EXO-VATICANA
(Pt 20)
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 10, 2013
8:00 am Easternhttp://www.raidersnewsupdate.com/vaticana20.htm
During
his life, Sir Arthur
C. Clarke
(1917–2008) was a
famous science-fiction
author, inventor,
futurist, and
television commentator
who, together with
Robert A. Heinlein and
Isaac Asimov, was
considered to be one
of the “Big Three”
of science
fiction.
According
to the narrative, the
revelation that these
beings—historically
known as the devil and
his angels—were in
fact always our
benefactors and
saviors does not lead
to chaos but rather to
technological and
spiritual utopia,
quickly resulting in
the dissolution of
all previously
existing religions. The
world celebrates as
people are described
as having overcome
their prejudices
against the devilish
sight of Karellen, or,
as he had been known
in the Bible, Satan.
Unbeknownst
to most Roman
Catholics, the retired
Pope Benedict XVI is a
Chardinian mystic of
the highest order. His
book, Credo for
Today: What Christians
Believe (2009),
follows the lead of
the Jesuit and states
unequivocally that a
belief in Creationism
(the idea that life,
the Earth, and the
universe as we know it
today did not
“evolve” but
rather were created by
the God of the Bible)
“contradicts the
idea of evolution and
[is] untenable
today.”[vii]
Following
his rejection of
Creationism and
support of evolution,
Pope Benedict XVI
employed the doctrine
of the Second Coming
of Christ to advance
Chardin’s “Omega
Point,” in
which a “new kind”
of God, man, and mind
will emerge. From
page 113 we read:
In
Cardin’s system,
noogenesis is the
fourth of five stages
of evolution,
representing the
emergence and
evolution of mind.
This is the stage we
are said to be in
currently, and as
noogenesis progresses,
so does the formation
of the noosphere,
which is the
collective sphere of
human thought. In
fact, many Chardinians
believe that the World
Wide Web is an
infrastructure of
noosphere, an idea
intersecting well with
transhumanist thought.
Chardin wrote, “We
have as yet no idea of
the possible magnitude
of ‘noospheric’
effects. We are
confronted with human
vibrations resounding
by the million––a
whole layer of
consciousness exerting
simultaneous pressure
upon the future and
the collected and
hoarded produce of a
million years of
thought.”[xii]
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 10, 2013
8:00 am Easternhttp://www.raidersnewsupdate.com/vaticana20.htm
|
PART
20: ALIEN
EVANGELISTS
|
With
Leathery Wings,
Little
|
During
his life, Sir Arthur
C. Clarke
(1917–2008) was a
famous science-fiction
author, inventor,
futurist, and
television commentator
who, together with
Robert A. Heinlein and
Isaac Asimov, was
considered to be one
of the “Big Three”
of science
fiction.
Clarke in particular
had an uncanny knack
at foreseeing the
future. As an example,
modern video games
were unheard of in
1956 and virtual
reality games had not
even been imagined.
That is, until Clarke
wrote about them in The
City and the Stars:
Of
all the thousands of
forms of recreation in
the city, these were
the most popular. When
you entered a saga,
you were not merely a
passive observer.…
You were an active
participant and
possessed—or seemed
to possess—free
will. The events and
scenes which were the
raw material of your
adventures might have
been prepared
beforehand by
forgotten artists, but
there was enough
flexibility to allow
for wide variation.
You could go into
these phantom worlds
with your friends,
seeking the excitement
that did not exist in
Diaspar—and as long
as the dream lasted
there was no way in
which it could be
distinguished from
reality.[i]
Or
who could have
believed in 1968 that
the “newspad”
technology set in 2001
would be realized nine
years late as the iPad
in 2010? Yet Clarke in
his novel, 2001:
A Space Odyssey,
clearly described
the technology:
When
he tired of official
reports and memoranda
and minutes, he would
plug his
foolscap-sized Newspad
into the ship’s
information circuit
and scan the latest
reports from Earth.
One by one he would
conjure up the
world’s major
electronic papers; he
knew the codes of the
more important ones by
heart, and had no need
to consult the list on
the back of his pad.
Switching to the
display unit’s
short-term memory, he
would hold the front
page while he quickly
searched the headlines
and noted the items
that interested him.[ii]
Unfortunately,
that Clarke showed
such remarkable
prescience may hold
important (and
frightening) realities
for our investigation,
too. This is because
in the sci-fi seer’s
classic, Childhood’s
End (1953), giant
silver spaceships
appear in the future
over every major city
on Earth. After the
dust settles, the
peaceful yet
mysterious
“Overlords” inside
them help form a world
government, which ends
all war and turns the
planet into a utopia.
Oddly, only a select
few people get to see
the Overlords, and
their purpose for
coming to Earth
remains shrouded as
they dodge questions
for years, preferring
to remain in their
spacecraft, governing
by proxy. Overlord
Karellen, the
“Supervisor for
Earth,” (an alien
god) speaks directly
only to the UN
Secretary-General.
Karellen tells him
that the Overlords
will reveal themselves
in fifty years, when
humanity will have
become used to (and
dependent on) their
presence. When the
revealing finally
takes place, at
Karellen’s request,
two children run into
the ship as the crowd
below finally gets a
glimpse of what the
aliens look like.
Clarke writes:
There
was no mistake. The
leathery wings, the
little horns, the
barbed tail—all were
there. The most
terrible of all
legends had come to
life, out of the
unknown past. Yet now
it stood smiling, in
ebon majesty, with the
sunlight gleaming upon
its tremendous body,
and with a human child
resting trustfully on
either arm.[iii]
According
to the narrative, the
revelation that these
beings—historically
known as the devil and
his angels—were in
fact always our
benefactors and
saviors does not lead
to chaos but rather to
technological and
spiritual utopia,
quickly resulting in
the dissolution of
all previously
existing religions. The
world celebrates as
people are described
as having overcome
their prejudices
against the devilish
sight of Karellen, or,
as he had been known
in the Bible, Satan.
Here
was a revelation which
no-one could doubt or
deny: here, seen by
some unknown magic of
Overlord science, were
the true beginnings of
all the world’s
great faiths. Most of
them were noble and
inspiring—but that
was not enough. Within
a few days, all
mankind’s
multitudinous messiahs
had lost their
divinity. Beneath the
fierce and passionless
light of truth, faiths
that had sustained
millions for twice a
thousand years
vanished like morning
dew.[iv]
As
the story continues,
the children on
Earth—set free from
outdated Abrahamic
religions such as
Christianity—begin
displaying powerful
psychic abilities,
foreshadowing their
evolution into a
cosmic consciousness,
a transcendent form of
life. Indeed, this is
the end
of the human species
as it was known as
everyone merges into a
cosmic intelligence
called the Overmind.
Those
familiar with eastern
religions will
recognize Clarke’s
narrative as a clever
ET version of
pantheistic monism
(the
view that there is
only one kind of
ultimate substance).
Overmind is quite
similar to the Hindu
concept of Brahman,
and given that Atman
is, simply stated, the
concept of self, the
Hindu doctrine
“Atman is Brahman”
is roughly equivalent
to absorption into the
Overmind. Similarly,
Buddhism advocates the
dissolution of the
self into Nirvana. In
fact, nearly all New
Age, spiritualist, and
occult traditions have
comparable monistic
dogma. Some shroud
this doctrine of
deceit in terms like
“Christ
Consciousness,”
giving it a more
appealing veneer, but
Jacques Vallée
recorded interesting
examples of such
twisted ET theology,
replacing biblical
prophecy with the
Overmind. One
contactee told Vallée:
I
was told that I was to
come out at this time
with this information
because mankind was
going to go through
the collective Christ
experience of
worshipping UFOs and
receiving information.
It would help mankind
balance its political
focus. You see the
interesting thing,
Jacques, is that we
must emphasize the
fact that we are
receiving a new
program! We
do not have to go
through the old
programming of
Armageddon. [v]
That
such New-Age babble as
described above has
been the doctrine of
non-Christians this
century is one thing,
but in recent
homilies, Pope
Benedict XVI’s
end-times views took
on a troubling and
similar preparatory
tome. This may not
come as a surprise to
those Catholics
familiar with Father
Malachi Martin’s
warnings in his book, The
Jesuits,
which documented
how priests like
Pierre Teilhard de
Chardin were deeply
influencing the Church
and its academia
toward occultism this
century. In our
chapter on
“Exotheology” in
the new book Exo-Vaticana
we
establish Chardin’s
belief in
extraterrestrials and
offer a brief
discussion on his
sorcerous Darwinian
mysticism. But it was
his connection with
monistic occultism and
what is called the
“Omega Point” that
takes us through the
alien-deity rabbit
hole. According to
Chardin, in his The
Future of Man
(1950), the universe
is currently evolving
towards higher levels
of material complexity
and consciousness and
ultimately will reach
its goal, the Omega
Point. Chardin
postulated that this
is the supreme
aspiration of
complexity and
consciousness, an idea
also roughly
equivalent to the
“Technological
Singularity” as
expressed in the
writings of
transhumanists like
Ray Kurzweil. Indeed,
one finds a remarkable
coalescence of all
non-Christian systems
under the banner of
Singularity, Monism,
Omega Point, and
Overmind. Yet, like
the nebulous “Christ
consciousness”
advocated by
occultists,
Chardin’s writings
are easily
misunderstood because
he not only created
new vocabulary for his
Darwinian religion, he
also redefined
biblical terminology
to mean something
alien to its original
intent. For instance,
when Chardin writes
about “Christ,” he
usually does not mean
Jesus of Nazareth.
Instead, he is
describing the
Ultra-Man, the
all-encompassing end
of evolution at the
Omega Point. As an
example, consider when
Jesus said, “Think
not that I am come to
destroy the law, or
the prophets: I am not
come to destroy, but
to fulfill” (Matthew
5:17). Chardin
exegetes this as, “I
have not come to
destroy, but to
fulfill Evolution.”[vi]
To
most Christians, this
probably seems overtly
heretical, but its
infiltration into
Roman Catholic thought
and the dangerous
alien-christ
implications it brings
with it has
infiltrated the
highest levels at Rome—including
the papacy.
Unbeknownst
to most Roman
Catholics, the retired
Pope Benedict XVI is a
Chardinian mystic of
the highest order. His
book, Credo for
Today: What Christians
Believe (2009),
follows the lead of
the Jesuit and states
unequivocally that a
belief in Creationism
(the idea that life,
the Earth, and the
universe as we know it
today did not
“evolve” but
rather were created by
the God of the Bible)
“contradicts the
idea of evolution and
[is] untenable
today.”[vii]
Following
his rejection of
Creationism and
support of evolution,
Pope Benedict XVI
employed the doctrine
of the Second Coming
of Christ to advance
Chardin’s “Omega
Point,” in
which a “new kind”
of God, man, and mind
will emerge. From
page 113 we read:
From
this perspective the
belief in the second
coming of Jesus Christ
and in the
consummation of the
world in that event
could be explained as
the conviction that
our history is
advancing to an
“omega” point, at
which it will become
finally and
unmistakably clear
that the element of
stability that seems
to us to be the
supporting ground of
reality, so to speak,
is not mere
unconscious matter;
that, on the contrary,
the real, firm ground
is mind. Mind holds
being together, gives
it reality, indeed is
reality: it is not
from below but from
above that being
receives its capacity
to subsist. That there
is such a thing as
this process of
‘complexification’
of material being
through spirit, and
from the latter its
concentration into a
new kind of unity can
already be seen in the
remodeling of the
world through
technology.[viii]
The
term
“complexification’
was coined by Chardin
(and the technological
allusions it suggests
is akin to
transhumanism and Ray
Kurzweil’s
Singularity) and the
pope’s complete
devotion to this
theology is again laid
bare in his book, Principles
of Catholic Theology (1987),
which states:
The
impetus given by
Teilhard de Chardin
exerted a wide
influence. With daring
vision it incorporated
the historical
movement of
Christianity into the
great cosmic process
of evolution from
Alpha to Omega: since
the noogenesis, since
the formation of
consciousness in the
event by which man
became man, this
process of evolution
has continued to
unfold as the building
of the noosphere above
the biosphere.[ix]
This
“noosphere” is
taken very
seriously today in
modernist Catholic
theology, academia,
and even science. It
is explained in the
scientific journal, Encyclopedia
of Paleontology,
this way:
Teilhard
coined the concept of
the “noosphere,”
the new “thinking
layer” or membrane
on the Earth’s
surface, superposed on
the living layer
(biosphere) and the
lifeless layer of
inorganic matter
(lithosphere). Obeying
the “law of
complexification/conscience,”
the entire universe
undergoes a process of
“convergent
integration” and
tends to a final state
of concentration, the
“point Omega”
where the noosphere
will be intensely
unified and will have
achieved a
“hyperpersonal”
organization. Teilhard
equates this future
hyperpersonal
psychological
organization with an
emergent divinity
[a future new form of
God].[x]
The
newly sanctioned
doctrine of an
approaching
“emergent
divinity” in place
of the literal return
of Jesus Christ
isn’t even that much
of a secret any longer
among Catholic priests
(though the cryptic
Charindian lingo masks
it from the
uninitiated). For
instance, in his July
24, 2009, homily
in
the Cathedral of Aosta
while commenting on
Romans 12:1–2, the
pope said:
The
role of the priesthood
is to consecrate the
world so that it may
become a living host,
a liturgy: so that the
liturgy may not be
something alongside
the reality of the
world, but that the
world itself shall
become a living host,
a liturgy. This
is also the great
vision of Teilhard de
Chardin: in the end we
shall achieve a true
cosmic liturgy, where
the cosmos becomes a
living host.
[xi]
This
is overtly pantheistic
and, of course, the
text he was discussing
(Romans 12) teaches
the exact opposite:
“Be not conformed to
this world” (Romans
12:2a). While the pope
thus aggressively
promotes Chardin’s
process of
“noogenesis” in
which the cosmos comes
alive and everyone
unifies as a “living
host,” one can
readily see that
Brahman, Nirvana,
Overmind, and
Singularity are
roughly equivalent to
this monistic concept.
Interestingly, noogenesis
(Greek:
νοῦς=mind;
γένεσις=becoming)
actually has two uses:
one in Chardin’s
Darwinian
pantheism—and
another, more telling rendering—within modern astrobiology.
In
Cardin’s system,
noogenesis is the
fourth of five stages
of evolution,
representing the
emergence and
evolution of mind.
This is the stage we
are said to be in
currently, and as
noogenesis progresses,
so does the formation
of the noosphere,
which is the
collective sphere of
human thought. In
fact, many Chardinians
believe that the World
Wide Web is an
infrastructure of
noosphere, an idea
intersecting well with
transhumanist thought.
Chardin wrote, “We
have as yet no idea of
the possible magnitude
of ‘noospheric’
effects. We are
confronted with human
vibrations resounding
by the million––a
whole layer of
consciousness exerting
simultaneous pressure
upon the future and
the collected and
hoarded produce of a
million years of
thought.”[xii]
However,
this concept gets more
translucent in
astrobiology, where
scientists have
adopted noogenesis as
the scientific term
denoting the
origin of
technological
civilizations capable
of communicating with
humans and traveling
to Earth—in
other words, the basis
for extraterrestrial
contact.[xiii]
Consequently,
among many if not most
of Rome’s
astronomers and
theologians, there is
the widespread belief
that the arrival of
“alien deities”
will promote our
long-sought spiritual
noogenesis, and
according to a leading
social psychologist,
the world’s masses
are ready for such a
visitation and will
receive them (or him) as a messiah.[xiv]
This is further
reflected in a 2012
United Kingdom poll,
which indicated that
more people nowadays
believe in
extraterrestrials than
in God.[xv]
Consequently, whether
or not it is the
ultimate expression,
the noogenic “strong
delusion” is already
here.
While
we aren’t suggesting
a direct equivocation
per se, the conceptual
intersection between
the two uses of
noogenesis (the
occultic and
astrobiological) is
thought provoking,
especially in light of
Clarke’s scenario in
Childhood’s
End, where
noogenesis in the
astrobiological
application (the
arrival of the alien
Overlords) was the
impetus for evolution
toward the Overmind
and dissolution of
humanity. It seems
Rome has connected
these dots for us. In
his sanctioned
treatise, Kenneth J.
Delano linked the
concept of maximum
consciousness and
alien contact, truly
noogenesis in both
senses of the word:
For
man to take his proper
place as a citizen of
the universe, he must
transcend the
narrow-mindedness of
his earthly
provincialism and be
prepared to graciously
accept the inhabitants
of other worlds as
equals or even
superiors. At this
point in human
history, our expansion
into space is the
necessary means by
which we are to
develop our
intellectual faculties
to the utmost and,
perhaps in
cooperation with ETI,
achieve the maximum
consciousness of
which St. Thomas
Aquinas wrote in Summa
Theologica:
This
is the earthly goal of
man: to evolve his
intellectual powers to
their fullest, to
arrive at the maximum
of consciousness, to
open the eyes of his
understanding upon all
things so that upon
the tablet of his soul
the order of the whole
universe and all its
parts may be enrolled.[xvi]
Viewed
through this lens, the
Vatican’s promotion
of Darwinism and
astrobiology
intrigues. Following
Chardin and Delano,
perhaps Pope Benedict,
the VORG astronomers,
and theologians like
Tanzella-Nitti,
O’Mera, and Balducci
pursued
astrobiological
noogenesis so that
when Petrus Romanus
assumed his reign as
the final pope, they
might usher in the
Fifth Element of the
Omega Point known as
“Christogenesis.”
(Authors note: one
cannot help recall the
movie The
Fifth Element that
involved a priesthood
who protects a
mysterious Fifth
Element that turns out
to be a messianic
human who ultimately
combines the power of
the other four
elements
[noogenesis]
to form a “divine
light” that saves
mankind.) In
Chardin’s book, The
Phenomenon of Man,
the five elements of
evolution are: 1)
“geogenesis”
(beginning of Earth);
2) “biogenesis”
(beginning of life);
3)
“anthropogenesis”
(beginning of
humanity); 4)
noogenesis
(evolutionary
consolidation to
maximum
consciousness);
leading to finally 5)
“Christogenesis,”
the creation of a
“total Christ” at
the Omega Point. With
that in mind, be aware
that astrobiology and
transhumanist
philosophy suggest
this noogenesis is
being driven by an
external intelligence,
whether it be
respectively
artificial or
extraterrestrial,
which
leads these authors to
conclude we are on the
cusp of a
noogenesis
unlike the one
Rome’s theologians
may have anticipated. We
would redefine the
terms and instead
suggest aggressive
preparation for an Antichristogenesis––an
Alien
Serpent-Savior––the
ultimate Darwinian Übermensch
who may even bare
leathery wings, little
horns, and a barbed
tail. But regardless
how he appears, it
will be frighteningly
obvious to all readers
of Exo-Vaticana
that
the Vatican has
cleverly prepared for
his coming, even now
monitoring his
approach from atop Mt.
Graham, using the
LUCIFER device.
No comments:
Post a Comment