Dharmic Christianity
Dharmic Christianity is a personal, syncretic religious framework founded by Dylan Kiss Cumba. It combines elements of Christianity with concepts associated with Dharmic traditions—particularly reincarnation—alongside unique beliefs about time, consciousness, and fictional universes. It is not an organized or historically established religion, but rather an individualized belief system.
Overview
Overview Dharmic Christianity integrates belief in a single omnipotent God with a non-linear model of existence in which consciousness can reincarnate across time periods and different realities, including certain fictional universes. The system departs from traditional Christianity by rejecting a single earthly life followed by eternal judgment, instead proposing a continuous, multidimensional cycle of existence.
Founder Founder: Dylan Kiss Cumba Date of Birth: December 1, 2012 Nature of Religion: Personal / self-created belief system
Core Beliefs
God
Dharmic Christianity affirms one God who is: Omniscient (all-knowing) Omnipresent (present everywhere) Omnipotent (all-powerful) Eternal and unchanging Incapable of lying This understanding aligns closely with the God described in Christianity.
Jesus Christ
Jesus is regarded as: A prophet or divine messenger A moral and spiritual guide His role differs from traditional Christian doctrine, particularly regarding salvation and divinity.
Scripture
Dharmic Christianity: Accepts the Old Testament Accepts most of the New Testament Rejects the Book of Revelation
Reincarnation Doctrine
Reincarnation Doctrine A central feature of Dharmic Christianity is its structured concept of reincarnation across cycles. Cycle System and Limit Each individual is limited to 12 reincarnations per cycle After the 12th reincarnation, the individual enters a new cycle of reincarnations A new cycle represents a continuation of existence rather than an endpoint Memory or identity between cycles may not necessarily persist This structure introduces a finite-but-renewable system of existence.
Allowed Forms of Reincarnation
Humans in real-world settings Humans and anthropomorphic beings in certain fictional universes
Restrictions on Reincarnation
Dharmic Christianity establishes specific prohibitions: No reincarnation into infants or babies No reincarnation into the following fictional categories: Western adult animated television series Five Nights at Freddy's (FNaF) and related fangame universes Horror movie universes
View on Reality and Fiction
Dharmic Christianity proposes that: Fictional universes may exist as alternate forms of reality Consciousness can transition between different types of existence Not all fictional worlds are spiritually accessible This creates a hybrid metaphysical framework where fiction and reality intersect.
Afterlife and Existence
Instead of a permanent heaven or hell, Dharmic Christianity teaches: A cycle-based existence system Repeated reincarnation across multiple realities Renewal through successive cycles after reaching reincarnation limits
Ethical and Philosophical Themes
Emphasis on personal belief and self-defined spirituality Exploration of identity across realities and cycles Rejection of strictly linear time Focus on continuity of consciousness