You came here to start an arguement and resorted to insults with your post to Omega.
Omega posted a comment about fearing God. This was an allusion to:
Ps 111:10
10 The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom;
A good understanding have all those who do His commandments;
His praise endures forever. NAS
The word translated fear can also be translated "reverence". We reverence God who is the fountainhead of all true wisdom. As to insulting other religious beliefs, at least we don't advocate executing those who disagree with us as Islam does in Indonesia or converting to Christianity in India and other eastern nations.
Killing a person for their faith is the ultimate insult, which only other religions resort to.
I gave you a Bible verse that states reincarnation is a myth. If you think arguing that Elijha, who did not die returning as John the Baptist is reincarnation so be it, but it takes the physical death of an individual for reincarnation to be a factor.
I have a friend who believes the opening verses of Ezekiel proves the existance of flying saucers, so what you believe is not always truth.
At the time when John the Baptist began his public preaching, the priests in Jerusalem asked him about his identity. They asked: "Are you Elijah?" (John 1,21) In such circumstances a true "guru" wouldn’t have hesitated to state his position in the succession of spiritual masters (the guru parampara) of the tradition he is representing. However, John the Baptist answered simply: "I am not." His negation suggests another meaning to the words quoted from Matthew 11,14 and 17,12-13. John the Baptist was rather a kind of Elijah, a prophet who had to repeat the mission of Elijah in a similar context. The same as Elijah did, John the Baptist had to suffer persecution from the royal house of Israel and acted in the context of the spiritual degeneration of the Jewish nation, with the mission of bringing the people back to the right worship of God. John the Baptist had the same spiritual mission as the prophet Elijah, but not the same soul or self. For this reason the expression "in the spirit and power of Elijah" should not be interpreted as reincarnation of a person, but as a necessary repetition of a well-known episode in the history of Israel. Another Biblical text that contradicts the reincarnation theory in this case is the story of Elijah’s departure from this world. Elijah didn’t die in the proper sense of the word, but "went up to heaven in a whirlwind" (2 Kings 2,11). According to the classic theory of reincarnation, a person has to die physically first in order that his self may be reincarnated in another body. In the case of Elijah this didn’t happen. So it must be considered an exception to both the natural process of death, and to the rule of reincarnation. Finally, the experience of the three apostles at the Mount of Transfiguration has to be remembered (Matthew 17,1-8, Mark 9,2-8; Luke 9,28-36), when Elijah was identified by the apostles without being confused with John the Baptist.
http://www.comparativereligion.com/reincarnation3.html
This Internet site states our postition clearly, who why reinvent the wheel?