There is a particular Protestant evangelist, the above-mentioned Carl
McIntire, who is extremely strict and righteous and very
Bible-believing. He has a radio program, the Twentieth-Century
Reformation, and a newspaper. He is absolutely upright—you have to
separate from all people who are in apostasy—and his ideas are very
nice. He’s anti-communist. He calls Billy Graham an apostate, together
with everyone who deviates from the strict line of what he thinks is
right. From this point of view he’s very strict, and yet you see the
strangest things i his philosophy. For example, he’s building himself
the Temple of Jerusalem, in Florida. He has a model of the Temple, and
he wants to build it so as to make it compete with Disneyworld. People
will come and pay to see the great Temple which is soon going to be
built for Christ to come to earth. This is supposed to provide a good
opportunity to witness Christianity.
He goes in for the flying saucers, also. In every issue of his
newspaper there’s a little column called “UFO Column,” and there they
talk, to one’s great astonishment, about all the wonderful, positive
things which these flying saucers are doing. The give conferences and
make movies about them.
Just recently there have been several Protestant books about UFOs,
showing quite clearly that they’re demons. The person who writes the
column in this newspaper got upset about this, and said that some people
say that these beings are demons, but we can prove they aren’t. He
says that maybe a couple of them are demons, but most of them aren’t.
He cites a recent case in which some family in the Midwest saw a flying
saucer. The flying saucer came down, landed, and the family saw inside
little men—they’re usually four and half feet tall or so—and they sang
“Hallelujah.” They stopped and looked and then they flew away; I guess
they didn’t talk to them any more. And that set the family to thinking;
they began to think “Hallelujah”; they began to think about
Christianity; they looked in their Bibles, and they finally ended up
going to a Fundamentalist church and being converted to Christianity.
Therefore, he says, these beings must be some kind of people who are
helping God’s plan to make the world Christian because they said
“Hallelujah.”
Of course, if you read Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov, you will know
about all the deceptions which the demons perpetrate: the demons “pray”
for you, the demons make miracles, they produce the most wonderful
phenomena, they bring people to church, they do anything you want, as
long as they keep you in this deception. And when the time comes, they
will suddenly pull their tricks on you. So these people, who have been
converted to some kind of Christianity by these so-called outer-space
beings, are waiting for the next time they will come; and the next time
their message may have to do with Christ coming to earth again soon, or
something of the sort. It’s obvious that this is all the work of
demons. That is, where it’s real. Sometimes it’s just imagination, but
when it’s real this kind of thing obviously comes form demons.
This is very elementary. If you read any text of the early Fathers,
any of the early Lives of Saints or the Lausiac History, you find many
cases where beings suddenly appear. Nowadays they appear in spaceships
because that’s how the demons have adapted themselves to the people of
the times; but if you understand how spiritual deception works and what
kind of wiles the devil has, then you have no problems in understanding
what’s going on with these flying saucers. And yet this person who
writes the UFO column is an absolutely strict Fundamentalist Christian.
He is looking, actually for new revelations to come from beings from
outer space.
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