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brycelaliberte
Guest
I recently read a book entitled The Logic of God Incarnate by Thomas V. Morris, which included a chapter on the speculation of multiple incarnations of God the Son.
The speculation is spurned by the question of extraterrestrial life; if there are other sentient beings in the universe, and these sentient beings have sinned and so require salvation, could God the Son “take on their flesh” and so become Incarnate as a being of their race just as God has done in ours?
While I would suppose that it would be logical for God to choose to save an extraterrestrial race by the same means, especially based upon the reasoning in St. Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo which discusses why God became man, I wonder what consequences this has for our Mariology?
For instance, Catholic theology posits that Mary is the Queen of Heaven;
CCC 966
I believe (1) is improbable, for certainly there are potentially infinite races of contingent beings, especially if there were to have been other universes that God creates. So, I would default to (2) as the most likely true assertion.
What do you think?
The speculation is spurned by the question of extraterrestrial life; if there are other sentient beings in the universe, and these sentient beings have sinned and so require salvation, could God the Son “take on their flesh” and so become Incarnate as a being of their race just as God has done in ours?
While I would suppose that it would be logical for God to choose to save an extraterrestrial race by the same means, especially based upon the reasoning in St. Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo which discusses why God became man, I wonder what consequences this has for our Mariology?
For instance, Catholic theology posits that Mary is the Queen of Heaven;
CCC 966
I believe this could be coherent, provided either;“Finally the Immaculate Virgin, preserved free from all stain of original sin, when the course of her earthly life was finished, was taken up body and soul into heavenly glory, and exalted by the Lord as Queen over all things, so that she might be the more fully conformed to her Son, the Lord of lords and conqueror of sin and death.”
- Mary is the only Queen and enjoys not only a unique place of exaltation by Christ among the human race, but a unique placement among all contingent beings that have ever existed or will ever exist; or
- Mary enjoys a unique place of exaltation among the human race, but not unique to all other contingent beings (there are “other Queens of Heaven”).
I believe (1) is improbable, for certainly there are potentially infinite races of contingent beings, especially if there were to have been other universes that God creates. So, I would default to (2) as the most likely true assertion.
What do you think?