Christians
will not immediately need to renounce their faith in God
“simply on
the basis of the reception of [this] new, unexpected
information of a religious
character from extraterrestrial civilizations.” However,
once the “religious
content” originating from outside the earth “has been
verified” they will have
to conduct “a re-reading [of the Gospel] inclusive of the
new data…”
–
Vatican Astronomer, Eminent Theologian and Full Professor of
Fundamental Theology
at the Pontificia Università della Santa Croce in Rome
[Connected With Opus Dei], Father Giuseppe Tanzella-Nitti
FABULOUS
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Exo-Vaticana
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LUCIFER, Petrus
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Vatican's astonishing
exo-theological plan
for the arrival of
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You
only think you know
what's coming...
Tom
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EXO-VATICANA
(Pt 6) Petrus
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LUCIFER, and
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You
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Posted:
January 20, 2013
8:00 am Eastern
PART
6: ARE 'THEY'
INVOLVED WITH
'THEM'?
Incubi,
Succubi, Daemons,and
Elementals
By Tom Horn &
Cris Putnam
Based
on facts detailed in
the previous entries,
we started this part
of the investigation
saying the question is
not whether humans
were, can be, or are
being hybridized, but
whether alien/demon
agencies are involved
in the process.
Today,
what some call
“alien abduction,”
in which a breeding
program allegedly
exists resulting in
alien/human hybrids,
seems but a
contemporary retelling
of similar DNA
harvesting and genetic
manipulation by those
mysterious beings
called “Watchers”
whose genetic
modification
activities we have
discussed.
In
his book, Confrontations—A
Scientist’s Search
for Alien Contact,
highly regarded UFO
researcher, Dr.
Jacques F. Vallée,
once argued:
“Contact with
[aliens is] only a
modern extension of
the age-old tradition
of contact with
nonhuman consciousness
in the form of angels,
demons, elves, and
sylphs.”[i]
Later, Vallée more
closely identified the
operative power behind
these “aliens” as
equivalent to the
fallen Watcher angels
of the Days of Noah:
Are
these races only
semi-human, so that in
order to maintain
contact with us, they
need crossbreeding
with men and women of
our planet? Is this
the origin of the many
tales and legends
where genetics plays a
great role: the
symbolism of the
Virgin in occultism
and religion, the
fairy tales involving
human midwives and
changelings, the
sexual overtones of
the flying saucer
reports, the biblical
stories of
intermarriage between
the Lord’s angels,
and terrestrial women,
whose offspring were
giants?[ii]
Another
highly respected and
often-quoted UFO
researcher, John Keel,
echoed the same when
he stated in Operation
Trojan Horse:
Demonology
is not just another
crackpot-ology. It is
the ancient and
scholarly study of the
monsters and demons
who have seemingly
coexisted with man
throughout history.…
The manifestations and
occurrences described
in this imposing
literature are
similar, if not
entirely identical, to
the UFO phenomenon
itself. Victims of
demonomania
[possession] suffer
the very same medical
and emotional symptoms
as the UFO contactees.…
The Devil and his
demons can, according
to the literature,
manifest themselves in
almost any form and
can physically imitate
anything from angels
to horrifying monsters
with glowing eyes.
Strange objects and
entities materialize
and dematerialize in
these stories, just as
the UFOs and their
splendid occupants
appear and disappear,
walk through walls,
and perform other
supernatural feats.[iii]
Associate
professor of
psychology Elizabeth
L. Hillstrom was even
more inflexible on
comparisons between
“alien”
experiences and
historical demonic
activity, quoting in
her book Testing
the Spirits an
impressive list of
scholars from various
disciplines who
concluded that
similarities between
ETs and demons is
unlikely coincidental.
Hillstrom cites
authorities of the
first rank including
Pierre Guerin, a
scientist associated
with the French
National Council for
Scientific Research,
who believes, “The
modern UFOnauts and
the demons of past
days are probably
identical,”[iv]
and veteran researcher
John Keel, who
reckons, “The UFO
manifestations seem to
be, by and large,
merely minor
variations of the
age-old demonological
phenomenon.”[v]
Harvard psychiatrist
and Pulitzer
Prize-winner John Mack
risked his career when
he announced that the
abduction phenomenon
is very much real
albeit an assault of a
quasi-spiritual
nature. The following
is a chilling excerpt
from Mack’s Passport
to the Cosmos:
Some
abductees feel that
certain beings seem to
want to take their
souls from them. Greg
told me that the
terror of his
encounters with
certain reptilian
beings was so intense
that he feared being
separated from his
soul. “If I were to
be separated from my
soul,” he said, “I
would not have any
sense of being. I
think all my
consciousness would
go. I would cease to
exist. That would be
the worst thing anyone
could do to me.”[vi]
Mack
recorded page after
page of such
transparently demonic
phenomenon. Another
victim described her
horror saying, “I
knew instinctively
that whatever that
thing was next to me
wanted to enter me. It
was just waiting to
enter me.”[vii]
Of
course, this screams
demon possession, but,
against the evidence,
Mack’s naturalistic
worldview steered him
toward the
extraterrestrial
hypothesis. In
contrast, Vallée
connects the dots:
“The ‘medical
examination’ to
which abductees are
said to be subjected,
often accompanied by
sadistic sexual
manipulation, is
reminiscent of the
medieval tales of
encounters with
demons.”[viii]
With
these sorts of
characterizations
coming from the
secular scholars, it
should be no surprise
that we also connect
UFO/ET phenomenon with
demonic activity.
Incubi,
Succubi, Daemons,and
Elementals
In
contrast to the
“demons” of later
Judeo-Christian
belief, French UFO
researcher, Aimé
Michel (1919–1992),
preferred the daemons
of earlier Greek
antiquity as the
culprits of UFO and ET
activity. The
difference between
what most people today
think of as a demon
(an incorporeal,
malicious spirit that
can seduce, vex, or
possess a human) and
the daemons of ancient
Greek Hellenistic
religion and
philosophy is that
daemons were corporeal
(though often
invisible and
constituted of
material unlike human
or animal genetics)
and could be good (eudoaemons)
or evil (cacodaemons).
Eudoaemons (also
called agathodaemons)
were sometimes
associated with
benevolent angels, the
ghosts of dead heroes,
or supernatural beings
who existed between
mortals and gods (as
in the teachings of
the priestess Diotima
to Socrates in
Plato’s Symposium),
while cacodaemons
were spiritsof
evil or malevolence
who could afflict
humans with mental,
physical, and
spiritual ailments.
(In psychology,
cacodemonia or cacodemomania
is the pathological
belief in which the
patient is convinced
he/she is inhabited,
or possessed, by a
wicked entity or evil
spirit.) This
delineation, and its
potential spiritual
and physical
ramifications on
humans, was reflected
in the works of
Italian Franciscan
theologian, exorcist
and advisor to the
Supreme Sacred
Congregation of the
Roman and Universal
Inquisition in Rome,
Ludovico Maria
Sinistrari
(1622–1701).
Sinistrari, who was
regarded as an expert
on sexual sins, wrote
extensively of
individuals accused of
amorous relations with
demons. His work, De
daemonialitate, et
incubis et succubis,
may be considered
today among the
earliest accounts of
what could otherwise
be called “alien
abduction” resulting
in hybrid offspring
because the incubi
and succubi of Sinistrari’s opinion were neither evil spirits nor
fallen angels, but
corporeal beings
“created midway
between humans and
angels.”[ix]
Sinistrari
found that monks and
nuns were of
particular interest to
the incubi/succubi,
presumably due to
pent-up sexual
frustrations resulting
from celibacy oaths
that made them easier
targets (which makes
one wonder what the
venerated St. Cecilia
really meant when she
said to Valerian,
“There is a secret,
Valerian, I wish to
tell you. I have as a
lover an angel of God
who jealously guards
my body”[x]).
Physical evidence,
including semen, left
on site following
intercourse with the
phantoms was often
copious, negating the
possibility in at
least some cases that
the event was
psychological. One
such incident between
a sleeping nun and an
incubus in the form of
a spectral “young
man” had multiple
eyewitnesses and was
recorded by Sinistrari
in his work, Demoniality.
The Catholic Father
writes:
In
a Monastery (I mention
neither its name nor
that of the town where
it lies, so as not to
recall to memory a
past scandal), there
was a Nun, who, about
trifles usual with
women and especially
with nuns, had
quarrelled with one of
her mates who occupied
a cell adjoining to
hers. Quick at
observing all the
doings of her enemy,
this neighbour
noticed, several days
in succession, that
instead of walking
with her companions in
the garden after
dinner she retired to
her cell, where she
locked herself in.
Anxious to know what
she could be doing
there all that time,
the inquisitive Nun
betook herself also to
her cell. Soon she
heard a sound, as of
two voices conversing
in subdued tones,
which she could easily
do, since the two
cells were divided but
by a slight partition.
[There she heard] a
peculiar friction, the
cracking of a bed,
groans and sighs, her
curiosity was raised
to the highest pitch,
and she redoubled her
attention in order to
ascertain who was in
the cell. But having,
three times running,
seen no other nun come
out but her rival, she
suspected that a man
had been secretly
introduced and was
kept hidden there. She
went and reported the
thing to the Abbess,
who, after holding
counsel with discreet
persons, resolved upon
hearing the sounds and
observing the
indications that had
been denounced her, so
as to avoid any
precipitate or
inconsiderate act. In
consequence, the
Abbess and her
confidents repaired to
the cell of the spy,
and heard the voices
and other noises that
had been described. An
inquiry was set on
foot to make sure
whether any of the
Nuns could be shut in
with the other one;
and the result being
in the negative, the
Abbess and her
attendants went to the
door of the closed
cell, and knocked
repeatedly, but to no
purpose: the Nun
neither answered, nor
opened. The Abbess
threatened to have the
door broken in, and
even ordered a convert
to force it with a
crow-bar. The Nun then
opened her door: a
search was made and no
one found. Being asked
with whom she had been
talking, and the why
and wherefore of the
bed cracking, of the
sighs, etc., she
denied everything.
But,
matters going on just
the same as before,
the rival Nun, become
more attentive and
more inquisitive than
ever, contrived to
bore a hole through
the partition, so as
to be able to see what
was going on inside
the cell; and what
should she see but an
elegant youth lying
with the Nun, and the
sight of whom she took
care to let the others
enjoy by the same
means. The charge was
soon brought before
the bishop: the guilty
Nun endeavoured still
to deny all; but,
threatened with
torture, she confessed
having had an intimacy
with an Incubus.[xi]
These
entities were
associated with the
forest sylvans and
fauns by Augustine in
his classic, De
Civiatate Dei
(“City of God”):
There
is, too, a very
general rumor, which
many have verified by
their own experience,
or which trustworthy
persons who have heard
the experience of
others corroborate,
that sylvans and
fauns, who are
commonly called
“incubi,” had
often made wicked
assaults upon women,
and satisfied their
lust upon them; and
that certain devils,
called Duses by the
Gauls, are constantly
attempting and
effecting this
impurity is so
generally affirmed,
that it were impudent
to deny it.[xii]
The
incubus in Henry
Fuseli’s famous 1781
oil painting The
Nightmare
These
devils usually
appeared at night as
either a seductive
demon in a male human
form (incubi,
from the Latin incubo,
“to lie upon”)
having phantasmagoric
intercourse with
women, or elsewhere as
a sensual female
presence (succubi)
who collected semen
from men through
dream-state
copulation. Some
believe these entities
are one and the same.
That is, the same
spirit may appear as a
female in one instance
to collect male seed,
then reappear
elsewhere as a male to
transfer the semen
into a womb. The
etymology (the study
of the history of
words, their origin,
form, and meaning) of
the word
“nightmare”
actually derives from
the Old English maere
for a “goblin” or
“incubus” and
variously referred to
an evil female spirit
that afflicted
sleepers with a
feeling of suffocation
and bad dreams and/or
elsewhere as a
seductress. While
religious credo
involving incubi and
succubi was widespread
in mythological and
legendary traditions,
Sinistrari defied
established church
theology on the topic
when he wrote:
“Subject to
correction by our Holy
Mother Church, and as
a mere expression of
private opinion, I say
that the Incubus, when
having intercourse
with women, begets the
human foetus fromhis
own seed” (emphasis
added).[xiii]
Ironically, Sinistrari
considered the worst
part of this sinful
intercourse to be that
the incubus—a
morally superior being
in his mind (as
currently suggested by
modern Catholic
theologians regarding
ET and documented in
the upcoming book Exo-Vaticana)—had
lowered itself by
taking up with a
human! “The incubus,
(or succuba) however,
does, he holds, commit
a very great sin
considering that we
belong to an inferior
species,” notes
twentieth-century
writer William Butler
Yeats from
Sinistrari’s own
writings.[xiv]
In
this sense,
Sinistrari’s
interpretation of the
incubi and succubi is
similar to the alien
abductors of modern
tradition and the
daemons of Hellenistic
Greek religion. They
also reflect the
beliefs of the
alchemists who
preceded Sinistrari,
especially
German-Swiss occultist
Paracelsus, who
believed in the
Aristotelian concept
of four elements
(earth, fire, water,
and air),[xv]
as well as the three
metaphysical
substances—mercury,
sulfur, and salt—the
finest of which were
used by the entities
to constitute the more
majestic “bodies”
of those elemental
beings. Elementals are
referred to by various
names. In the
English-speaking
tradition, these
include fairies,
elves, devas,
brownies, leprechauns,
gnomes, sprites,
pixies, banshees,
goblins, dryads,
mermaids, trolls,
dragons, griffins, and
numerous others. An
early modern reference
of elementals appears
in the
sixteenth-century
alchemical works of
Paracelsus. His works
grouped the elementals
into four Aristotelian
elements: 1) gnome,
earth elemental; 2)
undines (also known as
nymph), water
elemental; 3) sylph,
air elemental (also
known as wind
elemental); and 4)
salamander, fire
elemental. The
earliest known
reference of the term
“sylph” is from
the works of
Paracelsus. He
cautioned that it is
harmful to attempt to
contact these beings,
but offered a
rationale in his work,
Why
These Beings Appear to
Us:
Everything
God creates manifests
itself to Man sooner
or later. Sometimes
God confronts him with
the devil and the
spirits in order to
convince him of their
existence. From the
top of Heaven, He also
sends the angels, His
servants. Thus these
beings appear to us,
not in order to stay
among us or become
allied to us, but in
order for us to become
able to understand
them. These
apparitions are
scarce, to tell the
truth. But why should
it be otherwise? Is it
not enough for one of
us to see an Angel, in
order for all of us to
believe in the other
Angels? [xvi]
A
book that popularized
this concept in the
late sixteenth century
was the work Le
Comte de Gabalis, ou
entretiens sur les
sciences secrete
(“Count Gabalis, or
Secret Talks on
Science”), which
helped the revival of
the third-century
mystical philosophy
based on the teachings
of Plato and earlier
Platonists known as
Neoplatonism. It
explained:
The
immense space which
lies between Earth and
Heaven has inhabitants
far nobler than the
birds and insects.
These vast seas have
far other hosts than
those of the dolphins
and whales; the depths
of the earth are not
for moles alone; and
the Element of Fire,
nobler than the other
three, was not created
to remain useless and
empty. The air is full
of an innumerable
multitude of Peoples,
whose faces are human,
seemingly rather
haughty, yet in
reality tractable,
great lovers of the
sciences, cunning,
obliging to the Sages,
and enemies of fools
and the ignorant. [xvii]
“According
to Count Gabalis,”
Robert Pearson
Flaherty explains,
“these elementals
were—like
Sinistrari’s incubi
and the ETs of current
lore—corporeal and
capable of begetting
children with
humans.”[xviii]This
occult concept holds
potential for deep
deception and near
future malevolence,
as, according to the
doctrine, it was
“the original intent
of the Supreme God
that humans should
join in marriage with
the elemental races
rather than with each
other, and the ‘fall
of man’ occurred
when Adam and Eve
conceived children
with each other rather
than with elemental
beings. Unlike humans,
elemental beings had
mortal souls; hence,
they had but one hope
of
immortality—intermarriage
with humans.”[xix]
Flaherty
compares this to
modern ET abduction
stories and the
messages received by
those who are part of
the “alien”
breeding program:
Through
hybridization with
humans, ETs of current
lore do not seek
immortality but rather
to avoid extinction.
Historian of religions
Christopher Partridge
describes how the
concept of malevolent
ETs is rooted in
Christian demonology
(belief in evil
spirits). Here, “ET
religion” is used to
refer to the positive
valorization of ETs, who
are portrayed not as
fallen angels and
scheming demons, but
as[like
Vatican theologians
argue in the upcoming
book Exo-Vaticana]our
saviors, creators,
and (in the
hybridization myth)
partners in continued
evolution and survival.[xx](emphasis added)
Coming
up next: Close
Encounters of the
Skinwalking,
Shapeshifting, Demonic
Werewolf Kind
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HAGMANN &
HAGMANN
[i]
Jacques Vallée,
Confrontations—A
Scientist’s
Search for Alien
Contact (New
York, NY:
Ballantine
Books, 1990),
159.
[ii]Jacques
Vallée, Dimensions:
A Casebook of
Alien Contact
(New York, NY:
Ballantine
Books, 1988),
143–144.
[iii]John
A. Keel, UFOs: Operation Trojan Horse (Atlanta, GA: Illuminet Press, 1996),
192.
[iv]Elizabeth
L. Hillstrom, Testing
the Spirits
(Downers Grove,
IL: InterVarsity
Press, 1995),
207–207.
[v]John
A. Keel, UFOs: Operation Trojan Horse, 299.
[vi]
John E. Mack, Passport
to the Cosmos:
Human
Transformation
and Alien
Encounters
(New York:
Crown, 1999),
209.
[xi]Ludovico
Maria Sinistrari,
Demoniality:
Or Incubi and
Succubi (Isidore
Liseux, 1879),
235–241.
[xii]Philip
Schaff, The
Nicene and
Post-Nicene
Fathers Vol. II – St. Augustin's City of God and Christian Doctrine (Oak Harbor:
Logos Research
Systems, 1997),
303.
[xiii]
Ludovico Maria
Sinistrari,
(Whitefish, MT:
Kessinger,
2003), 27.
[xvii]
Abbé N. de
Montfaucon de
Villars, Comte
de Gabalis, ou
entretiens sur
les sciences
secrete(London:
The Brothers/Old
Bourne Press,
1913), 29.
[xviii]
Robert Pearson
Flaherty,
“These Are
They,” ET-Human
Hybridization
and the New
Daemonology,
Nova
Religio: The
Journal of
Alternative
& Emergenct
Religion
(Nov 2012, Vol.
14 Issue 2), 86.
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