I assume you do not mean "re-incarnation."
Incarnation is the Christian belief that the eternal Second Person of the Godhead, Jesus, took on human flesh and was born of the virgin Mary (John 1:14).
Re-incarnation is the non-Christian belief that people, once they die, come back as other objects or beings.
The Bible teaches man is not eternal. He is a direct creation of God (Psalm 139:13; Genesis 1:26-27). He is not incarnated successively, forced to physically atone for his sins of a previous life that he does not remember. Hebrews 9:26-27 categorically denies such ideas and instead asserts the justice of God. "And it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this is the judgement."
Christians believe that mary and joseph went to bethlehem (josephs home town ) to pay the taxes while mary was heavily pregnant (when she first concieved - without having sex - an angel told her to call the baby jesus ) anyway they get to bethlehem and mary is about to have her kid and they need a place to stay and for mary to have her kid but all the inns (motels ) are full so they downgrade and stay in a stable . Mary gives birth to jesus and names him jesus as directed by the angel . A really bright star shines over bethlehem once mary has given birth . Some more angels go and see shepherds in some fields and tell them that a saviour (jesus ) has been born and that the shepherds should follow the really bright star if they want to see baby jesus . So they do . Then several kings (three wise men ) travel from nearby countries carring gifts of gold frankincense and myrrh that they give to baby jesus . And thats te main bits and yeah then he goes and becomes a grown up and then dies because humans screwed up bigtime and he never screwed up (sinned ) so he died so that humans could go to heaven . And then he rose from the dead three days after he died and heaps of people saw him and then he rose up to heaven .
If you are referring to the act of Jesus' death and resurrection, Christians believe Jesus came back into the same human body in the tomb he was laid to rest.
The main one is the belief in re-incarnation.
Christian Lagger has written: 'Dienst' -- subject(s): Incarnation, Doctrinal Theology
Blake makes explicit the Christian symbolism of his poem in the second stanza by referring to God as the "Ancient of Days" and describing how God could not be seen until the Son, Jesus, took on a human form. This alludes to the Christian belief in the Trinity and the incarnation of Christ.
The Annunciation mysteries refer to the event in Christian belief when the archangel Gabriel announced to the Virgin Mary that she would conceive and give birth to Jesus. These are part of the Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary and are focused on reflecting on the incarnation of Jesus.
Avatar, from Sanskrit avatara, which is often translated as "incarnation," has the sense of "descent." The late scholar Geoffrey Parrinder wrote a book called Avatar and Incarnation in which he compared the Hindu (and other Eastern) conceptions of avatar with the Christian concept of incarnation. Although both Jesus and, for example, Krishna or Rama could be called descents of God into human form, the exclusivity of Jesus Christ as the "only begotten son" of God according to Christian theology makes the Hindu and Christian concepts somewhat incompatible. That didn't stop Hindus from absorbing Jesus into their pantheon of gods, much to the consternation of Christian missionaries.
No. He was an atheist. I think he believed in incarnation.
No
Nothing at all, it is not part of the christian belief.
An Angelus is a Christian devotion in memory of the Incarnation, or the bell rung as a call to prayer during the Angelus service.
That person is a non-Christian.
"Christian" is a belief not an ethnicity.
Christian Orthodox.