M
Mystophilus
Guest
I was just wondering how one could evangelise to another life-form if Jesus only came here and they never had an Incarnation…
I realise that this may look utterly daft, but I am actually serious. If Jesus was only incarnated here, then another life-form might reject the Gospel on the basis that it is speciesist: for humans only. If Jesus was incarnated on other worlds, then God had not one, but many, sons/offspring, and Jesus died/will die many times for the sins of the people.I was just wondering how one could evangelise to another life-form if Jesus only came here and they never had an Incarnation…
While he did only talk about the salvation of humans, he was only talking to humans. There was no reason to mention other beings, although there is a reference which could be claimed for them in “I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold. These also I must lead, and they will hear my voice, and there will be one flock, one shepherd” (John 10:16).Whether or not Christ also died for them is unknown. Personally, I would think it unlikely since he only talks about the salvation of men (meaning mankind).
Thus the adjective clause with the modal and the representational verb: “which could be claimed”. Were we to discover intelligent life elsewhere, I am quite sure that people would start reading that passage that way, justifiably or not.Most people understand that to refer to the gentiles.
I think he also addressed this in Mere Christianity (or in the collection of essays with The Worlds Last NightC.S. Lewis had an interesting view on this in his book “Perelandra”.
If, as you say, the task is impossible, then being distracted from it is not going to affect our degree of success. Thus there is no opportunity cost in considering the question.I dont see how the answer to such a question could further any mans faith. If it is beneficial in growing closer to God then it is good, if not, it only distracts man from the already impossible task of reaching perfection.
Curiosity is gratuitous. This does not make it bad.IMHO, such questions are irrelevant.
Well, I have Christ, and so I do not need a church to pronounce a dogma.If the answer to this question is important to you, then ask the church to pronounce a dogma on it. If not, let it rest. You have Christ, what else do you need?
That was the Adam and Eve reprise on Venus, was it not?C.S. Lewis had an interesting view on this in his book “Perelandra”.
Verbum Caro said:5. Christ cannot reincarnate and take on another nature. He has a human nature and a Divine nature, hypostatically joined in Divine Person – and this is the way He is now and will always be.
I am not so sure about this point. Without knowing what other possible method of salvation there might be, how can we accurately judge whether or not it has any particular quality, e.g., ‘fitness’? The mere fact that we know one method, which was good, does not rule out the possibility that there is another method, which is also good.So, unless there is another type of “salvation history” – a totally different method of saving these non-humans that does not involve the incarnation, then they would … be …
* 2)fallen but saved through some other method [let’s reject this because it doesn’t seem “fitting” for God to have two types of salvation – one which involved the great act of Love of the Incarnation, Suffering, Death and Ressurection, and one that did not.
Option 2 is there for people in your position.I have a problem with the options given as I believe that in dying for Men, he died for all creation. If Man is the sum and summit of creation, the priest of creation, as it were, then the God-Man, in suffering for Men, is suffering for all and working through Man the redemption of all creation. As such, I think it is through Man (because it is through the God-Man Christ) that even the angels will be restored to lost glory if it is possible for them to do so.
I would suggest that you might want to think very carefully about that conclusion, and here is why: in Genesis 2:7, we are told that God breathed into the man and the man became a living being. You read that (as many do) as the infusion of the soul into the man. However, you are also reading it as an exclusive event, suggesting that, because we do not see it for other creatures, it did not happen for them. This is very important, because we do not see it for the woman. Thus, if we follow this line of reasoning (as some Rabbis have), then women do not have souls.We are also assuming that aliens have souls. Are aliens, if intelligent lifeforms, necessarily given souls? Or are they like really intelligent pets. My dog won’t go to heaven. God only breathed into Adam.