Reincarnation as Delusion: Mike Adams and the Subjective Theology Trap
Written on 15 May 2025.
Reincarnation as Delusion: Mike Adams and the Subjective Theology Trap
In his May 15, 2025 broadcast of Brighteon Broadcast News, Mike Adams ventures into a spiritually confused and theologically dangerous line of thought. Amid his usual content surrounding vaccines, food safety, and institutional corruption, Adams flirts with the metaphysics of reincarnation—expressed in a manner that collapses objective truth into belief-based consequence.
The Belief-Determines-Reality Error
During a reflective moment in the broadcast, Adams states:
"I don't want you to have to come back if you believe in reincarnation... Maybe this is the actual hell... So maybe we're all sinners. You know, maybe the Christians are right."
The structure of this statement is alarming. It suggests that believing in reincarnation may itself cause reincarnation—implying a sort of spiritual auto-programming. The implication is not that reincarnation is objectively real or false, but that it may become real for you if you think it is. This is metaphysical relativism, not truth.
In other words: if you believe you’ll come back, you will. If you believe in hell, maybe you’re in it. If you think you’re a sinner, maybe you are. This is Word-of-Faith mysticism, not biblical doctrine.
A Gospel-Denying Theology
The Bible speaks with clarity:
"And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment." — Hebrews 9:27
One death. One judgment. Not cycles. Not karma. Not a reality contingent upon subjective belief. The reincarnation theory denies the gospel because it implies there is another chance, another life, another way to atone—apart from the finished work of Christ.
The Speculative Mind of Mike Adams
In a separate moment, Adams remarks:
"I bet you there are souls that have been vaccine terminated their human lives multiple times... vaccines would be the ultimate reincarnation interference pattern."
Here, reincarnation is presented not just as real but as a framework in which human lives are interrupted—multiple times—by vaccines. While Mike Adams is correct in pointing out the undeniable damage vaccines can inflict on the human body—including blood integrity, immune disruption, and potential long-term harm—the spiritual framework of reincarnation remains unbiblical.
There is no scriptural basis for the idea of returning souls. Vaccines are indeed a physical threat, but they do not determine eternal destiny or spiritual cycles. The danger here is not that Adams is wrong about vaccine harm—he's right—but that the framework of reincarnation misdirects the truth. Hebrews 9:27 remains absolute: it is appointed once to die, then the judgment.
Truth Is Not Made, It Is Received
Mike Adams operates from a foundation that has merged health skepticism with a mutable theology. In his universe, truth bends to perception—maybe we are sinners, maybe this is hell—but this is the language of spiritual confusion.
Scripture doesn’t allow that. Jesus Christ is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6). The judgment is real. The gospel is not one of self-actualization, but of repentance and belief on the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 16:31).
It is not what we believe that makes something true. It is what is true that demands our belief.