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Alien Ideas: Christianity and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life
CRISIS magazine via CERC ^ | BENJAMIN D. WIKER

Posted on 12/17/2002 2:21:52 PM PST by Polycarp

Alien Ideas Christianity and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life    BENJAMIN D. WIKER


We tend to consider speculation about extraterrestrials to be a recent phenomenon, a task forced on us by the scientific knowledge we’ve gained during the last century. It’s rather surprising, perhaps, to find out that the debate about whether there is extraterrestrial life stretches back just shy of two and a half millennia.

Columns of cool interstellar hydrogen
gas and dust in M16, the Eagle Nebula

Given the antiquity of the question, we might be even more surprised to find that the Catholic Church has never issued any formal pronouncement, one way or the other, about the existence of extraterrestrial life.

Yet unofficial pronouncements have recently come from respected sources connected to (but not speaking for) the Vatican. Rev. George Coyne, director of the Vatican Astronomic Observatory, considers the possibility of extraterrestrials an "exciting prospect, which must be treated with caution.... The universe is so large that it would be folly to say that we are the exception." Rev. Christopher Corbally, S.J., another astronomer at the Vatican Observatory, believes that if we discover extraterrestrials, it will entail an expansion of our theology, for "while Christ is the First and the Last Word (the Alpha and the Omega) spoken to humanity, he is not necessarily the only word spoken to the whole universe."

Theologians have weighed in as well. Thomas O’Meara, O.P., professor of theology at Notre Dame, argues, "The history of sin and salvation recorded in the two testaments of the Bible is not a history of the universe; it is a particular religious history on one planet." For O’Meara, "the central importance of Jesus for us does not necessarily imply anything about other races on other planets.... Believers must be prepared for a galactic horizon, even for further Incarnation."

It would seem, then, that for Catholics the question of whether to believe in extraterrestrials is wide open. Tempting as such speculation is, however, a closer look at the history of the debate in relationship to Christianity might take some of the wind out of our speculative sails.

Atomism and Aliens

To begin with, Christians inclined toward believing in the existence of extraterrestrials should be aware that such belief makes for strange bedfellows. Historically, the idea of aliens arose more than 2,000 years ago among the ancient atomists (Democritus, but especially Epicurus and Lucretius) as part of an overall philosophical argument, rooted not in evidence but in the desire to rid the world of religion.

According to Epicurus and Lucretius, belief that the gods interfere in human affairs was the root of all evil, causing human beings to engage in all manner of vile and foolish activities from war to child sacrifice. In Lucretius’s famous words (which 17 centuries later were to become a favorite taunt of the anti-Christian elements of the Enlightenment), "Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum" (Only religion was able to persuade men of [such] evil things).

The Epicurean solution? A rather modern-sounding one: Eliminate religion by embracing a materialist view of the universe. The atomists got rid of the need for a divine creator of nature by asserting that everything in the universe came into being as a result of the chance jostling of brute matter (a.k.a., atoms). Because the number of atoms in a limitless universe is infinite, the random motion of the atoms must have produced a "plurality of worlds." As Lucretius declared in On the Nature of the Universe, if "the purposeless congregation and coalescence of atoms" brought about all living things in our world — plants, people, and everything in between — then certainly "in other regions there are other earths and various tribes of men and breeds of beasts."

Since the first speculation about the existence of extraterrestrials bubbled up from the materialist belief that chance could spin forth a variety of reasoning creatures with ease, Christians ought to be a bit more careful about heaving themselves into the same theoretical hammock, so to speak.

The Advent of Christianity

To further sharpen the point, there were both cosmological and theological reasons why early Christians either did not believe in extraterrestials or refused to speculate about them. The early Christians held to a geocentric universe: The earth was the only location possible for intelligent embodied beings. As patristics scholar Rev. Joseph Lienhard points out, there were no extraterrestrials in either the Epicurean or modern sense, because in the world of the early Christians, "anything ‘extra terram’ (that is, apart from earth and water) had to live in the air — hence, they would be spirits of some sort.... In no case I know of did a Father of the Church postulate corporeal beings living on some other planet." According to Father Lienhard, the closest thing we find among the early Christians is the belief of some (rooted in neo-Platonism) that "the seven planets or wanderers (the sun, moon, and five visible planets) were indwelt by rational beings or minds" because their circular motion "had to have a rational origin."

Such rude cosmology may strike us as irrelevant, but the early Christians also had theological reasons for their position. First, in direct contrast to the Epicureans, Genesis makes it clear that God (not chance) created the universe and, consequently, that human beings were intentionally (not accidentally) created by God. Second, according to Scripture, the universe is already quite well populated with intelligent extraterrestrials; they’re called angels. But most important of all, the incarnation of Christ was the union of God’s divinity with our humanity. Human beings were thereby placed at the center of the cosmic drama, which made no room for questions about the redemption of other intelligent beings (even angels).

For all these reasons, we find no evidence of speculation about extraterrestrials among the early Christians. Not only did such speculation run directly against the central doctrinal claims of Christianity, but it also smacked of Epicureanism (which entailed, among other things, the denial of the immortal, immaterial soul, heaven, and hell). Small wonder the early Christians tossed the Epicurean package, extraterrestrials and all, into the abyss of doctrinal errors.

And there it stayed for nearly a thousand years.

The Rise of the Modern Extraterrestrial Debate

Three things caused the debate about extraterrestrials to resurface in the West: the theological anti-Aristotelianism of the late 13th century, the rediscovery of ancient atomism in the 15th century, and the invention of the telescope in the early 17th century.

Beginning about 1100 a.d., text after text of the great Greek philosopher Aristotle reached the West, and Christians were suddenly confronted with a unified, well- constructed account of the universe, an account written by a pagan. Aristotle denied that there could be a plurality of worlds. Of course, if there could not be a plurality of worlds, then the question of extraterrestrials was moot.

There were three reactions to Aristotle’s purely natural, non-Christian philosophical account: vehement rejection (the radical Augustinians), careful embrace (St. Thomas), and passionate embrace (the radical Aristotelians).

Around 1265 a conflict between the two radical wings began to heat up, resulting in the famous (or, for Thomists, infamous) 219 Propositions in 1277, issued by the bishop of Paris, Etienne Tempier. Proposition 27 condemns all who hold the Aristotelian position "that the first cause cannot make more than one world."

It should be stressed that the aim of this condemnation was not to affirm a plurality of worlds but to affirm God’s omnipotence against any account of nature that seemed to restrict God’s powers. Aristotle’s insistence that there could only be one world accorded nicely with the Genesis account of creation, but it appeared to the radical Augustinians to make God the servant of natural necessity rather than its master. The remedy, so Bishop Tempier and his followers thought, was to assert that the first cause could indeed create a plurality of worlds (even if we know, by revelation, that He happened to make only one).

But the condemnation had an unforeseen effect. No sooner had the ink soaked into the vellum than speculation about a plurality of worlds began in earnest. By the beginning of the 15th century, that speculation had led some Christian thinkers to affirm the existence of extraterrestrial life. In his On Learned Ignorance (1440), Nicholas of Cusa argued that "life, as it exists here on earth in the form of men, animals and plants, is to be found, let us suppose, in a higher form in the solar and stellar region." Cusa then began to churn out a zoology:

It may be conjectured that in the area of the sun there exist solar beings, bright and enlightened intellectual denizens, and by nature more spiritual than such as may inhabit the moon — who are possibly lunatics — whilst those on earth [i.e., human beings] are more gross and material. [Quoted in Steven Dick, Plurality of Worlds: The Origins of the Extraterrestrial Life Debate from Democritus to Kant]

So it was that Christian speculation about lunatics and solarians moved from the lunatic fringe closer to the acceptable center. But exactly what is such let-us-supposing and conjecturing based on? Evidence? Revelation? Reason? No. In fact, it issued from an unhappy union of sloppy logic and untethered imagination. To affirm God’s omnipotence (by condemning the proposition that "the first cause cannot make more than one world") does not entail that God indeed has created more than one world (and peopled it with aliens). As for footloose imagination, the embarrassing claim about solarians and lunatics speaks for itself.

Dovetailing neatly with this new Christian affirmation of the plurality of worlds (and even the possibility of extraterrestrial life), we have the rediscovery in the 15th century of the long-buried texts of Democritus, Epicurus, and Lucretius. During the next two centuries, the words of these ancient atomists spread all over Europe, becoming the foundation of the modern scientific revolution in the 17th and 18th centuries.

As we might expect, the atomists’ belief in extraterrestrials blossomed anew with the advance of the materialistic view of modern science. But in contrast to the ancient antagonism between such materialism and religion, modern atomism met with Christian theologians moonstruck by the possibility of lunatics. The Epicurean-Lucretian cosmology, designed to eliminate religion, was now welcomed as the bearer of galactic good news.

We’ll return to this irony below. Our analysis would be incomplete, however, if it did not include the visible support that the plurality-of-worlds theory seemed to receive with the invention of the telescope. When the new "spyglass" (as Galileo called it) was trained on the heavens in the early 17th century, the heavens were found to be far deeper and far, far more populated with stars than anyone could ever have imagined. Were these not the suns illuminating the infinite worlds promised by Epicurus and Lucretius?

When coupled with the earlier arguments of Copernicus — that the earth was not (as Aristotle had argued) the center of the universe — this open expanse of space filled with countless stars seemed to shatter any notion that our little sun and our little world were anything other than a drop in the cosmic bucket. For many Christians, the expanded cosmology seemed to demand an expanded theology.

The Era of Speculation (and Secularization)

From approximately 1600 to 1900 there was first a trickle, then a flood of scientific-philosophical-theological speculation on the nature of extraterrestrial life.

From this period, we can cull a veritable bestiary of extraterrestrials that were supposed to inhabit every known planet in our solar system, as well as the sun and moon and, beyond that, every star, planet, and comet in the universe.

Such speculation often came from the best scientists of the day. Sir William Herschel (1730-1822), the astronomer who discovered Uranus (1781), claimed that he saw near-certain evidence of forests, circular buildings, canals, roads, and pyramids on the moon — all, of course, signs of lunarians. He was equally certain that the known planets of our solar system were all peopled and insisted the sun was "a most magnificent habitable globe" filled with solarians "whose organs are adapted to the peculiar circumstances of that vast globe." Sir John Herschel (1792-1871), William’s son, inherited both his father’s science and his fantasies; he argued that since the front side of the moon was apparently dead, lunarians must live on the dark side.

Johann Bode (1747-1826), a director of the Berlin Observatory and famous for Bode’s Law, asked of these same solarians, "Who would doubt their existence?" The reason for such certainty was quasi-theological. "The most wise author of the world assigns an insect lodging on a grain of sand and will certainly not permit...the great ball of the sun to be empty of creatures and still less of rational inhabitants who are ready gratefully to praise the author of life." The same reasoning led him to affirm the existence of extraterrestrials on the moon, Mercury, and Venus.

We find, throughout this period, similar speculations approved by equally eminent scientists: Sir William Rowan Hamilton (1805-1856), Sir David Brewster (1781-1868), François Arago (1786-1853), J. Norman Lockyer (1836-1920), Jean Liagre (1815-1892), Jules Janssen (1824-1907), William Pickering (1858-1938) — and the list goes on well into the 20th century, a Who’s Who of the leading astronomers. As François Plisson, a French physician and coolheaded critic of extraterrestrial mania, wrote in 1847, "Almost all the astronomers of our day, and the most eminent among them, freely adopt the opinions that not long ago were viewed as being able to spring only from the mind of a madman."

If belief in solarians, lunarians, jupiterians, venusians, mercurians, and martians seems madness now, during the 18th and 19th centuries it was taken to be the only rational, scientifically grounded view. Small wonder, then, that theologians — both Christian and deist — felt not only inspired but obliged to incorporate extraterrestrials into their systems.

Looking first at the Christian attempts, one notices immediately that the doctrine of the Incarnation underwent a transformation as well-intentioned Christians rushed to keep up with the latest menagerie of extraterrestrials.

To cite a few examples: John Wilkins, an Anglican theologian who would go on to become a bishop, penned a popular account of extraterrestrials called Discovery of a World in the Moone. Wilkins insisted that the existence of extraterrestrials would not contradict Christianity. The absence in Scripture of any mention of other worlds or extraterrestrials did not preclude the possibility of their existence because "’tis besides the scope of the Holy Ghost either in the new Testament or in the old, to reveale any thing unto us concerning the secrets of Philosophy," and further, an inhabited "Moone" was an expression of God’s creative power, unduly restricted by believers, for too long, only to the earth.

A more famous and far more influential work was the quasi-Christian Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle’s Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds (1686), which asserted that the existence of creatures on other planets would not upset Christianity because such creatures would not be descendants of Adam and therefore would not be subject to the Incarnation.

A bit later, and pushing things a bit further, Traité de l’Infini Créé was published in 1769, allegedly by Abbé Malebranche but actually by Abbé Jean Terrasson. In it, Terrasson argued, against Fontenelle, that the Incarnation was not peculiar to our planet. If "it is asked...if the eternal Word can unite himself hypostatically to a number of men [i.e., different rational creatures on multiple planets]; one responds without hesitation — yes. The men would all be men-God [hommes-Dieu], men in the plural, God in the singular, because these men-God would in effect be several in number as to human nature, but they would be only one in respect to divine nature." Indeed, even where there was no Fall, Christ would embody Himself as a member of the race, for they deserved this honor even more than those who had fallen.

Other attempts to reconcile Christian revelation with extraterrestrials abound. William Hay (1695-1755) argued for multiple modes of salvation entailing multiple modes of Christ’s incarnation; James Beattie (1735-1803) asserted that Christ’s incarnation, death, and resurrection served as an inspiring example for all extraterrestrials; and Beilby Porteus (1731-1808) maintained that the Incarnation actually extends to all extraterrestrials.

By the beginning of the 19th century, belief in the plurality of worlds was so well accepted, especially among Protestants, that it was now incorporated as an essential element of evangelical orthodoxy. Some proponents, like Thomas Chalmers (1780-1847), were fairly cautious. Chalmers would say only that "for anything we can know by reason, the plan of redemption may have its influences and its bearings on those creatures of God who people other regions."

But as we have seen, others showed less restraint. To such speculations, we should add those of the influential visionary Baron Emanuel Swedenborg (1688-1772), who claimed to have conversations with the angels of each of the planets of our solar system and reported that the lunarians speak very loudly "from the abdomen" because "the Moon is not surrounded with an atmosphere of the same kind as that of other earths."

Ellen Harmon (1827-1915), prophetess and foundress of the Seventh-Day Adventists, reported after one of her visions that "the inhabitants [of Jupiter] are a tall, majestic people, so unlike the inhabitants of earth. Sin has never entered here." The Mormons were another sect inspired by astronomical speculation; they also believed in a universe populated by a plurality of gods, angels, and extraterrestrials.

The Infinite Machine

Of course, Christians weren’t the only ones busy with theological speculation about extraterrestrials. The 18th century was a time of transition for the West, from a Christianized culture to a secularized culture. Deism, standing midway between Christianity and atheism, was the religion of transition.

To be more exact, deism was the religion of the Newtonians. At the end of the 17th century, Newton had used the materialist atomism, ultimately rooted in the thought of Epicurus and Lucretius, as a foundation for his geometrical account of nature. As a result, the closest Newton could come to Christianity was deism, in which a distant god created the atoms and gave them an initial shove. The Incarnation was simply jettisoned as cosmologically incompatible and therefore irrelevant.

Deist poet laureate Alexander Pope composed "The Universal Prayer," which praised the deist god as the creator of multiple worlds and was intended by Pope to replace the all-too-provincial Lord’s Prayer. The works of the archdeist Voltaire, who called himself the new Lucretius, were shot through with multiple worlds peopled by extraterrestrials. On America’s own shores, Benjamin Franklin included such cosmic pluralism in his personal articles of belief, even claiming that the plurality of extraterrestrials included a plurality of gods to watch over each of the suns.

Perhaps more clearly than anyone else of the time, the deist Thomas Paine realized that the existence of a multitude of worlds (and, thus, of extraterrestrials) was entirely incompatible with Christianity: "[T]o believe that God created a plurality of worlds at least as numerous as what we call stars, renders the Christian system of faith at once little and ridiculous and scatters it in the mind like feathers in the air." For those who attempted a reconciliation of such plurality with Christianity, Paine warned that "he who thinks that he believes in both has thought but little of either." Paine, convinced of plurality, chose deism.

Many eminent figures agreed. The existence of extraterrestrials made belief in the particularity of Christianity an embarrassment. The poet Percy Bysshe Shelley found it easy to believe in extraterrestrials but, as a consequence, "impossible to believe that the Spirit that pervades this infinite machine begat a son upon the body of a Jewish woman." John Adams wrote to warn Thomas Jefferson against hiring anyone at the University of Virginia who holds the "awful blasphemy" that the "great Principle which has produced...Newton’s universe...came down to this little ball, to be spit upon by the Jews."

Scanning the 18th and 19th centuries, we find, then, two overlapping but opposing trends — one Christian and the other deist — united in one pluralist effort. Both sung endless paeans to a mighty God, creator of heaven and many earths, and both chiseled away at the doctrine of the Incarnation to make it fit such pluralism. Christians bent on saving Christianity from irrelevance cheerfully hacked away at the embarrassing particularity of the Incarnation until the doctrine itself became largely irrelevant. The deists, true to their Epicurean-Lucretian origin, simply gouged the Incarnation out of the cosmos as completely unsuitable to the new cosmology. The intelligentsia sided with the deists.

The revolution was not over, however. In the latter half of the 19th century, the intelligentsia shifted from deism to atheism. To be more exact, it simply embraced full-scale Epicurean-Lucretian materialism, now called Darwinism. Since the chance actions of matter were sufficient to create the universe, a deity was no longer either necessary or desirable. The deist god was given the bounce, replaced by the blind materialist forces of cosmic evolution. Atheism no longer needed the halfway house of deism. Secularization could now proceed at full throttle. And the belief in extraterrestrials was an essential part of the new materialist creed, just as it had been an essential part of the old one.

The Evidence of Absence

Only by the beginning of the 20th century was science advanced enough to move from speculation to the actual search for hard evidence. As amply documented by Steven Dick in Life on Other Worlds: The 20th Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate, by the end of the 20th century, scientists had demonstrated to all but the most zealously intransigent that — humble Earth excepted — our solar system was devoid of intelligent life and most likely devoid of any life. Further, as biologists discovered the ever-greater complexity of living organisms and the delicate balance of conditions that make them possible, it became clearer and clearer that fewer and fewer places in the universe could meet the conditions required for even the most rudimentary forms of life.

Yet the dismal result of the high-tech search for extraterrestrials only stirred advocates all the more, resulting in the optimistic but defensive battle cry: "The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." While this might warm the dwindling fires in the enthusiast’s heart, it pays little service to reason. To be blunt, since it was the negative result of a century-long search for aliens, the absence of evidence is evidence for absence. What else would it be?

A naysayer might ask, "But if what you’re saying is true, doesn’t the lack of scientific evidence for angels prove that angels don’t exist?" Such a riposte merely deflects attention from the seriousness of the self-inflicted wound. Again, whether or not angels exist, scientists were actively looking for extraterrestrials, convinced without a shred of evidence that they must exist. The simple truth remains: Over the span of the 20th century, science systematically eliminated the possibility of extraterrestrials in our solar system, and their existence elsewhere has dwindled from an absolute necessity to a dim chance.

Further, those who compare angels to aliens forget that angels are by definition immaterial beings. What kind of a scientific test would one devise to locate a being who, because it is not embodied, has no location? Extraterrestrials, on the other hand, are supposed to be material organisms; if they exist, we should be able to detect them the same way we detect any other physical body.

For the nonbeliever already convinced that angels don’t exist, to be forced to admit that he has no more reason to believe in aliens than in angels is an admission of defeat. This admission is all the more important precisely because extraterrestrials function for secularists as material substitutes for angels. In the great religion of secularism, aliens have now been reduced to, at best, a matter of faith.

Lessons for Theology

First, a humbling lesson for those inclined to hitch theological doctrines to the science of the day: Think how foolish we would appear today if the Catholic Church had modified its doctrine of redemption to make room for the solarians, venusians, mercurians, martians, and lunarians. We would be in the same speculative boat as Swedenborgians, Seventh-Day Adventists, and Mormons. The lesson? There’s nothing more dated than the ideas of those who insist on keeping their ideas up-to-date. The best remedy for theologians so inclined is a long, deep draught of the elixir of history, especially the history of science, where it becomes evident that today’s verities are often tomorrow’s absurdities.

Second, as we have seen, belief in the existence of extraterrestrials is not a modern thing, and that means it does not depend essentially on any advance in science. Rather, the belief stems from a particular metaphysical stance, not Christian but Epicurean in origin. As I argue long and hard in Moral Darwinism: How We Became Hedonists, such Epicureanism acts as an acid toward any religion but especially toward Christianity.

Third, Christians should be wary of leaning on revived forms of the sloppy logic of omnipotence, which arose after the publication of Tempier’s 219 Propositions in 1277. In its original form, it is a theological truism: "God is omnipotent; therefore God can create anything." But all too soon, this became a very different proposition: "Since it is possible for God to create anything, then God must create everything possible; therefore, extraterrestrials must exist, and the doctrine of the Incarnation must be expanded accordingly." This double inference is not only invalid but leads to foolishness. Would we say that since God is all-powerful, He must create fairies and also redeem them?

Fourth, Christians should be equally wary of the idea that God would somehow be a second-rate deity if He allowed human beings to be the only intelligent embodied beings in the universe, since that would mean a lot of wasted space. What frightens us into making such claims is, I believe, the immensity of space itself. But while the vastness of the universe rightly humbles us, its size means nothing to God, an immaterial intelligence. Since He has no size, it is all the same to Him whether He makes the universe as big as a pin or a pin as big as the universe.

A final, related point: Christians should not be cowed by the materialist’s logic of probability, which had its birth in Epicurus and Lucretius. The logic runs thus: Our sun is a star; since the number of stars is so vast, sheer probability demands that there must be other inhabited planets beyond our solar system. But probability does not demand any such thing, unless we think (with Epicurus) that the universe is governed by chance, and that, of course, would be a reason to give up our Christianity, not to rerig its cosmology.

I can already hear the parting objection: "But what would you do if extraterrestrials actually show up? It is possible, after all. And the Church hasn’t pronounced one way or the other."

I am as prepared for the arrival of extraterrestrials as I am for that of elves, and for the same reason: All evidence points to their nonexistence, and yet it remains a very, very remote possibility — so remote that to change our central doctrines to accommodate either possibility would be folly.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Benjamin D. Wiker. "Alien Ideas Christianity and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life." Crisis 20, no. 10 (November 2002).

This article is reprinted with permission from the Morley Institute, a non-profit education organization. To subscribe to Crisis magazine call 1-800-852-9962.

THE AUTHOR

Benjamin D. Wiker, a fellow with Discovery Institute, teaches theology and science at Franciscan University. His Moral Darwinism: How We Became Hedonists is now available from InterVarsity Press.

Copyright © 2002 Crisis


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To: XeniaSt
There are lots of animals in the zoo and PCs today are a commodity. Are ETs in the domain of creatures, genetically engineered beings by other creatures, or another domain under the Father but outside our intended domain?

OPtions I've considered have been:

1) fallen angels
2) other creatures still created by the Son or the Father, (other animals in the zoo)
3) Created by angels (a counterfeit creation?)
4) Spiritual domain only?
521 posted on 12/22/2002 9:25:27 PM PST by Cvengr
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To: Cvengr
Yes, I rely on the Interlinear Bible to get through some confusing passages.

But I've found if one just concentrates on the words of Jesus (and maybe Paul), in any language, His truth prevails.

I'm not sure what you mean by "parallelism to the domains of other creatures..."

522 posted on 12/22/2002 9:46:17 PM PST by Dr. Eckleburg
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To: Polycarp
To be more exact, deism was the religion of the Newtonians. At the end of the 17th century, Newton had used the materialist atomism, ultimately rooted in the thought of Epicurus and Lucretius, as a foundation for his geometrical account of nature. As a result, the closest Newton could come to Christianity was deism, in which a distant god created the atoms and gave them an initial shove. The Incarnation was simply jettisoned as cosmologically incompatible and therefore irrelevant.

Benjamin D. Wiker, a fellow with Discovery Institute, teaches theology and science at Franciscan University. His Moral Darwinism: How We Became Hedonists is now available from InterVarsity Press.


The author, Wiker seems to be painfully ignorant of the life of Sir Issac Newton.
I guess if you are not a member of the Roman or English church, you are not a follower of the Christ, just a Deist.

Newton was also an ardent Bible scholar who was very fluent in the ancient languages. He studied and translated the book of Daniel from the original Hebrew and his interpretations are the foundation of a book entitled, NEWTON'S PROPHECIES OF DANIEL, by the Oregon Institute Of Science and Medicine.
Sir Issac Newton 1642-1727

Newton, Isaac (1642-1727)

chuck <truth@YeshuaHaMashiach>

523 posted on 12/22/2002 9:47:14 PM PST by Uri’el-2012
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To: crystalk
I'm sorry I was hasty in my post because you know something? I don't know what the cosmos is. I did a quick check of the the word "cosmos" and posted it. Not a thorough study by any means and I apologize for it.

As far as ET's goes I think it is a foolish question because the Scriptures do not say therefore we do not know. Oh sure some mental tickling on the subject is ok but I'm not going to spend a lot of mind time on it.

Are you familiar with Hebrew? Because if you are I would like for you to consider something in Gen 1 that the modern versions may have all wrong according to the Hebrew. Either way I apologize again for my arrogance.
524 posted on 12/22/2002 10:07:05 PM PST by jwh_Denver
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To: yendu bwam; carpio; Polycarp
So they carp all the time.

hmmmmm

At least they are carpable of something. Some people are just vegetables.

I'm curious, do they have a carpacious appetite this time of year?

The carpacities of their stomachs must be quite large.

I wonder if any of them have swam by the Carpe of Good Hope.

When they go carrolling, do they sing A'Carpella?

When they do, I hope they bundle up well to keep their carpillaries warm and flowing.

I wonder if their carpital investments are carpmensurate with their carping?

Thankfully, on this site, we should be able to count them in as strong supporters of carpitalism.

Too bad the same can't be said for all the left-heads in our D.C. Carpitol!

Have you ever known one of them to carpitulate in an argument?

I'm sure glad [g]utless carpon Gore is not running again.

Has our FR carp school read all of Truman Carpote's works?

One thing plenty rare around FR parts is any carpricious mind change--especially among the school of carp.

I'm curious, if leftists carpsize, does the school of carp turn into a school of piranha?

If they carpsulated all their carping, would the result be dried fish or dried leftist?

BTW, who's the carptain of their ship?

What are their romantic rituals when they are carptivated by their lovers?

How do Carpuchin monkeys carpture carp?

At this rate, pretty soon, I'll be carput, if not already.

But I do hope our Carp school can show some reverence toward our Carpenter this Grand Season honoring His birth.

If the school eats too many fruits, they might have to take up carpology.

I suppose they could dry the fruits in their carp-orts.

And with that, this really SHOULD BE carput!
525 posted on 12/22/2002 10:50:08 PM PST by Quix
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To: XeniaSt
I am, of course, not at this point engaging in any "-gesis" at all...just translating the original languages into modern, technologically aware English. Ancient Hebrew was aware of self-propelled vehicles, aerial and land...Ancient Greek and Hebrew were well aware of intelligent and humanlike beings not from Earth.

Kosmos is and always has been much broader than the English 'world,'...

We are now far better placed to study Hebrew than ever before, since it has been recovered as a living language, and many implications that Christians may have suspected, sure enough ARE there, PACE earlier dictionaries, and many other implications they many NOT have suspected are also there!

Your theological "-gesis-es" can do all they wish, they have already done much damage. But I am not going to play the "-gesis" game. I am just translating.

The earlier commentaries were just walking in sparks of their own kindling, the blind leading the blind, when it comes to the overtones and actual meanings of the Hebrew in particular. We can now let the LANGUAGE lead, get [all of] the meaning[s] that an educated Hebrew speaker would get out of the passage, and ignore the pompous theological establishments of the Gentile world.

526 posted on 12/22/2002 11:58:19 PM PST by crystalk
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To: Quix
You sure outcarped me! I stand chastened!

Best,

yendu bwam
527 posted on 12/23/2002 6:08:44 AM PST by yendu bwam
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To: Quix
i SUPPOSE their wives are . . .

CARPettes?

It's certainly carp-possible...

528 posted on 12/23/2002 6:11:32 AM PST by yendu bwam
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To: Quix
But of course, when speaking of these matters, all we can go on is our God-given faith and intelligence.
529 posted on 12/23/2002 8:25:32 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: Quix
OK, you got me, poor words on my part. All who have faith presuppose something, otherwise, what would faith be?
530 posted on 12/23/2002 8:28:40 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: Quix
I have no doubts that God can do virgin births, resurrections, animals speaking, etc. I just don't think He did.
531 posted on 12/23/2002 8:30:30 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: yendu bwam
Why do you feel I ignore God, just like everyone else, I wouldn't be here, thinking as I do, if it wasn't for Him.
532 posted on 12/23/2002 8:41:48 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: Dr. Eckleburg
Simile - sometimes used on freerepublic to attempt to make a point, when nothing else works.
533 posted on 12/23/2002 8:46:41 AM PST by stuartcr
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To: yendu bwam
That's the world according to carp.
534 posted on 12/23/2002 8:48:35 AM PST by js1138
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To: Cvengr
There are lots of animals in the zoo and PCs today are a commodity. Are ETs in the domain of creatures, genetically engineered beings by other creatures, or another domain under the Father but outside our intended domain?

OPtions I've considered have been:

1) fallen angels
2) other creatures still created by the Son or the Father, (other animals in the zoo)
3) Created by angels (a counterfeit creation?)
4) Spiritual domain only?

521 posted on 12/22/2002 10:25 PM MST by Cvengr

There are some who hypothesize that the UFOs may be something not unlike the Nephilim.

Baruch HaShem Adonai Yeshua HaMashiach

Praise the Holy Name of the L-rd Jesus the Christ

chuck <truth@YeshuaHaMashiach>

535 posted on 12/23/2002 9:09:55 AM PST by Uri’el-2012
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To: Quix
That is very, very unclear--at least to me--at present.

Well, we probably need to consider all possibilities. I suspect that truth is much more wild than the theories of conventional thinking.

536 posted on 12/23/2002 9:49:00 AM PST by My2Cents
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To: yendu bwam
I think it was unfair, you were probably asleep and I'd had a long nap.

But I can certainly offer my carpdolences.

Cheers
537 posted on 12/23/2002 10:05:02 AM PST by Quix
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To: yendu bwam
Carp-ossible that their wives are carpettes?

But if so, the wives should be very carpful . . . it could be very dangerous . . .

A continual dropping in a very rainy day and a carpentious woman are alike.
(Whole Chapter: Proverbs 27 In context: Proverbs 27:14-16) [with carpologies to Holy Spirit, Solomon and The Lord.]

and

Proverbs 21:19
It is better to dwell in the wilderness, than with a carptentious and an angry woman.
(Whole Chapter: Proverbs 21 In context: Proverbs 21:18-20)
[with carpologies to Holy Spirit, Solomon and The Lord.]

And having dwelled in both the wilderness and been married to a carpentious woman for 9 years . . . The Bible is correct . . . carporrect.
538 posted on 12/23/2002 10:13:48 AM PST by Quix
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To: stuartcr
Yes, God insists that He gives to every man a measure of faith.

It is up to us to exercise it. That involves active and persistent choice.

I don't think we can blame God that He gave us an inferior faith as the reason we have weak or inadequate faith in Him.

We are not teenager druggies and He's not the social worker.

About every game our carnal nature could construe, God is infinitely too sharp for.

Perhaps I've gone off sky west and crooked from your point. I just wanted to caution about assumptions and slippery thinking in that ball park.

There's a WORD OF FAITH movement started probably in these times by Kenneth Hagin. I hear Hagin's tapes and read his books and he has plenty of outs which more or less balance out his position. But his son and a lot of his theological offspring have seemed to jump off the cliff with the principles involved.

NEVERTHELESS, that brand of Christian tends to experience and administer significantly more healings than most others. Certainly the Word of God earnestly believed and applied with whatever faith one can muster will produce far more miracles than other efforts.

But God is not a valet, not a butler, not a vending machine.

One time Kenneth Hagin knew of an elderly widow who had always been a righteous prayer warrior. She had heart trouble of some such and was clearly going to die unless God healed her. He knew from his long association that she had tons of faith and applied it appropriately, Scripturally. He went and layed hands on her and prayed for her. She died. He asked God why. God told him it was none of his business and to never think of it nor talk about it again.

That's fine. Certainly God's option. But it was a convenient out for Kenneth Hagin. He was faithful to God's command.

God doesn't seem to respond to formulas well--even Biblical ones. HE DEMANDS, INSISTS ON, COVETS A LOVE RELATIONSHIP WITH US MOMENT BY MOMENT. He wants a lover's dialogue with us moment by moment. He wants our trust and abandonment to Him moment by moment.

That takes a lot of faith and trust. Our culture tends to generate fear and mistrust and ocean fulls of incredulity. We have a lot to overcome to arrive at the state of relationship God desires for us. He is well able to get us there with our cooperation.

Blessings,
539 posted on 12/23/2002 10:28:11 AM PST by Quix
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To: stuartcr
BTW,

I'm convinced your IQ is above average and at least more than sufficient for a reasoned faith based on reasonable evidence.
540 posted on 12/23/2002 10:30:39 AM PST by Quix
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