UFOs and the Bible: 7 Theories by Dr Barry Downing
"I went to the Wikipedia site and found there was no reference for "UFOs
and the Bible," so I accepted their invitation to write one. It was
submitted in February of 2010. Almost immediately it was nominated in
the "everyone can be an editor" process for deletion as "fringe"
material. The original material was shrunk to a few paragraphs, which
were then merged into an already existing 'Ancient Astronaut' article.
Then Wikibin published only the text of the original article, without
footnotes. (As is their policy, no author is listed.) Strong Delusion,
in the interests of clarity and intellectual integrity, has agreed to
publish the document as originally submitted to Wikipedia."
Barry H.
Downing
UFOS AND THE BIBLE
Barry H. Downing
February 2010
Contents
-
Four
Major Theories Relating UFOs and the Bible
-
The
Ancient Astronaut Theory
-
The
Angelic Theory
-
The
Demonic Theory
-
The
Fallen Angel Theory
-
UFOs
and Religious Imagination
-
UFOs
as Religious Mythology
-
UFOs
and New Age Spirituality
-
UFOs,
Contactees and Religious Cults
3 References
-
Bibliography
UFOS AND THE BIBLE
Dr. Barry H. Downing
The
advent of the phenomenon of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) in the
middle of the 20th
Century has led to a wide range of religious speculation, especially
in regard to the Bible, in western culture. There have been four
major theories put forward to connect UFOs and the Bible: the ancient
astronaut, the angelic, the demonic, and the fallen angel theory.
These theories all seek to reconcile the concept of extraterrestrial
visitation with the biblical material.
There
is also a wider sense in which UFOs have influenced religious
imagination, and in this regard the Bible is seen as a resource but
not as an authority to be interpreted. There are three other major
ways in which the issue of religious imagination has related to the
UFO experience: UFOs as a modern religious mythology, UFOs as hope
for a New Age spirituality, and the emergence of religious cults
rooted in UFO mythology.
All
of this discussion has taken place against a back drop in which the
governments of the world deny that we are being visited by an
extraterrestrial reality, while UFO researchers claim that the
evidence of a cover-up is overwhelming. The United States Air Force
study of UFOs stated there was “no factual basis whatever” of a
government UFO cover-up. (1) But authors such as Donald Keyhoe,
Timothy Good, Richard M. Dolan, Terry Hansen, Lawrence Fawcett and
Barry J. Greenwood believe there is a cover-up. (2) Because of the
lack of clarity about UFO truth, a truly scientific and academic
appraisal of the religious implications of UFOs can only be tentative
at this time.
FOUR
THEORIES LINKING UFOS AND THE BIBLE
THE
ANCIENT ASTRONAUT THEORY
The
“Ancient Astronaut” theory is most closely associated with Eric
von Daniken, and his multi-million best selling book, Chariots
of the Gods? But authors such as Brinsley
Le Poer Trench, and Morris Jessup had begun to explore the issue of
extraterrestrial visitation and our religious past before von
Daniken. (3)
Von
Daniken asked questions about our archaeological past, wondering
about Egyptian pyramids, and ancient temples, suggesting that their
design and construction were inspired by extraterrestrial contact.
Television programs, especially on the History Channel, showed photos
of strange lines on the plains of Nazca, which are best visible from
the air. Von Daniken published books with photos of archaeological
sites that added plausibility to his ancient astronaut thesis. (4)
Chapter
4 of von Daniken’s book is entitled, “Was God an Astronaut?”
He refers to the vision of Ezekiel, who saw a strange flying object
that looked like a “wheel within a wheel,” suggesting Ezekiel
had seen a spaceship, a comparison Morris Jessup had made in 1956.
(5) But von Daniken makes his basic epistemology clear in a
discussion of Genesis 19, the story of the visitation of Lot by two
angels, and the destruction of the city of Sodom. He suggests that
these were not angels, but ancient astronauts. They may have used
atomic weapons to destroy the city. In any case, the other worldly
beings acted as if there was a time set for Sodom’s destruction—why
would God work on a time table? “It is also difficult for
enlightened children of this age to think of an infinitely good
Father who gives preference to ‘favorite children,’ such as Lot’s
family, over countless others.” (6)
Von
Daniken makes several assumptions with religious implications. He
assumes that in our scientific age, it makes sense to substitute the
idea of space aliens for angels. If we were to land on another
planet, where the people were very primitive, our astronauts would be
worshiped as “sons of heaven” or as “gods.” (7) Thus one key
to von Daniken’s theory is the issue of mistaken identity. Our
primitive ancestors might have thought they were seeing angels, but
we in our scientific age have grown beyond that understanding. We
now know better.
He
also assumes that the story of the destruction of Sodom can be taken
literally, which is contrary to the thinking of many religious
liberals, who would see this story as biblical mythology, not as real
history. Religious conservatives, however, would read this story
literally, but would object that von Daniken has turned angels into
space aliens, and has turned what may have been the supernatural
destruction of Sodom into destruction by means of advanced
technology. Religious liberals would agree that a “truly fair God”
would not have “favorite children,” but conservatives would
object that calling the Jews God’s chosen people is a central
biblical concept. (8)
Once
the concept of space aliens is imagined in relation to the Bible,
then those like R.L. Dione have argued that God is a space alien,
literally, as in his book God Drives a Flying
Saucer. Some even suggest that Jesus was an
extraterrestrial, and his miracles were due to his extraterrestrial
powers. After his crucifixion and resurrection, he returns to his
extraterrestrial existence, having told his disciples, “you are
from below, I am from above; you are of this world, I am not of this
world. (9)
THE
ANGELIC THEORY
The
angelic theory of UFOs has been put forward by Barry H. Downing in
his book, The Bible and Flying Saucers,
first published, like Chariots of the Gods?,
in 1968. Downing’s thesis is that UFOs carry the angels of God.
He does not secularize them, like von Daniken, into space aliens with
no special religious mission. (10)
Downing
makes an ontological distinction between God and God’s angels. God
in his essence is invisible. “No one has ever seen God.” (11)
But his angels can be seen, and take physical form. Jesus is the
visible “image of the invisible God.” (12) In the Old Testament,
angels were sometimes given God-like status, as when at Mt. Sinai the
book of Exodus says “And Moses went up to God, and the Lord called
him out of the mountain.” (13) But in the New Testament, the
distinction between God and God’s angels is more firm. It is
understood that the Jews “received the law as delivered by angels.”
(14)
Angels
are so physical, and so human, that we may not identify them
properly. “Do not hesitate to show hospitality to strangers, for
thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” (15) While Downing
would not say “God drives a flying saucer,” he suspects the
angels might, since they can be physical. If Jesus could ride a
donkey, angels should be allowed to fly in spaceships. (16)
Downing
devoted a major section of his book to the Exodus, claiming that the
“pillar of cloud and fire” of the Exodus was a space vehicle for
the angels, and the angels use technology. The “pillar” shape
suggests a cylinder which is similar to modern “cloud cigars”
that are frequently reported. (17) He takes the position that we
cannot be sure that ancient people, or we ourselves, can tell the
difference between the supernatural and the super technological. He
argues it is premature to make the separation that Roman Catholic
theologian Msgr. Corrado Balducci makes saying that miracles, angels
and demons come from the supernatural world, whereas UFOs come from
the natural world. (18)
Downing
and UFO researcher Joe Lewels, have put forward “The God
Hypothesis,” which argues that UFO beings are not here on earth
only as observers, but rather that they are directing and controlling
human destiny. (19) Scientific researchers such as Jacques Vallee
seem to support this hypothesis in works such as Dimensions,
where Vallee argues that UFOs are a god-like force, a “Control
System.” (20)
How
can UFOs be in control, and not land and make open contact? As
Vallee says, “Direct contact would preclude genuine learning.”
(21) Downing argues that if, as the Bible says, we are being made
in the image of God, then we have to be free from God, for God has no
God. The parable of Jesus concerning the householder who plants a
vineyard, lets it out to tenants, and leaves town, illustrates this
principle. God creates the earth, then goes away, to see if humans
will care for the vineyard, or the planet, responsibly. (22)
But
it is not true to say that UFOs, or the angels, do not interact at
all with life on earth. Rather, Downing argues that “targeted
intervention” is used to establish the biblical religion. (23)
For
Downing, the Exodus story is an example of targeted intervention.
Moses is targeted as a chosen person to speak for God, and to lead
the Exodus. Killing of the first-born in Egypt, leading to Jewish
Passover, is targeted intervention. The timing is targeted—midnight;
sexually targeted, males; birth order targeted, first-born only;
ethnically targeted, Egyptian only; Jewish first-born are “passed
over.” (24)
The
Jews are led up to the Red Sea by the Exodus UFO, the “pillar of
cloud and fire,” which hovers over the sea, using its propulsion
system (some type of beam technology) to split the water, and later
to either break off, or lock up, the Egyptian chariot wheels as the
army of Egypt tried to follow the Jews. ( 25)
The
Exodus UFO drops the “manna” for the Jews to eat during their
Exodus journey, at Sinai the commandments of the Jewish religion are
given, and then the Jews are led on to the “Promised Land,” where
their law, their priesthood, their “revealed” religion, becomes
self-directed. Once the Jewish faith becomes self-directed, in theory
it no longer requires angelic intervention. Nevertheless, through
the Exodus story the Jewish faith becomes, and still is, a model to
the world of divine intervention. (26)
In
the New Testament, Jesus becomes the ultimate form of targeted
intervention, he becomes God in human form, born the king of the
angels. UFO related New Testament events include the star of
Bethlehem, the angelic appearance to the shepherds at the birth of
Jesus, the Spirit of God that “descends like a dove” at the
baptism of Jesus, the “bright cloud” at his transfiguration, an
angel rolling back the stone at his tomb, and the “cloud” that
takes Jesus to heaven at his ascension. The ascension story of Jesus
has its parallel in the story of the “chariot of fire” that took
Elijah to heaven. (27) The conversion of the Apostle Paul becomes
one of the most important acts of targeted intervention in the
formation of the early church. On the road to Damascus, Saul/Paul
has a UFO close encounter which includes hearing the voice of Jesus.
(28)
Are
UFOs carrying out some kind of “targeted intervention” in our
time? Downing argues there is compelling evidence that UFOs have
interacted with our nuclear weapons facilities, disabling some
weapons, while perhaps preventing some disasters at nuclear power
facilities. The purpose of UFO abductions is not clear, but they
meet the definition of targeted intervention. Some abduction cases
such as that of Betty Andreasson Luca report a meeting with God
through her experience, presenting the possibility that some larger
spiritual purpose is involved in modern abductions. Perhaps the main
abduction message is: we are dealing with a power greater than any
human power. (29)
It
is thus the conclusion of those who hold “The God Hypothesis”
that UFOs are not just space aliens, but rather they are a divine, or
angelic power, guiding the development of life on earth. The Exodus
story in the Old Testament, and the Jesus story in the New Testament,
are examples of religious targeted intervention that have shaped
human development, although as Vallee would argue, in a very subtle
and indirect way.
THE
DEMONIC THEORY
The
two remaining theories in regard to UFOs and the Bible are both
developed by conservative Protestant Christians. They are the
“Demonic Theory” and the “Fallen Angel Theory.” Both
theories agree in rejecting the “Ancient Astronaut” and “Angelic”
theories discussed above, but they do not agree on how to connect
modern UFO evidence in light of the Bible. These two theories share
not only a common opposition to von Daniken and Downing, but they
also agree that whatever UFOs are, they are evil. They are evil
either because they are trying to deceive us into rejecting Jesus as
the Christ, or perhaps trivializing Jesus by making him into a space
alien. It is also possible they are working in a way that is
destructive of human genetics, especially in the area of human
sexuality.
Both
the demonic theory and the fallen angel theory are rooted in an
attempt to explain the abduction phenomenon in connection with UFOs.
This is no small issue. If UFOs simply challenged our jet fighters,
or interacted with our nuclear sites, we might understand UFOs to be
extraterrestrial observers who are largely willing to leave us alone.
But with hundreds of reports of alien abductions of humans,
researcher Thomas E. Bullard comments, “Respected investigators
like John Keel and Jacques Vallee declared the phenomenon elusive by
nature and pronounced that UFOs are not just stranger than anyone
imagined, but stranger than anyone could
imagine.” (30)
Researcher
Budd Hopkins has suggested aliens need our DNA, while Jacobs has
wondered if aliens are using our genetics to develop a hybrid race.
The late Harvard psychiatrist John Mack has argued that abductions
lead to a spiritual transformation, toward a more eastern type of
thinking (Buddhism in particular), while Whitley Strieber wrote
extensively of the spiritual dimension of his abduction experience in
his best selling book Communion.
The strange combination of the physical, genetic, psychological and
spiritual has been a challenge to secular UFO research organizations
such as MUFON. (31)
Christian
conservatives have approached the issue of abductions with a sense
that evil was at work here, a power working deceptively. The
writings of Keel, Vallee, Jacobs, Mack and Strieber have all provided
material on which either the demonic theory, or the fallen angel
theory, was built. (32)
One
of the early books promoting the demonic theory was by John Weldon,
UFOs: What On Earth Is Happening?
Published in 1976, the argument was that UFOs were demons let loose
on earth in anticipation of the Second Coming of Christ. A similar
point of view is in Timothy J. Dailey’s book, The
Millennial Deception: Angels, Aliens & the Antichrist.
Published in 1995, in addition to drawing on the writings of Keel,
Vallee, Jacobs and Strieber to make his demonic argument that the
anti-Christ has been let loose, he also lists the near death
experience of those like Betty Eadie as examples of the “masters of
deception.” (33) The central New Testament concept is that in the
end times there will be a “coming of the lawless one by the
activity of Satan” with all “wicked deception,” bringing on a
“strong delusion” concerning what is false. (34) Our scientific
age has been deceived into believing UFOs are space aliens, when in
fact they are demons whose presence will separate true believers in
Christ from those who can be tempted to believe in false signs.
A
more recent book making the demonic argument is by Gary Bates, Alien
Intrusion: UFOs and the Evolution Connection.
Bates draws on the works of Keel, Vallee, Jacobs, and Mack among
others to make his argument that UFOs are demonic. Concerning
whether the aliens are physical or spiritual, Bates concludes that
the aliens are spiritual beings “sometimes manifesting as
physical.” (35)
One
key element in conservative thinking is that true Christian
believers, if they call on the name of Jesus as they are about to be
abducted by an alien, the abduction attempt will stop. This belief
has been supported by MUFON CE-4 researcher Joe Jordan, among others,
who has discovered this pattern in his abduction studies. (36)
Bates
writes from the point of view of a “Young Earth” Christian, who
believes the earth is only about 6000 years old, and holds to a
literal Genesis, anti-evolutionary point of view. (37) Thus any
suggestion that space aliens are visiting earth opens the possibility
we live in an evolutionary universe, contrary to the Bates
understanding of creation. Thus he condemns von Daniken on the basis
of “dubious research,” (38) but his condemnation of Downing is
more theological.
Bates
places Downing with the fallen angels because Downing, though a
pastor, presents a deceptive doctrine of “a non-supernatural
interpretation of the Bible. By definition, any intervention by a
supernatural God would suggest that the Bible really is what it
claims to be—the inspired Word of God (2 Tim. 3:16).” (39)
Although Bates does not refute Downing’s
argument that a UFO parted the Red Sea, he senses that a
technological explanation for any divine or angelic intervention
destroys its value. Thus the faith of Bates depends on a concept of
the supernatural, in spite of the fact that “supernatural” is not
a biblical word.
THE
FALLEN ANGEL THEORY
The
fallen angel theory has its roots in a brief passage in early
Genesis. “When men began to multiply on the face of the ground,
and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the
daughters of men were fair; and they took to wife such of them as
they chose. “ “The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and
also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men,
and they bore children to them.” (40)
The
Nephilim are perhaps children of the fallen angels, although scholars
are not sure. (41) Eric von Daniken sees an extraterrestrial
connection in this passage, “we have the sons of God, who
interbreed with human beings.” (42)
Chuck
Missler and Mark Eastman in their book, Alien
Encounters: The Secret Behind the UFO Phenomenon,
make the argument that UFOs carry the fallen angels, or offspring of
fallen angels, the Nephilim of Genesis, who have now returned.
They
believe it was this interbreeding between the angels and humans that
led to what they call “the gene pool problem.” Noah was perfect
in his “generations,” that is “Noah’s genealogy was not
tarnished by the intrusion of fallen angels. It seems that this
adulteration of the human gene pool was a major problem on the planet
earth.” (43) Modern UFO abductions have a reproductive purpose.
Missler and Eastman quote David Jacobs who says the purpose of alien
abductions is “to help the aliens produce other beings.” (44)
Budd Hopkins says the aliens are “here to carry out a complex
breeding experiment in which they seem to be working to create a
hybrid species, a mix of human and alien characteristics.” (45)
Missler and Eastman see this as evidence that connects modern aliens
with the Nephilim.
Missler and Eastman
see modern UFO abductions as the work of fallen angels, rather than
demons, because of the physical nature of the UFO reality, as well as
the sexual dimension of abduction reports.
“Most
students of the Bible tend to assume that the demons of the New
Testament are equivalent to the fallen angels. Angels, however, seem
to have the ability to materialize, etc. (that is, except those
which are presently bound in Tartarus.) In contrast, the demons
seem desperate to seek embodiment. Angels and demons seem to be
quite different creatures.” (46) In the New Testament we find the
story of Jesus driving out demons or evil spirits from a man. The
demons talk to Jesus, and ask permission to be driven into a herd of
pigs. After the demons entered the herd of pigs, the pigs rushed
down a steep bank and drowned in the sea. (47) This New Testament
story seems to support the Missler and Eastman argument that since
UFO aliens seem to have their own bodies, they cannot be demons.
The
authors turn to the apocryphal Book of Enoch which reports that
“watchers” are a group of angels whose task is to watch over the
earth, and “200 of these Watchers lusted and fell into sin when
they married the ‘daughters of men.’” (48) Because Enoch is
mentioned in Hebrews 11:5, and Jude 1:14, the authors believe this is
sufficient authority to trust the reliability of this non-canonical
book. But it is the reproductive dimension of modern abduction
reports that leads Missler and Eastman to prefer the fallen angel
over the demonic interpretation of UFO encounters.
Gary
Bates considered the fallen angel or Nephilim argument at the end of
his book. He is aware of the work of Missler and Eastman, and cites
them occasionally in his own book. They agree on the basic concept
that UFOs are some kind of evil force seeking to deceive us into
rejecting Jesus as the Christ.
But
Bates neither rejects, nor endorses the Nephilim argument. Since
much of the fallen angel theory depends on the Book of Enoch, which
is not part of the Protestant canon, he is skeptical of the authority
Christians should give to the “Return of the Nephilim” theory.
Bates says the Book of Enoch is one of those books “that no council
of the entire early church favored.” (49) It might also occur to
Bates that the more physical the fallen angels seem, the more likely
they may be the kind of extraterrestrials that Erich von Daniken
believes in. This is a position Bates seeks to avoid.
UFOS
AND RELIGIOUS IMAGINATION
Each
of the above theories is based on the assumption that UFOs are real,
and whatever this reality is, it was around during biblical times,
and can be interpreted in light of the Christian religion, although a
scientific approach to the issues may alter our understanding of our
religious traditions.
But
there are other religious dimensions to the UFO phenomenon, some of
which impact the biblical world view, but which are mainly a product
of our human imagination. The question has to be raised: what is the
role of human psychology in modern UFO reports, and how does human
ability to create mythologies impact the religious dimension of the
UFO experience?
UFOs
can be seen as religious mythology in which our space age mind set is
used to turn angels into space aliens. Or we can suppose that UFOs
represent a significant change in human mentality, perhaps at the
level of the collective unconscious, and so all of humanity is in a
sense growing into a “New Age Form of Religion.”
Once
the traditional understanding of religion is questioned by UFOs and
space age thinking, the field is open for humans to explore “New
Revelations,” and we find that several religious cults have been
born out of the UFO womb.
UFOS
AS RELIGIOUS MYTHOLOGY
The
ancient astronaut, angelic, demonic, and fallen angel theories of
UFOs all depend on a belief in the literal reality of UFOs, as well
as the literal reality of angels and demons reported in the Bible.
Von Daniken turns angels into ancient astronauts, but they are
assumed to be as real as humanity itself.
But
a wide range of liberal Christian scholarship is skeptical of the
existence of angels and demons, they are seen as pre-scientific
mythology. Thus Cuthbert A. Simpson says of the Genesis 6 passage,
“The nucleus of this tale is a brief notice of the origin of the
Nephilim, a mythical race of giants referred to again in Num. 13.33.”
“Nephilim were thus represented as semidivine, the offspring of the
sons of God, and the daughters of men.” (50) Some liberal
Christians extend a mythological understanding of the angelic to the
New Testament. Thus John Hick would see the story of the Virgin
Birth of Jesus as a similar myth, a union between God and a female
human. (51) Those like Bishop John Shelby Spong call on the church
to give up the myth of Christ as risen savior. (52) This point of
view is heretical to conservative Christians, but represents the
thinking of modern secular scholarship, as well as some liberal
Christian scholarship.
For
Christian liberals, the attempt to interpret the Bible in light of
the space age is simply reforming an old myth in technological terms.
Swiss psychologist C.G. Jung set the academic foundation for this
point of view in his book, Flying Saucers: A
Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies. He
argues that the round shape of UFOs represents the human soul,
although “they do not represent our modern conception of the
psyche, but give an involuntary archetypal or mythological picture of
an unconscious content, a rotundum,
as the alchemists call it, that expresses the totality of the
individual.” (53)
As
signs in the sky, UFOs then become gods, and when one sees a UFO, it
becomes an experience of the divine in which a religious experience
gives “the personality the greatest possible unity and wholeness.
It creates the image of the divine-human personality….an Elijah who
calls down fire from heaven, rises up to heaven in a fiery chariot,
and is a forerunner of the Messiah, the dogmatized figure of Christ.”
(54)
Jacques
Vallee added academic justification for the mythological view of UFOs
and religion in his book Passport to Magonia:
From Folklore to Flying Saucers. Vallee
demonstrated parallels between modern UFO reports and stories of
fairies and “little people” from the past. (55) Interestingly,
Vallee’s book Dimensions
lends support to the angelic theory of UFOs, while his book
Revelations: Alien Contact and Human
Deception, is a source of support for the
demonic point of view. (56)
Since
UFOs do not land and make open contact, and since the governments of
the world take the position that UFOs are only unidentified natural
phenomena, much is left to the human imagination, creating the modern
UFO myth. Those like Keith Thompson explore these issues in his book
Angels and Aliens: UFOs and the Mythic
Imagination. Thompson devotes some of his
book to the question of how modern films and TV programs about space
aliens have created the modern UFO myth. (57)
Thompson
points out that two of the most qualified scientific researchers in
regard to UFOs, J. Allen Hynek, and Jacques Vallee, noticed “there
appeared remarkable parallels among UFO phenomena and descriptions of
human encounters with spiritual entities
throughout history.” (58) Whereas von Daniken projected space
aliens into the Bible, seeing them as perhaps a little more
technologically advanced, but otherwise human-like, current UFO
research includes what Hynek came to call a “strangeness rating.”
(59) Sometimes the data from UFO reports falls outside what human
logic predicts, including a spiritual dimension. Does the “high
strangeness” of UFO reports indicate they are mainly of a
psychological or mythical nature, or is high strangeness evidence of
an extremely advanced life form?
Liberal
Christianity has mainly ignored the religious dimensions of the
modern UFO story. One exception is Lutheran professor of theology
Ted Peters. In his book, UFOs--God’s
Chariots?, Peters explores the issue of
“flying saucers in politics, science and religion.” He is
skeptical that UFOs are real physical objects, saying the question of
UFO reality “is a long way from being resolved.” (60) Peters is
comfortable with a psychological and mythological interpretation of
UFOs. He says, “even though we in our modern era have been
enlightened by the discoveries of science to the extent that we feel
we have outgrown the mythological world view of the ancient
religions,” (61) modern attempts to link the Bible and UFOs, angels
and aliens, illustrates how our need to connect to a higher reality
is still in us.
Peters
devotes considerable space in his book to von Daniken, and Downing,
as well as R.L. Dione, in the way they give a space-age
interpretation to both the Old and New Testament. Peters says, “What
is startling about the claims of von Daniken and other would-be UFO
theologians is that they actually humanize and trivialize God. They
make natural what we believe to be supernatural.” (62) Thus Peters
agrees with Bates that to explain the miracles in the Bible
technologically rather than supernaturally destroys their value.
This book by Peters was published in 1977, well before those like
Bates, Missler and Eastman were making their demonic or fallen angel
arguments in regard to UFOs. Consequently Peters has no section in
his book devoted to the demonic interpretation of UFOs.
Theological
liberals like Peters are willing to offer their interpretation of the
UFO phenomenon without serious concern whether UFOs are “real,”
and whether there is a world wide cover-up on the part of the
governments of the earth. If governments were to release evidence
that UFOs are real, however, the types of issues that religious
liberals avoid would have to be faced. For instance, one of the most
famous miracles in Roman Catholic history involves a sighting related
to the Virgin Mary in Fatima, Portugal, on October 13, 1917. Many
researchers connect this miracle to UFOs, since what was seen by
thousands was “a huge silver disk, the apparent size of the sun.”
(63) Release of classified UFO information could force religious
leaders to face the question: how do we tell the difference between
the supernatural, and the super technological? That would lead to
the further theological question: In what way does the difference
matter?
UFOS
AND NEW AGE SPIRITUALITY
A
good introduction to New Age Spirituality is Shirley MacLaine’s
book Out on a Limb.
The book takes a conversational approach to issues such as
reincarnation, past lives, contact with spirits from other worlds,
channeling, the meaning of UFOs and even the biblical implications of
extraterrestrial contact. She connects UFOs and the biblical Exodus,
Jesus, and the Plains of Nazca in Peru all in the space of only two
pages. (64)
But
the most basic truth for MacLaine is the concept of reincarnation,
because on this basis each soul is responsible for its own
progression, for its own salvation. Thus there is a strong Hindu and
Buddhist direction at the core of MacLaine’s faith. Why would the
Christian church deny the truth of reincarnation? Because “such a
truth would make the power and the authority of the Church
unnecessary. Each person, that is, each entity, becomes responsible
to itself for its conduct. It does not need a church.” (65) This
is one dimension of New Age thinking that Christian conservatives
find most objectionable; if we can save ourselves, we do not need
Jesus as a savior. Connecting UFOs and New Age spirituality in this
way is exactly the kind of “deception” that those like Bates,
Dailey, Missler and Eastman are against.
Jacques
Vallee, one of the most insightful of modern UFO researchers, has
concluded, “We are not dealing with successive waves of visitations
from space. We are dealing with a control system,” (66) a system
that theologians usually have called God. Vallee wonders about “the
next form of religion,” wonders “what will happen to our
civilization if the next step in the development of the phenomenon is
a massive change of human attitudes toward paranormal abilities and
extraterrestrial life.” (67) Part of the issue here is separating
cause and effect. Do UFOs represent a change in human psychology, or
are UFOs causing a change in human psychology?
Perhaps
the best known psychiatrist dealing with UFOs has been the late Dr.
John Mack, formerly of Harvard Medical School. In 1977 he published
the Pulitzer Prize-winning book A Prince of
Our Disorder, a biography of T.E. Lawrence.
Through Budd Hopkins Mack became interested in UFO abductions,
publishing Abduction: Human Encounters with
Aliens in 1994, and then Passport
to the Cosmos: Human Transformation and Alien Encounters.
On the basis of interviews with abductees from many parts of the
world, Mack gained the impression that UFOs are some kind of
spiritual reality, trying to wean us away from the hard science
rationalism of the West, and move us in the direction of Eastern
spirituality, a view typical of New Age religious movements.
Mack
devotes a chapter to “Bernardo Peixoto,” a “shaman and
anthropologist of native Brazilian and Portuguese parents.” (68)
Bernardo tells Mack that his native people have legends of contact
with strange entities who come from the stars, and are “spirits who
take human form in order to be seen.” (69) Some of these spirit
beings are good, some are evil; pictures of these beings were drawn
on the walls of caves. The star beings went away, and “Bernardo’s
people, rather like Christians expecting the Second Coming of Christ,
are waiting for the star people to return.” (70) Bernardo tells of
his own contact with these beings; when asked where they came from,
the aliens answered “We come from nowhere.” (71) This kind of
anti-logical answer meets Allen Hynek’s standard of a high degree
of “strangeness,” but it does have echoes in the biblical
tradition. When Moses meets a divine being at the burning bush,
Moses asks for the name of the being, and the answer was given: “I
am who I am.” (72) There is a sense of timelessness, and perhaps
spacelessness, about this answer, which corresponds to the
commandment given later against making graven images. (73) The
spirit beings that Bernardo meets in some sense are like the biblical
angels, they briefly open a material window into a non-material
world.
How
do Bernardo’s alien contacts impact his life? He feels called to
protect his people, his land, his earth. As “a result of
industrialization, cattle farming, and ecotourism,” fires are
clearing land to graze cattle. The forests are being destroyed.
His goal is to “increase awareness on the part of both Indians and
whites of the ecological peril the region faces.” (74) What we
find is that the message from the aliens, and their impact on
Bernardo, has led him to live out what has come to be called New Age
spirituality. Mack might not reject the four theories relating UFOs
and the Bible entirely, but he would say each is far too simplistic.
Whatever aliens are, they are not simply scientists from outer
space.
In
regard to UFO aliens being either angels, or demons, or a combination
of both, Mack’s research indicates that native tribes from around
the world hold to similar beliefs, although their names for this
extraterrestrial reality may vary. What Mack would say is that UFOs
are a world wide phenomena, they are not something to be interpreted
exclusively in light of the biblical tradition. UFOs need to be
studied for their spiritual purpose, but in light of spiritual truth
all of humanity can embrace. Mack says, “In the end, the abduction
phenomenon seems to me to be a part of the shift in consciousness
that is collapsing duality and enabling us to see that we are
connected beyond the Earth at a cosmic level. No common enemy will
unite us, but the realization of a common Source might.” (75)
At
the same time, he believes we no longer expect “ an Old Testament
God/bully that will part the seas” as we go, nor will we find a
divine savior coming from above. Rather UFO contacts, and
“near-death and other out-of-body experiences” point us toward
“the essence of all creation.” (76)
Although
there has been no clear connection between UFOs and near death
experiences (NDEs), books like Raymond Moody’s Life
After Life, Betty Eadie’s Embraced
by the Light, Kenneth Ring’s Heading
Toward Omega: In Search of the Meaning of the Near-Death Experience,
as well as Howard Storm’s My Descent Into
Death, are examples of books that have
impacted modern consciousness about the reality that may lie beyond
death. (77)
NDEs
have a widely disputed history of interpretation, some seeing them as
genuine experiences beyond death, others suppose the “light at the
end of the tunnel” is only a birth memory. The reports of NDEs
have contributed to a widening sense of the spiritual that goes
beyond what has been considered biblical orthodoxy. Thus
conservative writers like Timothy Dailey see NDE’s, UFOs,
channeling, and belief in reincarnation all as forms of spiritual
deception in our time. (78)
Howard
Storm was an agnostic art professor before his NDE. During his NDE,
when he was on “the other side” Storm reports meeting Jesus, and
several angels, and he asked a series of questions about the meaning
of life, and the nature of the universe. After his experience, Storm
became a Christian, went to seminary, and is now an ordained pastor.
(79)
The
problem New Age spirituality represents for traditional Christianity
is this: are we going through a “falling away” from true
Christianity, or are we going through another “Reformation,” in
which things like UFOs and NDEs are some modern form of revelation
which will bring us to a truer and more universal understanding of
the biblical faith?
UFOS,
CONTACTEES AND RELIGIOUS CULTS
The
issues of psychology, religion, UFO contactees, and religious cults
are closely connected. In the early years of the UFO mystery, there
were many stories of persons having contact with our “space
brothers,” and perhaps being given a ride in a flying saucer to a
far planet. Later, abduction stories tended to move in a more
complex religious and extraterrestrial, or extradimensional
direction.
John
Mack’s study of Bernardo Peixoto represents one kind of contactee
experience. All contactee reports have a religious dimension, some
contactees, or those who claim to be contactees, go on to form a
religious cult. The problem of separating genuine contact reports
from fraudulent ones challenges the resources of those trying to
study UFOs scientifically. (80) Although those studying UFOs
scientifically look skeptically at contactee stories, the problem for
those who connect UFOs and the Bible is this: might Moses, Elijah and
Jesus be examples of early contactees?
One
mid-20th century
contactee was Orfeo Angelucci, who reported that he was on his way
home from work one evening in Burbank, California, when he noticed a
glowing disk following him. He stopped his car, and met a beautiful
man and woman from another planet, who gave him a ride in their
saucer, and who gave him spiritual wisdom. “He tells us that we
are continually under observation by the Spirit of God, by a
hierarchy of angels and heavenly hosts, and by the very highly
evolved beings he encountered, beings of other planets who are so
perfected as to be ‘almost angels, on the threshold.’” (81)
Using Angelucci’s book, The Secret of the
Saucers (1955), C.G. Jung devoted attention
to Angelucci’s story, illustrating how the human unconscious can
transform the old biblical mythology into a space age mythology. (82)
Religious
cults can emerge from those who claim to have had extensive, or
perhaps even on going, contact with aliens. One such is the Raelian
Movement, started by former French race car driver, Claude Vorilhon.
He reported a UFO encounter in which the Elohim named him as a
prophet. He now has a fairly strong following, and his new name,
“Rael” is a name “that implies a total reconsideration at all
levels, individual, social, political, scientific philosophical and
religious. This allows Universal involvement in building of
tomorrow’s society.” (83) Rael is still receiving messages
telepathically from the aliens, with information such as: “I,
Yahweh, through the words of my messenger Rael, address to the people
of the Earth the following message.” “Beware! It is not
impossible that other Aliens will make contact very soon with the
people of the earth.” (84)
Heaven’s
Gate was the name of a well known UFO religious cult that ended with
the suicide of 39 of its members, including its leader Marshall
Applewhite. The suicides occurred during Holy Week of 1997, in
Rancho Santa Fe, California. This was actually Applewhite’s second
UFO cult. He was first linked with Bonnie Lu Trusdale Nettles, who
had died in 1985. They had been leaders of the cult of “The Two,”
based on Revelation 11:3, “And I will grant my two witnesses power
to prophesy for one thousand two hundred and sixty days, clothed in
sackcloth.” When Nettles died and Applewhite lived on, he formed a
new cult, waiting to be rescued by a UFO that would follow the
Hale-Bopp comet. Suicide was the means by which cult members could
leave their earthly bodies and join that UFO salvation in the sky.
(85)
The
religious, psychological, social and political issues that relate
UFOs to the Bible are complex. If the governments of the world are
hesitant to be open about UFO information, this reluctance is to
some extent understandable. If there is secret UFO information to be
released, it is difficult to judge what the social and religious
implications would be for those who trust the Bible as their source
of spiritual inspiration.
Footnotes to “UFOs and
the Bible”
1. Edward U. Condon,
Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying
Objects (New York: Bantam, 1969), p. 15.
2.
Maj. Donald E. Keyhoe, Flying Saucers: Top
Secret (New York: G.P. Putnam’s, 1960);
Timothy Good, Above Top Secret: The Worldwide
UFO Cover-up (New York: William Morrow,
1988); Richard M. Dolan, UFOs and the National
Security State, Vol. 1, 1941-1973 (Rochester,
NY: Keyhole Publishing, 2000); Vol. 2, 1973-1991 (Rochester, NY:
Keyhole Publishing, 2009); Terry Hansen, The
Missing Times: News Media Complicity in the UFO Cover-up
(Xlibris, 2000); Lawrence Fawcett and Barry J. Greenwood, Clear
Intent: The Government Coverup of the UFO Experience
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1984).
3.
Erich von Daniken, Chariots of the Gods?
Unsolved Mysteries of the Past, trans.
Michael Heron (New York: Bantam, 1971; copyright 1968 Econ-Verlog);
von Daniken was born in Switzerland, and attended the College of
Saint-Michel in Fribourg; see “Von Daniken, Erich,” The
Encyclopedia of Extraterrestrial Encounters,
Ronald D. Story, ed. (New York: New American Library, 2001), p.
634-5, [Hereafter designated EEE.]
Brinsley Le Poer Trench, The Sky People
(New York: Award Books, 1970; copyright 1960, London); Morris K.
Jessup, UFO and the Bible
(New York: Citadel Press, 1956). Concerning theories of UFOs and
religion see Barry H. Downing, “Religion and UFOs,” EEE,
p. 481-484.
4.
Erich von Daniken, In Search of Ancient Gods:
My Pictorial Evidence for the Impossible,
trans. Michael Heron (New York: Putnam’s, 1974; copyright 1973Econ
Verlag); Miracles of the Gods,
trans. Michael Heron (New York: Delacorte Press, 1975; copyright 1974
Econ-Verlag.) Also see, “33 UFO-or Extraterrestrial-Themed TV
shows,” Stephen J. Spignesi, The UFO Book
of Lists (New York: Citadel Press, 2000), p.
218-225.
5.
Ez. 1:16; von Daniken, Chariots of the Gods?,
op. cit., p. 38-9.
Jessup, op. cit., p.
56-59. NASA scientist Josef F. Blumrich designed a spaceship based
on the description in Ezekiel; The Spaceships
of Ezekiel (New York: Bantam, 1974).
6.
von Daniken, op. cit.,
p. 37. Le Poer Trench had previously speculated that a space vehicle
had used nuclear weapons to destroy Sodom; op.
cit., p. 64-5.
7.
von Daniken, op. cit.,
p. 44.
8.
Concerning the Jews as chosen people: “For you are a holy people
to the Lord your God; the Lord your God has chosen you to be a people
for his own possession, out of all the people that are on the face of
the earth.” (Deut. 7:6; all biblical quotations are from the
Revised Standard Version.) Liberal Christians like John Shelby
Spong, in reference to the God of Exodus who saves the Jews, but
drowns the Egyptians in the Red Sea, wonders if that God is a
“capricious deity who appears to embody the worst of our human
tribal and political hatreds?” Why
Christianity Must Change or Die (New York:
HarperCollins, 1998), p. 9.
9.
Jn 8:23; R.L. Dione, God Drives a Flying
Saucer (New York: Bantam, 1973); Ann Madden
Jones, The Yahweh Encounters: Bible
Astronauts, Ark Radiations and Temple Electronics
(Chapel Hill, NC: Sandbird Publishing, 1995); concerning Jesus as an
alien from space see Ronald D. Story, “Jesus as an
extraterrestrial,” EEE,
p. 277-282; also see Spignesi, op. cit.,
“14 Elements of the ‘Jesus Was an Extraterrestrial’ Theory,”
p. 39-41. Gerhard R. Steinhauser, Jesus
Christ: Heir to the Astronauts (New York:
Pocket Books, 1976).
10.
Barry H. Downing, The Bible and Flying
Saucers (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott,
1968), (Hereafter designated BFS);
also see Downing, “Angels and UFOs,” EEE,
p. 72-3. Downing is an ordained Presbyterian pastor with degrees in
physics and theology; he has served as a theological consultant to
the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) since 1972. See “Downing, Barry
H.,” Who’s Who In Theology and Science,
John Templeton Foundation, ed. (Framingham, MA: Winthrop Publishing,
1992), p. 55; also, “Downing, Barry H.,” EEE,
p. 159. Michael J.S. Carter experienced an alien encounter in his
own home, and sought to interpret the experience in light of biblical
angelic visitations. See his book, Alien
Scriptures: Extraterrestrials in the Holy Bible
(Blue Star Publications, 2005).
11.
Jn 1:18.
12.
Col 1:15.
13.
Ex 19:3.
14.
Acts 7:53; also Gal 3:19.
15:
Heb. 13:2.
16.
Barry H. Downing, “UFOs, the Bible and Targeted Intervention”
(Strong Delusion web site, http//the strongdelusion.com/, January
2010); see Part 1, “Exodus and Biblical Angelology.”
17.
Ex 13:21,22; Spignesi, op. cit.,
p. 136.
18.
See the Michael Hesemann interview with Msgr. Corrado Balducci,
printed in the book by Whitley Strieber, Confirmation:
The Hard Evidence of Aliens Among Us (New
York: St. Martin’s Press, 1998), p. 265-274. Also response by
Barry H. Downing, “The Balducci interview and religious certainty,”
MUFON UFO Journal,
September 1998, p. 16, 17. Also by Downing, “Biblical miracles as
super-technology,” EEE,
p.
111-12. R.L. Dione, Is God Supernatural? The
4,000-Year Misunderstanding (New York:
Bantam, 1976).
19.
Barry H. Downing, “The God Hypothesis,” MUFON
UFO Journal, October 1988, p. 10-13; Joe
Lewels, The God Hypothesis: Extraterrestrial
Life and its Implications for Science and Religion
(Mill Spring, NC: Wild Flower Press, 1997).
20.
Jacques Vallee, Dimensions: A Casebook of
Alien Contact (Chicago: Contemporary Books,
1988), p. 271-281.
21.
Ibid, p. 276.
22.
Mt 21:33-41.
23.
Barry H. Downing, “UFOs, the Bible and Targeted Intervention,”
January 2010, op. cit.,
see section III, “Targeted Intervention as a Ruling Strategy;”
Vallee sees a similar strategy. He says in regard to patterns of UFO
intervention, “The best schedule for reinforcement is one that
combines periodicity with unpredictability.” Vallee, op.
cit., p. 274.
24.
Ex 3; 12:1-27; Downing, BFS,
op. cit., p. 78; also
Downing, “Targeted Intervention,” op.
cit., Part I, “Exodus and Biblical
Angelology,” and Part III, “Targeted Intervention as a Ruling
Strategy.”
25.
Ex 14:19-29; Downing, BFS,
op. cit., p. 81-101;
also Downing, “Did a UFO Part the Red Sea?” UFO
Magazine, Vol. 5, No. 2, 1990, p. 16-21.
Morris Jessup, in reference to Exodus 14:21 had these words,
“Gravitational control?” Jessup, op. cit.
p. 41. R.L. Dione suggested that two
cylindrical UFOs settled in the sea bed, some distance apart, thus
leaving an open sea channel. Dione, Is God
Supernatural?, op.
cit., p. 63.
26.
Ex 16:4-12; 19:1-25; 20:1-17; 24:1-18; 26:1-30; Nu 9:15-23;
11:1-15; Downing, BFS,
op. cit., 101-118.
27.
Mt 2:9; Lk 2:9; 3:22; Mt 17:1-8; 28:2; Acts 1:9; 2 Ki 2:11. Downing,
BFS, p. 125-152.
28.
Acts 9:3-7; 22:6-11; 26:12-18; Downing, BFS,
p. 153-8.
29.
Downing, “Targeted Intervention,” op.
cit., Part III, “Targeted Intervention as a
Ruling Strategy;”
Concerning
UFOs interacting with nuclear weapons facilities, see Dolan, op.
cit, Vol. 2 (2009), Malmstrom Air Force Base,
p. 84-86; 95-99; parallel report from Hansen, op.
cit, near Great Falls, Montana, p. 17-20.
UFOs disabling nuclear weapons at an American base in England--Larry
Warren and Peter Robins, Left at East Gate: A
First-hand Account of the Bentwaters-Woodbridge UFO Incident, Its
Cover-up, and Investigation (New York:
Marlowe, 1997), p. 407-419. UFO intervention to stop damage from a
leak in a nuclear power plant near Peekskill, New York; Dolan, op.
cit., p. 339. Concerning the religious
dimension of the Betty Andreasson abduction report, see Raymond E.
Fowler, The Andreasson Affair
(New York: Bantam, 1980).
30.
<ref>David
M. Jacobs, ed., UFOs and Abductions:
Challenging the Borders of Knowledge
(Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 2000), p. 167. From
chapter 6, “UFOs: Lost in the Myths,” by Thomas E. Bullard.
</ref>
31.
<ref>
John Mack, Abduction: Human Encounters with
Aliens (New York: Charles Scribner’s,
1994); concerning sexual and reproductive dimension of abductions
involving a female, see Budd Hopkins, Intruders:
The Incredible Visitations at Copley Woods
(New York: Random House, 1987); concerning a male sexual contact with
an alien, see Scott Corrales, “Villas Boas Abduction,” EEE,
p. 633-4. For a reported alien encounter with spiritual implications
see Whitley Strieber, Communion: A True Story
(New York: Beech Tree Books, 1987). For a wide look at the
paranormal dimension of modern issues that support the demonic
argument, see George P. Hansen, The Trickster
and the Paranormal (Xlibris Corporation,
2001). </ref>
32.
<ref>
In his book The Mothman Prophecies
(New York: Signet Books, 1975), John Keel has argued that UFOs are
an interdimensional reality that seems to use humans as
entertainment. Abduction researcher David Jacobs believes aliens are
using humans to develop a hybrid race. See his book The
Threat: Revealing the Secret Alien Agenda
(New York: Fireside Books, 1998).
33.
Weldon, John, with Zola Levitt, UFOs: What on
Earth Is Happening? (New York: Bantam,
1976).
Timothy
J. Dailey, The Millennial Deception: Angels,
Aliens & the Antichrist (Grand Rapids,
MI: Chosen Books, 1995), p. 192. </ref>
34.
<ref>
2 Thes 2:9-12</ref>
35.
<ref>Gary
Bates, Alien Intrusion: UFOs and the
Evolution Connection (Green Forest, AR:
Master Books, 2004), p. 249. Gary Bates works with Creation
Ministries International. </ref>
36.
<ref>
Ibid, p. 256-7. </ref>
37.
<ref>
Ibid, p. 345. </ref>
38.
<ref>
Ibid, p. 203. </ref>
39.
<ref>Ibid,
p. 328. </ref>
40.
<ref>Gen.
6:1,2; 4. </ref>
41.
<ref>James
Orr says “it is not easy to be certain of the interpretation of
this strange passage.” “Nephilim,” The
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia,
James Orr, ed., (Chicago: Howard-Severance, 1930), Vol. IV, p. 2133.
</ref>
42.
<ref>
Von Daniken, op. cit.,
p. 34. </ref>
43.
<ref>Missler,
Chuck, and Mark Eastman, Alien Encounters: The
Secret Behind the UFO Phenomenon (Coeur
d’Alene, ID: Koinonia House, 1997), p. 207. Missler is the founder
of Koinonia House in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. </ref>
44.
<ref>Ibid,
p. 44. </ref>
45.
<ref>
Ibid, p. 118</ref>46.
<ref>Ibid,
p. 213. Also see “Aliens, Angels, and Demons,” p. 239. </ref>
47.
<ref>Mk
5:1-13. </ref>
48.
<ref>Missler,
op. cit., p. 241. In
the Book of Enoch, God addresses Enoch and sends him to confront the
“Watchers,” saying, “Why did you leave lofty, holy Heaven to
sleep with women, to defile yourselves with the daughters of men and
take them as your wives, and like the children of the earth to beget
sons, in your case giants?” Willis Barnstone, ed.,
The Other Bible (New York: HaperSanFrancisco,
1984), p. 487. </ref>
49.
<ref>
Bates, op. cit., p.
365. </ref>
50.
<ref>Cuthbert
A. Simpson, “Genesis,” The Interpreter’s
Bible, Vol. I (New York: Abingdon, 1952), p.
533. </ref>
51.
<ref>Concerning
Mary’s conception by the Holy Spirit see Lk 1:35. John Hick has
called on Christians to give up believing in The
Myth of God Incarnate (Philadelphia:
Westminster Press, 1977). Also see Rudolf Bultmann, Jesus
Christ and Mythology (New York: Scribner,
1958). </ref>
52.
<ref>
Spong, op. cit., see
chapter 6, “Jesus as Rescuer: An Image That Has to Go,” p. 83-99.
</ref>
53.
<ref>C.G.
Jung, Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things
Seen in the Skies, trans. R. F. C. Hull (New
York: MJF Books, 1978), p. 20. </ref>
54.
<ref>
Ibid, p. 21-2. </ref>
55.
<ref>
Jacques Vallee, Passport to Magonia: from
folklore to flying saucers (Chicago: Henry
Regnery, 1969).“Perhaps what we search for is no more than a dream
that, becoming part of our lives, never existed in reality.” p.
163. </ref>
56.
<ref>Jacques
Vallee, Revelations: Alien Contact and Human
Deception (New York: Ballantine Books, 1991).
Also see Barry H. Downing, “Ufology, Religion and Deception,”
MUFON UFO Journal, February 1977, p. 9-12.
</ref>
57.
<ref>Keith
Thompson, Angels and Aliens: UFOs and the
Mythic Imagination (Reading, MA:
Addison-Wesley Publishing, 1991), p. 62-72. Also see Spignesi, op.
cit., “187 Movies About UFOs and Aliens,”
p. 213-17. </ref>
58.
<ref>Thompson,
op. cit., p. 80.
</ref>
59.
<ref>J.
Allen Hynek, The UFO Experience: A Scientific
Inquiry (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1972), p.
24. </ref>
60.
<ref>Ted
Peters, UFOs—God’s Chariots? Flying
Saucers in Politics, Science and Religion
(Atlanta: John Knox, 1977), p. 19. Peters is Professor of Systematic
Theology at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, Berkeley,
California, and co-editor of Theology and
Science. </ref>
61.
<ref>Peters,
op. cit., p. 150.
</ref>
62.
<ref>Ibid,
p. 115. </ref>
63.
<ref>Ann
Druffel, “Fatima (Portugal) miracle at,” EEE,
p. 190. Also Spignesi, op. cit.,
“6 Similarities Between Apparitions of the Virgin Mary and UFO
Sightings,” p. 175-6. </ref>
64.
<ref>Shirley
MacLaine, Out on a Limb
(New York: Bantam, 1983), p. 243-4. The Foreword to the Missler and
Eastman book was written by Douglas James Mahr, who met MacLaine as
she was writing Out on a Limb,
where Ramatha “orchestrated the popularization of New Age.”
Missler, op. cit., p.
2. </ref>
65.
<ref>MacLaine,
op. cit., p. 204-5.
Richard L. Thompson has connected Vedic literature and UFOs in his
book Alien Identities: Ancient Insights into
Modern UFO Phenomena (San Diego: Govardhan
Hill, 1993).
Concerning
Hindu and Buddhist connections to UFOs also see W. Raymond Drake,
Gods and Spacemen in the Ancient East
(New York: Signet Books, 1968). </ref>
66.
Vallee, Jacques, The Invisible College (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1975), p. 195.
67.
<ref>
Ibid., p. 204. </ref>
68.
<ref>John
E. Mack, Passport to the Cosmos: Human
Transformation and Alien Encounters (New
York: Crown Publishers, 1999); p. 158. </ref>
69.
<ref>
Ibid., p. 160. </ref>
70.
<ref>Ibid.,
p. 159. </ref>
71.
<ref>Ibid.,
p. 162. </ref>
72.
<ref>Ex
3:14. </ref>
73
<ref>Ex
20:4. </ref>
74.
<ref>Mack,
op. ct., p. 165.
</ref>
75.
<ref>
Ibid., p. 280. </ref>
76.
<ref>Ibid.
Raymond Fowler explores the issue of out of the body experiences in
the Betty Andreasson abduction sequence in his book The
Watchers: The Secret Design Behind UFO Abduction
(New York: Bantam, 1990), see chapter 9, “UFOs and OBEs,” p.
141-191. Fowler also explores the Genesis 6 issue, the Nephilim, in
chapter 10, “The Watchers,” p. 192-220. </ref>
77.
<ref>Raymond
A. Moody, Jr., Life After Life
(New York: Bantam, 1976); Kenneth Ring, Heading
Toward Omega: In Search of the Meaning of the Near-Death Experience
(New York: Quill, 1984); Betty Eadie, Embraced
By the Light (New York: Bantam, 1992); Howard
Storm, My Descent into Death
(New York: Doubleday, 2005). </ref>
78.
<ref>Dailey,
op. cit., p. 80-100.
</ref>
79.
<ref>Storm,
op. cit., questions
asked of Jesus and the angels, p. 68-76. </ref>
80.
<ref>Ronald
D. Story, “Contactees,” EEE,
p. 134. </ref>
81.
<ref>Robert
S. Ellwood, “Angelucci, Orfeo,” EEE,
p. 75. </ref>
82.
<ref>Jung,
op. cit., p. 112-120.
</ref>
83.
<ref>Claude
Vorilhon Rael, Let’s Welcome Our Fathers
from Space: They Created Humanity in Their Laboratories
(Tokyo: AOM Corporation, 1987), p. 185. Also see Barry H. Downing,
“UFOs, cults, and cloning,” MUFON UFO
Journal, February 2003, p. 7-8. </ref>
84.
<ref>Rael,
op. cit., p. 11.
</ref>
85.
<ref>Barry
H. Downing, “Cult of ‘The Two’ Composed of Five Elements,”
Skylook, December
1975, p. 10-11. Downing, “The Second Coming of Marshall
Applewhite,” MUFON UFO Journal,
May 1997, p. 7-8.</ref>
Bibliography
The
Holy Bible, Revised Standard Version, Second
Edition, (Park Ridge: Cokesbury, 1963).
Barnstone,
Willis, ed., The Other Bible
(New York: HarperSanFrancisco, 1984).
Bates,
Gary, Alien Intrusion: UFOs and the Evolution
Connection (Green Forest, AR: Master Books,
2004).
Carter,
Michael J. S., Alien Scriptures:
Extraterrestrials in the Holy Bible (Blue
Star Publications, 2005).
Clark,
Jerome, The UFO Book: Encyclopedia of the
Extraterrestrial (Detroit: Visible Ink,
1998).
Condon,
Edward U., Scientific Study of Unidentified
Flying Objects, Daniel S. Gillmor, ed. (New
York: Bantam, 1969).
Dailey,
Timothy J., The Millennial Deception: Angels,
Aliens & the Antichrist (Grand Rapids,
MI: Chosen Books, 1995).
R.L.
Dione, God Drives a Flying Saucer
(New York: Bantam, 1973).
________,
Is God Supernatural? The 4000 Year
Misunderstanding (New York: Bantam, 1976).
Dolan,
Richard M., UFOs and the National Security
State, Vol. 1, 1941-1973 (Rochester, NY:
Keyhole Publishing, 2000).
________,
UFOs and the National Security State,
Vol. 2, 1973-1991 (Rochester, NY: Keyhole Publishing, 2009).
Downing,
Barry H., The Bible and Flying Saucers
(Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1968).
Fawcett,
Lawrence and Barry J. Greenwood, Clear Intent:
The Government Coverup of the UFO Experience
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1994).
Fowler,
Raymond E., The Andreasson Affair
(New York: Bantam, 1980).
________,
The Watchers: The Secret Design Behind UFO
Abduction (New York: Bantam, 1990).
Good,
Timothy, Above Top Secret: The Worldwide UFO
Cover-up (New York: William Morrow, 1988).
Hansen,
George P., The Trickster and the Paranormal
(Xlibris Corporation, 2001).
Hansen,
Terry, The Missing Times: News Media
Complicity in the UFO Cover-up (Xlibris
Corporation, 2000).
Hopkins,
Budd, Intruders: The Incredible Visitations
at Copley Woods (New York: Random House,
1987).
Hynek,
J. Allen, The UFO Experience: A Scientific
Inquiry (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1972).
Jacobs,
David M., The Threat: Revealing the Secret
Alien Agenda (New York: Fireside Books,
1998).
________,
ed., UFOs and Abductions: Challenging the
Borders of Knowledge (Lawrence, KA: Kansas
University Press, 2000).
Jessup,
Morris K., UFO and the Bible
(New York: Citadel Press, 1956).
Jung,
C.G., Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things
Seen in the Skies, trans. R.F.C. Hull (New
York: MJF Books, 1978).
Keel,
John A., The Mothman Prophecies
(New York: Signet Books, 1975).
Keyhoe,
Maj. Donald E., Flying Saucers: Top Secret
(New York: G. P. Putnam’s, 1960).
Le
Poer Trench, Brinsley, The Sky People
(New York: Award Books, 1970).
Lewels,
Joe, The God Hypothesis: Extraterrestrial Life
and its Implications for Science and Religion
(Mill Spring, NC: Wild Flower Press, 1997).
Mack,
John E., Abduction: Human Encounters with
Aliens (New York: Charles Scribner’s,
1994).
________,
Passport to the Cosmos: Human Transformation
and Alien Encounters (New York: Crown, 1999).
MacLaine,
Shirley, Out on a Limb
(New York: Bantam, 1984).
Missler,
Chuck, and Mark Eastman, Alien Encounters: The
Secret Behind the UFO Phenomenon Coeur
d’Alene, ID: Koinonia House, 1997).
Moody,
Raymond A. Jr., Life After Life
(New York: Bantam, 1976).
Peters,
Ted, UFOs—God’s Chariots?: Flying Saucers
in Politics, Science and Religion (Atlanta:
John Knox, 1977).
Rael,
Claude Vorilhon, Let’s Welcome Our Fathers
from Space: They Created Humanity in their Laboratories
(Tokyo: AOM Corporation, 1987).
Ring,
Kenneth, Heading Toward Omega: In Search of
the Meaning of the Near-Death Experience (New
York: Quill, 1984).
Thompson,
Keith, Angels and Aliens: UFOs and the Mythic
Imagination (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley
Publishing, 1991).
Thompson,
Richard L., Alien Identities: Ancient
Insights into Modern UFO Phenomena (San
Diego: Govardhan Hill, 1993).
Spignesi,
Stephen J., The UFO Book of Lists
(New York: Citadel Press, 2000).
Spong,
John Shelby, Why Christianity Must Change or
Die (New York: HarperSanFrancisco, 1998).
Storm,
Howard, My Descent into Death (New
York: Doubleday, 2005).
Story,
Ronald D., ed., The Encyclopedia of
Extraterrestrial Encounters (New York: New
American Library, 2001).
Strieber,
Whitley, Communion: A True Story
(New York: Beech Tree Books, 1987).
________,
Confirmation: The Hard Evidence of Aliens
Among Us (New York: St. Martin’s Press,
1998).
Vallee,
Jacques, Dimensions: A Casebook of Alien
Contact (Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1988).
________,
Passport to Magonia: From Folklore to Flying
Saucers (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1969).
________,
Revelations: Alien Contact and Human Deception
(New York: Ballantine Books, 1991).
________,
The Invisible College
(New York: E.P. Dutton, 1975).
Von
Daniken, Erich, Chariots of the Gods?:
Unsolved Mysteries of the Past, trans.
Michael Heron (New York, Bantam, 1971).
Warren,
Larry and Peter Robbins, Left at East Gate: A
First-Hand Account of the Bentwaters-Woodbridge UFO Incident, its
Cover-up, and Investigation ((New York:
Marlowe, 1997).
Wilson,
Clifford, Crash Go the Chariots
(New York: Lancer Books, 1972).
|