UFOs in non-christian religions
Adapted from Daniel O'Connor's book "Only Man Bears his Image" with permission
Virtually all non-Christian religions are primed to accept the "day of disclosure" when ETs are launched onto the world stage as part of the Great Deception.
This includes Hinduism, Islam, and Buddhism and a multitude of pagan beliefs.
The lesson is unmistakable. Man-made—or demon-made—religions usually teach elaborate cosmologies that posit innumerable inhabited worlds throughout the cosmos; often detailing with great numerical precision just how many such worlds supposedly exist and for how long they will exist. While post-Enlightenment Western scientists proposing the “plurality thesis” (i.e., the existence of innumerable or infinite inhabited worlds) congratulated themselves for having “evolved beyond medieval anthropocentrism,” the truth is that all they did in positing these wild theories was revert to the very same tactics that had been employed for thousands of years in various Godless Pagan traditions; the very doctrines of demons from which Christ had rescued us. The only difference was the new scientific jargon. The substance was the same: the return of the Pagan demons. Let us conclude this section by reiterating its opening: a Christian ET believer finds himself in the position of suggesting that, while almost all the world’s Pagan, Godless religions have, for thousands of years, confirmed his ET thesis, it is only his own religion which repudiates it. He will, of course, falsely insist that Christianity does not repudiate ET belief. But even most of the more zealous of Christian ET promoters concede Christianity certainly does not affirmatively teach that aliens exist, and they likewise concede there is great difficulty in reconciling belief in aliens with the Faith.[††††††††††††††††]
This Christian ET believer, then, must ask himself:
“Do I really believe God would arrange it thus? Do I really believe that God made aliens, then established only one true Faith on earth, such that this one true religion—Christianity—also happens to be the only major religion which, by far, is the most difficult to reconcile with the existence of these aliens He made?”
In other words:
“Do I really believe that God made aliens, and allowed all the Godless religions to teach that these aliens exist, while depriving the one religion He actually established of an equally or surpassingly clear revelation of this truth?”
As with other such questions we have pondered—and many similar ones yet remain—it should not be difficult for a sincere Christian to answer this one. There is only one reasonable explanation for why belief in extraterrestrials permeates Pagan religions but is absent from Christianity.
Only Christianity can defend us against this UFO deception.