnation is really karma, or the "law of justice," why not give
the person a full vision of what he has done in his past life. That would
be justice. Let him remember his good deeds and his flaws in his past life.
Thus he could both understand his predicament and correct his life for the
future.
IV Grace Destroys Reincarnation.
Almost every Hindu I have ever met has told me, "I believe in Jesus
Christ. I believe the same things you do." Of course he doesn't understand
the difference in his religion and mine, so he is willing to include Jesus
into his collection of avatars or Lords. But for a moment, let's agree that
he is right. We believe in the same Christ.
If he agrees that Jesus is truly the Christ—the anointed one sent by God,
then finally, reincarnation for him is finished. Why? Because Jesus died
to save him and make him perfect before God. He has gone his last round
on the wheel of life, and he has been perfected! He has no more work to
do. If he is perfected by the blood of Jesus, never again will he be
reincarnated for there is no need. He can go from this life into eternal
rest.
This should be great news to a Hindu, for he has been going from one
reincarnation to the next seeking perfection. He has been trying, in each
life, to purify the bad karma and to collect enough good karma to get off
the wheel and find Nirvana.
Well, here is the good news: if he turns to Christ and believes what Jesus
taught, he will have discovered the very key he has been seeking. What He
offers is called "Grace," (The word means "unearned favor") and God's grace
helps him to spiritual maturity.
When Jesus went to the cross, He died as a substitute. He was sinless, but
He died in your place; taking the punishment you deserved. He did it so
that God could take your "bad Karma" and put it on Him, and so Jesus could
pay for it once and for all. From that point on, you are to "walk in the
light as He is in the light..."
(I John 1:7). The process is called
"Justification." Through the sacrifice of Jesus, we are all declared by
God to be righteous." When we are baptized into Christ, our sins are
washed away. We go to our God redeemed, saved and happy provided we live
faithfully unto death.
V. Reincarnation Destroys Grace.
Those of us who have been saved by this wonderful grace of God, are taught
immediately to show that same grace (undeserved kindness) to others around
us. By doing so, we make this world a better place in which to live by
showering our path with sweetness and goodness. If there is one who is
suffering, we must comfort and help him.
But in the view of reincarnationists, such kindness should not be practiced.
The people who are suffering in this world are "working out their karma."
Whatever suffering they experience in this life is due to the evil of a
past life. They deserve their fate. This is based on the Hindu concept of
Dharma which may be roughly translated, "the inevitability of what must
be," or "doing what is set before you."
So what about being kind and helping that poor, suffering soul? Why not
feed that hungry man? Why not clothe the naked or heal the sick? Because
it is wrong to disturb the process of karma. That poor fellow has to pay
for his evil some day, so let him suffer in silence now. Helping him is
not wise. In fact interrupting his karma could be a sin that you yourself
will pay for in a next life.
Let's go even one step further: have you ever thought that it might be a
good thing (under the system of reincarnation) to murder, rape, steal and
abuse others? Why not? You are merely purifying the bad karma in the
people you victimize. They deserved what you are doing to them. In fact
they need for you to be vicious toward them if they are going to go on in
the evolution process. Karma might even reward you for carrying out upon
them the pain they deserved!
If that is true, Hitler should be thanked for his evil; and so should every
rapist or murderer in the world! Do you see what I meant earlier about
"bad food that seems good"?
And that suggestion is not so far-fetched. For centuries the rich Hindus
have reveled in splendor while the poor go without. There is no compassion
or kindness in such a system. The rich deserve their wealth and the poor
deserve their misery. You can search the entire world and you will not
find a Hindu orphan's home, or a Hindu hospital. The system doesn't work
on the basis of kindness.
The Christian looks at this situation in disgust. Jesus Christ came to this
world teaching and practicing the very opposite of that. He said to feed
the hungry, clothe the naked, help the poor
(Matthew 25:34-40).
His followers were taught to be kind to everyone.
Romans 15:1
We who are strong ought to bear with the failings of the weak
and not to please ourselves. Each of should please his neighbor for his
good, to build him up.
Galatians 6:2
Carry each other's burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.
Galatians 6:10 Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all
people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers.
VI Reincarnation is not Vital.
A Christian was studying with a Hindu a few years ago in Guyana. As they
discussed the two religions, the Christian asked, "What difference does
your religion make?"
"What do you mean?" asked the Hindu.
"Well," answered the Christian, "if your religion
had never existed, how different would the world be? If you discovered
today that your religion had totally disappeared—that you and no one else
believed it any more; what difference would it make?" The Hindu thought
for a while and then admitted, "It wouldn't make a bit of difference."
If there is nothing "out there" beyond the grave except another
reincarnation, all the rotations of all the souls in all the history of
the world do not matter one whit. The earth is no better, no soul is saved,
and no good is done.
Christianity on the other hand is vital. If correct, (and it is) the
message of Jesus Christ is crucial to know and follow. If you do not hear,
heed and obey this message from God, the Bible says you are lost.
This truth is illustrated in the story of the man and his wife who
purchased a Bible and took it home to read. After reading the first
portion, the man looked at his wife and said, "Wife, if this book is
correct, there is a God who loves us" After a few more nights reading,
the man looked at his wife again and said, "If this book is correct, there
is a Devil who has deceived us." The next night, he said, "If this book
is correct, we are lost." And the very next evening, the man said, "Wife,
if this book is correct, we can be saved." And they were.
Do you need the Bible message? Yes! You can't live without it!
VII. Reincarnation is Not Pleasing.
People who choose to believe in reincarnation usually do so because they
don't like the concept of a hell for the wicked. They would much rather
think of going through another life, and making good their old mistakes. A
person would much rather meet himself than his Maker on the other side of
death.
But in choosing reincarnation, people never stop to think what a lifeless
and sterile thing it is, both in life and in death.
For example, the reincarnationists in the West love to tell of their "past
lives"—how they were Joan of Arc or Mohammed or Abraham Lincoln. It is
strange that none of them ever recall being a worm in a garden or a snail
on a rock.
But if reincarnation is true, then that is what some of them were—or what
they soon may be. Depending on their bad karma, they could be a mule as
easily as a man. They could as easily be a hog as a human.
Then consider the undesirable death of reincarnation. Even if we work off
the bad karma and purify our souls completely, what do we receive? The
Hindu's reward is nothingness—extinction in Nirvana. The devotee has
successfully annihilated his personality and sinks into oblivion.
So here is something strange—think carefully about this:
Nirvana has sometimes been described as "The further shore, the harbor of
refuge, the cool cave, the matchless island, the holy city. It is sheer
bliss."
But for what? We have already annihilated our personalities in purifying
ourselves of bad karma. So what use have our souls for such a wonderful
place? How can an obliterated personality enjoy sheer bliss?
Author John Weldon said: "There is only one thing that makes a future life
worthwhile—that is the preservation of the consciousness—personal identity
and uniqueness. Yet in reincarnation, (such things) are forever
obliterated."
How is it possible to draw meaning from life, if the goal of existence is
to slowly annihilate personality?
The Christian, on the other hand, is promised heaven—that glorious place
of joy, peace and rest, prepared for the faithful by God Himself. The
conscious soul goes there to enjoy glory forever. That is reasonable and
full of happiness and hope. A rational person would rather have the holy
happiness of heaven than the nothingness of Nirvana.
The Conclusion We Must Draw.
After studying it, we find that reincarnation does not answer the question
of pain and suffering in this world. It merely points to a foggy past as
a cause for it. But what caused the suffering in that past? Another past
even further back in the fog.
So reincarnation claims that there is no personal God out there beyond
time. There is merely karma—a law of the universe. It claims there is no
judgment. No one answers to anyone. You end this life merely to begin
again in a lower or higher life, depending on your karmic debt. Christians
say, "That's not true!"
So how can we know what is right? The only way we can know the truth of
the matter is to find someone—anyone who has been through death and has
come back to tell about it. That "someone" is Jesus Christ. He is the only
one who ever has.
Historians admit that Jesus was nailed to a cross, and a few hours later
that he was taken down dead. He was laid in a tomb as a dead man, but the
Bible says that, on the third day, He was resurrected from the grave. In
Revelation 1:17, 18
we read of the resurrected Christ:
When I saw him, I fell at his feet as though dead. Then he placed his right
hand on me and said: "Do not be afraid, I am the first and the Last. I am
the Living One; I was dead, and behold I am alive for ever and ever! And
I hold the keys of death and Hades."
Here, then, is the only one who went into the cold grave to do battle with
death. He came back victorious. This is a proven fact! He has a right to
speak, for He knows what is on the other side. So what does He say about
life after death? He said things like:
Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul.
Rather be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.
(Matthew 10:28).
Again He said:
For just as the Father raises the dead and gives them life, even so the
Son gives life to whom he is pleased to give it ... I tell you the truth,
whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and
will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life. I tell you
the truth, a time is coming and has now come when the dead will hear the
voice of the Son of God and those who hear will live. For as the father
has life in himself, so he has granted the Son to have life in himself.
And he has given him authority to judge because he is the Son of Man. Do
not be amazed at this, for a time is coming when all who are in their
graves will hear his voice and come out—those have done good will rise to
live, and those who have done evil will rise to be condemned.
John 5:21-30.
He also told the interesting story of a wicked rich man and a good but
poor, man. Both died and were taken into a waiting place for the dead.
The evil man lifted up his eyes being in torment, but the good man was
placed in a secure and comfortable place. There they were to wait for
the judgment that is coming upon all people. I believe Jesus was speaking
of what He knew. Do you believe Him?
When the day of judgment arrives, the living and the dead will be gathered
before the great white throne. Everyone will give an account of his deeds,
whether good or bad. "Then the King will say to those on his right, 'Come,
you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom
prepared for you since the creation of the world."
(Matthew 25:34).
You get one chance, my friend. I beg you to live your life in view of
eternity. You will face your God one day to answer for your deeds. There
is not just some "force of law" out beyond the grave—there is the one true
and living God. He hopes you will be wise and make ready for that great
day called "Judgment."
There is a song many Christians sing. Part of it goes like this:
There's a great day coming
A great day coming,
There's a great day coming
by and by,
When the saints and the
sinners
Shall be parted right and
left.
Are you ready for that day
to come?
An Invitation.
If Jesus has been through it; and if He testifies that there is no
reincarnation, I beg you to believe Him. He is the only one who can save
you and get you safely home to heaven. His message to you is this:
"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in
heart and you will find rest for your souls."
(Matthew 11:28).
If you accept Him as Lord and Savior, please obey His Gospel. Seek out a
local congregation of the Church of Christ. Those Christians will help you
find the true path to eternal life—the path that leads to your eternal
home.
2 Corinthians 5:10 For we must all appear before the judgment seat of
Christ, that each one may receive what is due him for the things done
while in the body, whether good or bad.
Thank you for reading this booklet. I hope it has helped you in your
search for truth. Please pass this tract on to someone else so they can
read it too.
If you have any questions or comments, I would be glad to hear from you.
Post your questions to:
Kenn Francart
The only address we have from this old trac in not valid anymore.
David Lusk has not been found but we will continue to search for him.