In 1953, the execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg for espionage shocked the world. Many questioned why they received the death penalty when other, seemingly more serious crimes often resulted in lighter sentences. Was this a grave injustice, or was there a deeper pattern of justice at work?

This fascinating account traces Ethel Rosenberg’s soul journey through multiple incarnations, revealing a striking pattern of choices and consequences. In one life, she played a pivotal role in President Lincoln’s assassination. In another, as Thereza Venina in 17th century Spain, she was complicit in the deaths of hundreds of innocent people during the Spanish Inquisition. Her husband Julius, then known as Justinius, was also entangled in these historical events, consistently showing a pattern of being influenced by stronger personalities.

The story illustrates a profound truth: what appears as an isolated incident of harsh justice in one lifetime may actually be the culmination of actions and choices made across many lives. During this time of the Final Judgment, as the story suggests, every soul must face the consequences of its past actions – not as punishment, but as the natural working of Divine Laws.

You can read the full story of the Rosenbergs and other such stories that illuminate our limited perspective on justice, suggesting that true fairness operates on a scale far broader than we can see in a single lifetime, in Roselis von Sass’s book “Threads of Fate Determine Human Life.” It reminds us that every action, every choice, weaves threads into a tapestry that spans hundreds, if not thousands of lives, eventually creating the circumstances we encounter in our present existence.