EXO-VATICANA
(Pt 19)
Petrus Romanus, PROJECT LUCIFER, and the Vatican's astonishing exo-theological plan for the arrival of an alien savior.
You only think you know what's coming...
Posted: March 5, 2013
8:00 am Eastern
As
our book Exo-Vaticana
heads to the printer
we still do not know
whether the last pope
will turn out to be a
person on our short
list, but, whoever he
is, intrigue surrounds
how he may accommodate
the newly celebrated
astro-theology of
Rome’s top
astronomers and
theologians and
whether this will
somehow fulfill the
Catholic prophecies of
the coming Man of
Sin—the seed of
Satan—either as an
alien serpent-savior,
or as a deceiver that
points mankind to a
god of another world.
With
this in mind and based
on other documents
contained in the
upcoming book, it’s
evident that for
hundreds of years,
both Catholic prophets
and Protestant
reformers believed the
Antichrist would
ultimately champion a
strange, alien deity (and this fits
perfectly with what we
have documented and
have even been assured
of in person by
today’s Vatican
authorities,
astronomers, and
theologians, as
readers will
discover). They also
saw how this union
would ultimately lead
to war and destruction
from the heavens. And
these visionaries were
not alone in their
assessment concerning
a powerful alien-christ
and his coming war as
the result of
otherworldly
alliances. Government
leaders around the
globe have believed
this for some time,
and as far back as
1955, General Douglas
MacArthur warned:
Over
the last decade
especially, the
Vatican has ramped up
its production of
science and theology
studies aimed at
developing an
ecclesiastical
position for
disclosure of
extraterrestrial
intelligence. This
includes November
2009, when it convened
a five-day study week
on astrobiology at the
summer residence of
the pope on the
grounds of the
Pontifical Academy of
Sciences, during which
astronomers and
scientists from
countries around the
world joined prominent
churchmen to evaluate
“the origin of life
and its precursor
materials, the
evolution of life on
Earth, its future
prospects on and off
the Earth, and the
occurrence of life
elsewhere.”[xi]
Whether any discussion
was held at that time
concerning the LUCIFER
device and what it is monitoring in
deep space from atop
Mt. Graham is unknown
(the meetings were
private), but just
three months later, in
January 2010, the
Royal Society, the
National Academy of
Science of the UK, and
the Commonwealth
hosted representatives
from NASA, the
European Space Agency,
and the UN Office for
Outer Space Affairs to
discuss “The
Detection of
Extraterrestrial Life
and the Consequences
for Science and
Society.”[xii]
Lord Martin Rees,
president of the Royal
Society and Astronomer
Royal, and other
speakers at that time referred to
“overwhelming
evidence” and
“unprecedented
proof” to signify
how close we are to
making irrefutable disclosure of alien
life. This had Vatican
spokesmen in the news
again with
increasingly candid
statements regarding
the future of the
Church and Jesuit
preparations to
accommodate a dynamic
ET reality.
While
some in the Catholic
church believe there
is no official church
teaching on
Extraterrestrial
Intelligence (which,
as we document, is
coming), it is
possible to derive
their trajectory even
now from officially
sanctioned literature.
Kenneth J. Delano’s Many
Worlds, One God (1977)
is described on its
dust jacket as “an
intelligent discussion
of the existence of
extraterrestrial life
and its impact upon
mankind.” The thing
that makes this book
important is that it
advocates belief in
ETs and boasts a nihil
obstat and an
imprimatur. A nihil
obstat is an
official approval
granted by a
designated censor in
the Roman Catholic
Church. Its presence
certifies that a work
does not contradict Catholic
teachings on matters
of faith and morals. An imprimatur
is the final approval
and official
declaration by the
bishop in the diocese
where the work is to
be published,
indicating the content
is free from errors
concerning Catholic
doctrine.
Petrus Romanus, PROJECT LUCIFER, and the Vatican's astonishing exo-theological plan for the arrival of an alien savior.
You only think you know what's coming...
Posted: March 5, 2013
8:00 am Eastern
|
PART
19: THE GOSPEL
OF ET...
|
Here It Comes, Ready Or NotBy Tom Horn & Cris Putnam |
As
our book Exo-Vaticana
heads to the printer
we still do not know
whether the last pope
will turn out to be a
person on our short
list, but, whoever he
is, intrigue surrounds
how he may accommodate
the newly celebrated
astro-theology of
Rome’s top
astronomers and
theologians and
whether this will
somehow fulfill the
Catholic prophecies of
the coming Man of
Sin—the seed of
Satan—either as an
alien serpent-savior,
or as a deceiver that
points mankind to a
god of another world.
In
point of fact, the
Bible describes both
the False Prophet (Petrus
Romanus?) and the
Antichrist as having
allegiances and
endowments not of this
Earth. Not only can
both of them call
“fire” (lightning
that struck St.
Peter's Basilica two
weeks ago?) down from
out of those heavens
suspected to be the
host-location of
aliens (see Revelation
13:12–14 as a clear
alliance with the
“powers” of the
celestial realm), but
the prophet Daniel
tells us their belief
system will actually
honor a “strange,
alien god.” In
Daniel 11:38–39 we
read:
But
in his estate shall he
honour
the God of forces:
and a god whom his
fathers knew not shall
he honour with gold,
and silver, and with
precious stones, and
pleasant things. Thus
shall he do in the
most strong holds
[Hebrew Mauzzim]
with a strange god, whom he shall
acknowledge and
increase with glory:
and he shall cause
them to rule over
many, and shall divide
the land for gain.
(emphasis added)
Several
parts of Daniel’s
prophecy stand out as
very unusual. First,
the “God of
forces” or
alternately “god of
fortresses” (מעזים
אלה)
has been connected
to Baal-Shamem,
literally “Lord of
the Heavens,” a
deity whom the
Manichaean Gnostics
later worshipped as
“the greatest angel
of light.”[i]
His
second reference to
the deity as “a
strange god” is also
intriguing. The Hebrew
text “עִם־אֱלוֹהַּ
נֵכָר”
can be literally
rendered “with an
alien god.” Add to
this how the
turn-of-the-century
Protestant scholars
translated this text
as directly related to
segments at the Vatican, and
things get really
interesting (more on
that later).
With
this in mind and based
on other documents
contained in the
upcoming book, it’s
evident that for
hundreds of years,
both Catholic prophets
and Protestant
reformers believed the
Antichrist would
ultimately champion a
strange, alien deity (and this fits
perfectly with what we
have documented and
have even been assured
of in person by
today’s Vatican
authorities,
astronomers, and
theologians, as
readers will
discover). They also
saw how this union
would ultimately lead
to war and destruction
from the heavens. And
these visionaries were
not alone in their
assessment concerning
a powerful alien-christ
and his coming war as
the result of
otherworldly
alliances. Government
leaders around the
globe have believed
this for some time,
and as far back as
1955, General Douglas
MacArthur warned:
You
now face a new world,
a world of change. We
speak in strange
terms, of harnessing
the cosmic energy, of
ultimate conflict
between a united human
race and the sinister
forces of some other
planetary galaxy. The
nations of the world
will have to unite,
for the next war will
be an interplanetary
war. The nations of
the earth must someday
make a common front
against attack by
people from other
planets.[iv]
Over
thirty years later,
one of America’s
most beloved
presidents, Ronald
Reagan, echoed the
same before the United
Nations when he said:
In
our obsession with
antagonisms of the
moment, we often
forget how much unites
all the members of
humanity. Perhaps we
need some outside,
universal threat to
make us recognize this
common bond. I
occasionally think how
quickly our
differences worldwide
would vanish if we
were facing an alien
threat from outside
this world.[v]
In
Britain, the five-star
admiral and former
head of the British
Ministry of Defence,
Lord Hill-Norton,
expressed his opinion
that “some UFO
encounters are
definitely
antithetical to
orthodox Christian
belief” and helped
to form an
international group
called UFO Concern to
assess the phenomenon
as it pertains to
religion and national
security.[vi]
More recently, the
former UFO adviser for
the UK Ministry of
Defence, Nick Pope,
acknowledged that
Britain has even
prepared (and is
preparing) top-secret
sophisticated aparati
in anticipation of
this future military
engagement against
space invaders.[vii]
Global leaders outside
the United Kingdom who
have hinted similar
knowledge of a
potential external
threat include former
presidents Jimmy
Carter and Gerald
Ford, former US
Senator Barry
Goldwater, J. Edgar
Hoover when he was
director of the FBI,[viii]
and the former
president of the old
Soviet Union, Mikhail
Gorbachev, who
believed “it must be
treated seriously.”[ix]
It makes one wonder if
something of this
knowledge was behind
recent Vatican
comments when it
criticized the Ridley
Scott film Prometheus, saying that it is “a bad idea to defy the gods.”[x]
The
Gospel According to
ET—Ready or Not,
Here it Comes
Over
the last decade
especially, the
Vatican has ramped up
its production of
science and theology
studies aimed at
developing an
ecclesiastical
position for
disclosure of
extraterrestrial
intelligence. This
includes November
2009, when it convened
a five-day study week
on astrobiology at the
summer residence of
the pope on the
grounds of the
Pontifical Academy of
Sciences, during which
astronomers and
scientists from
countries around the
world joined prominent
churchmen to evaluate
“the origin of life
and its precursor
materials, the
evolution of life on
Earth, its future
prospects on and off
the Earth, and the
occurrence of life
elsewhere.”[xi]
Whether any discussion
was held at that time
concerning the LUCIFER
device and what it is monitoring in
deep space from atop
Mt. Graham is unknown
(the meetings were
private), but just
three months later, in
January 2010, the
Royal Society, the
National Academy of
Science of the UK, and
the Commonwealth
hosted representatives
from NASA, the
European Space Agency,
and the UN Office for
Outer Space Affairs to
discuss “The
Detection of
Extraterrestrial Life
and the Consequences
for Science and
Society.”[xii]
Lord Martin Rees,
president of the Royal
Society and Astronomer
Royal, and other
speakers at that time referred to
“overwhelming
evidence” and
“unprecedented
proof” to signify
how close we are to
making irrefutable disclosure of alien
life. This had Vatican
spokesmen in the news
again with
increasingly candid
statements regarding
the future of the
Church and Jesuit
preparations to
accommodate a dynamic
ET reality.
In
the lead-up to the
Vatican-sponsored
conference on
astrobiology, the
official Church
newspaper, L'Osservatore
Romano,
interviewed Father José
Gabriel Funes, an
astronomer and
director of the
Vatican Observatory
who made it clear that
accepting the reality
of intelligent aliens
does not contradict
the Catholic faith and
that, in fact, to
believe otherwise
is the real heresy, as
it puts “limits on
God’s creative
freedom.” Attorney
Daniel Sheehan, who
served for ten years
as
general
counsel to the United
States Jesuit
Headquarters in
Washington, DC, said
Funes’ explicit
statement that
disbelief in
extraterrestrial
intelligence “puts
limits on God’s
creative freedom”
was code-talk for
those in the know. He
wrote:
On
the face of it, this
statement may not seem
like an important
event…. However,
unbeknownst to the
non-Catholic world,
Father Funes’
specific choice of
words tracks precisely
the exact wording of
the key aspect of the
official Catholic
Church Edict that was
issued in 1277 by
Bishop Etienne Tempier,
the Bishop of Paris,
in which the Catholic
Church officially
condemned St. Thomas
Aquinas’ Theological
Proposition #34 in
which Aquinas had
publically asserted
that “the first
cause [meaning God]
cannot possibly have
created other
worlds.” Proposition
#34 was officially
condemned by the
Catholic Church on the
specific grounds that
“it seems to set
limits on God’s
creative freedom,”
the precise words that
were deliberately used
by Father Funes in
2008.[xiv]
Sheehan
went on to explain why
the reassertion of
this theological
position by Roman
Catholic leaders is
very important:
The
fact that these
precise words were
chosen by the official
Jesuit director of the
Vatican Observatory to
announce the new
official policy of the
Roman Catholic Church
acknowledging the
likelihood of the
existence of
extraterrestrial life
elsewhere in the
universe is understood
by those of us who are
familiar with such
matters to be no mere
coincidence. It may,
indeed, prove to be of
extraordinary
importance. For this
specific 1277 Catholic
Edict that condemned
Proposition #34 of
Thomas Aquinas is
deemed, by Church
authorities and by
secular historians
alike, to have been
the action which
opened “the
plurality of worlds
debate” in Western
civilization, which
led directly to the
removal of earth from
the center of the
universe four-hundred
years ago. And these words may point the way, here in the twenty-first century,
to
our removal from our
position on the
pinnacle of the
pyramid of life.”
[xv]
What
Sheehan here
identified is the
belief by most
Catholic theologians
that Christianity as
we know it is based on
a pre-Copernican
cosmology. Once
cosmology changes as a
result of new
discovery or
disclosure of alien
life, so, too, will
theology, whether
explicitly or
implicitly. To believe
otherwise is “cosmic
hubris,” thought
Andrew Burgess, who
wrote:
As
long as someone is
thinking in terms of a
geocentric universe
and an earth-deity,
the story has a
certain
plausibility.… As
soon as astronomy
changes theories,
however, the whole
Christian story loses
the only setting
within which it would
make sense. With the
solar system no longer
the center of
anything, imagining
that what happens here
forms the center of a
universal drama
becomes simply silly.[xvi]
While
some in the Catholic
church believe there
is no official church
teaching on
Extraterrestrial
Intelligence (which,
as we document, is
coming), it is
possible to derive
their trajectory even
now from officially
sanctioned literature.
Kenneth J. Delano’s Many
Worlds, One God (1977)
is described on its
dust jacket as “an
intelligent discussion
of the existence of
extraterrestrial life
and its impact upon
mankind.” The thing
that makes this book
important is that it
advocates belief in
ETs and boasts a nihil
obstat and an
imprimatur. A nihil
obstat is an
official approval
granted by a
designated censor in
the Roman Catholic
Church. Its presence
certifies that a work
does not contradict Catholic
teachings on matters
of faith and morals. An imprimatur
is the final approval
and official
declaration by the
bishop in the diocese
where the work is to
be published,
indicating the content
is free from errors
concerning Catholic
doctrine.
In
this hard-to-find
work, Delano states,
“Extraterrestrial
visitors to our planet
might display an
astonishing knowledge
and understanding of
the universal laws of
nature as well as
psychic abilities that
enable them to
exercise powers of
mind over matter to an
equally amazing
degree. To our
bewildered human race,
their wondrous deeds
would be
indistinguishable from
the miraculous. An
experience of this
sort would shake the
foundations of many a
person’s
religion.”[xvii]
He
continues, “In our
dealings with ETI, we
will have to adopt a
way of thinking called
‘cultural
relativism’ by
anthropologists. Like
cultural relativists
who do not assume that
their way of life is
better than the
‘weird’ or
‘evil’ practices
of other peoples, we
must not assume that
our species, Homo
sapiens, is morally
superior to any other
species of
intelligence in
space.”[xviii]
This
sort of relativism
leaves mankind wide
open for a great
deception scenario.
Furthermore, the idea
that “moral truth is
relative” is
dangerously false. An
extreme example makes
this self-evident. For
example, we ask, “Is
there ever a
circumstance in which
‘killing babies for
fun’ is morally
virtuous?” Of
course, no one in his
or her right mind will
answer affirmatively.
Thus, moral truths are
not relative. If
something is evil, it
is evil for all. The
sanctioned Roman
Catholic position
treating ETI in terms
of cultural relativism
demonstrates just how
susceptible the
Vatican is to evil
supernaturalism
cloaked in an alien
guise.
Philosopher
J. Edgar Burns foresaw
how space exploration
would thus become the cosmic center for
the birth of a new
“space-faith”
(what he also called
“cosmolatry”) that
ultimately would give
birth to a new
religion. “By ‘new
religion’ it is not
entirely clear whether
Burns meant an
annihilation of the
past or a breakthrough
in religious
consciousness that
renders our ‘truth
claims’ obsolete,”
wrote
Ilia
Delio in Christ in Evolution. “What the term does connote, however, echoes
an insight of the
[Jesuit] Pierre
Teilhard de Chardin
[whose conclusions
were celebrated by
Pope Benedict XVI],
namely, that
Christianity is
reaching the end of
one of the natural
cycles of its
existence. ‘Christ
must be born again,’
he said, ‘he must be
reincarnated in a
world that has become
too different from
that in which he
lived.’ It is in
light of this insight
that ‘exoChristology,’
a term Burgess used to
discuss Christological
issues ‘raised by
discoveries in outer
space,’ takes on new
import for Christian
faith.”[xix]
This also casts
significant light on
the new official
position of the
Vatican that not
believing in
aliens and being
willing to accept
their superior
morality and coming
new religion is not
only paramount to
heresy, but is based
on a dying and
antiquated belief
system. Given that the
Vatican holds sway to
over 1 billion
followers as well as
influencing an even
greater number of
peoples, governments,
and policies
worldwide, any puny
obstacles to their
revised Christianity
will thus hardly keep
most of the world’s
“spiritual” people
from wholeheartedly
embracing the alien
serpent-saviors on
their arrival. In
fact, acquiescence to
ET gods will be widely
and positively
received by the masses
of the world,
according to Vatican
astronomer and
professor of
fundamental theology,
Father Giuseppe
Tanzella-Nitti,
exactly because:
Extraterrestrial
life contexts
re-propose the
intervention of
mediators from faraway
worlds, the delivery
of moral messages that
awaken in human beings
the existential
questions that
ordinary terrestrial
life has made dormant.
Moreover… contact
with civilizations
different from our own
is…a powerful
conceptual place in
which the human family
returns
to wisdom and
self-understanding.
As
Paul Davies has
intelligently pointed
out… “The powerful
theme of alien beings
acting as a conduit to
the Ultimate—whether
it appears in fiction
or as a seriously
intended cosmological
theory—touches a
deep chord in the
human psyche. The
attraction seems to be
that by contacting
superior beings in the
sky, humans will be
given access to privileged
knowledge, and that
the resulting
broadening of our
horizons will in some
sense bring us a step
closer to God.”
[xx]
Professor
Tanzella-Nitti further
elaborated on this
alien-derived
“privileged
knowledge” in his
doctrinal paper for
the Vatican in which
he expressed
theologically how,
upon open contact with
these highly advanced
aliens, the Church
will “have to
conclude that our
understanding of
Revelation until that
moment had been
largely imprecise and
even ambiguous [or,
nowhere near the
truth].”[xxi]
But
all is not lost, as a
new and improved
religious
“revelation” based
on information
acquired from another
world is
coming. It will
involve a “strange,
alien God” according
to prophecy and
(according to both
ancient and modern
authorities) be
advocated for by a
priesthood seated in
Rome. Just be aware
that there is a
considerable downside.
To reject the
mysterious new gospel
or even to neglect
bowing down before the
image that the deity
sets up in its place
(Daniel 11:38–38;
Revelation 13:15) will
result in “as many
as [will] not worship
the image of the beast
[to] be killed.”
There will be no place
for those heretics
Father Funes referred
to who reject the
(papal?) decree and
refuse to accept the
alien dogma. Any such
denial will definitely
not go unpunished.
Coming
up next:
Alien
Evangelists with
Leathery Wings, Little
Horns, and Barbed
Tails
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