This is actuallp part 2 of this series, but part 1 was focused on the authors visit to the LUCIFER and VATT telescope array in Arizona. I've got a lot of respect for the authors. They reference all of their work, and aren't into making predictions. Is this speculative? Of course. But there's good reason for this speculation, starting with the Bible.
And of focus here is the fact that the Vatican is proposing "extraterrestrial saviors" that will soon be arriving.
By Tom Horn and Chris Putnam
By Tom Horn and Chris Putnam
In our last
entry top Vatican Astronomer Guy Consolmagno stated how contemporary societies
may soon “look to The Aliens to be the Saviours of humankind.” [i] To illustrate
the theological soundness of this possibility, Consolmago argues that humans are
not the only intelligent beings God created in the universe, and, he says, these
non-human lifeforms are described in the Bible. He starts by pointing to angels
then surprises us by actually referencing the
Nephilim:
Other heavenly
beings come up several times in the Psalms. For example, look at the beautiful
passage in Psalm 89 that calls out, “Let the heavens praise your wonders, 0
Lord, your faithfulness in the assembly of the holy ones. For who in the skies
can be compared to the Lord? Who among the heavenly beings is like the Lord? ...
The heavens are yours, the earth also is yours; the world and all that is in it
-you have founded them.” Likewise, God asks Job (38:7) if any human can claim to
have been around at the creation, “when the morning stars sang together and all
the heavenly beings shouted for joy .”
Are these “heavens,” “holy ones,” those “in the sky,” the “morning
stars ... and heavenly beings” more references to angels? Or do they refer to
some other kind of life beyond our knowledge?
…And these are not the only non-human intelligent creatures mentioned
in the Bible. There’s that odd, and mysterious, passage at the beginning of
Genesis, Chapter 6, that describes the “sons of God” taking human wives. With it
is a frustratingly oblique reference to “The Nephilim ...the heroes that were of
old, warriors of renown .”
Most Biblical scholars suggest that the Nephelim and the Sons of God
in Genesis can be explained away as a left-over reference to the creation
stories of the pagans who surrounded ancient Israel, that they were written by
the kind of people whose culture saw anyone Not Of My Tribe as being unspeakably
alien. Likewise, the references to heavens and stars singing and praising the
Lord can be seen simply for the beautiful poetry that it is.
But whether you interpret these creatures as
angels or aliens doesn’t really matter for the sake of our argument here. The
point is that the ancient writers of the Bible, like all ancient peoples, were
perfectly happy with the possibility that other intelligent beings could exist.
[ii]
Read that again, then ask yourself: Did the Vatican’s top astronomer
actually mean to use the story of the Nephilim from the Bible as an example of
the kind of “space saviors” man could soon look to for salvation? This
incredible assertion is only topped by what he says next. In quoting John 10:16,
which says, “And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I
must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one
shepherd,” Consolmago writes: “Perhaps it’s not so far-fetched to see the Second
Person of the Trinity, the Word, Who was present “In the beginning” (John 1: l),
coming to lay down His life and take it up again (John 10: 18) not only as the
Son of Man but also as a Child of other races?” [iii]
Do Vatican scholars actually believe Jesus might have been the
Star-Child of an alien race? Does Consolmagno and/or other Jesuits secretly hold
that the “Virgin Birth” was in reality an abduction scenario in which Mary was
impregnated by ET, giving birth to the hybrid Jesus? As incredible as that
sounds, you should prepare for the unexpected answer as this series
unfolds.
All this would seem impossible theology if not for the fact that
other high ranking Vatican spokespersons—those who routinely study from the
“Star Base” (as local Indians call it) on Mt. Graham—have been saying the same
in recent years. This includes Dr. Christopher Corbally, Vice Director for the
Vatican Observatory Research Group on Mt. Graham until 2012, who believes our
image of God will have to change if disclosure of alien life is soon revealed by
scientists (including the need to evolve from the concept of an
“anthropocentric” God into a “broader entity”), [iv] and the
current Vatican Observatory director, Father Josè Funes who has gone equally
far, suggesting that alien life not only exists in the universe and is “our
brother” but will, when manifested, confirm the “true” faith of Christianity and
the dominion of Rome.
When the
L’Osservatore Romano newspaper (which publishes nothing that the Vatican doesn’t
approve) asked him what this meant, he replied: “How can we rule out that life
may have developed elsewhere? Just as we consider earthly creatures as ‘a
brother,’ and ‘sister,’ why should we not talk about an ‘extraterrestrial
brother’? It would still be part of creation”[v] and believing in the existence of such is not contradictory to Catholic doctrine. [vi]
Brother Guy Consolmagno with Pope Benedict XVI
Such
statements are but the latest in a string of recent comments by numerous Vatican
astronomers confirming a growing belief (or inside knowledge?) that disclosure
will be made in the near future of alien life, including intelligent life, and
that this encounter will not challenge the authority of the Roman Catholic
Church.