By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO—I'm not certain whether the History Channel should perhaps call
itself the Speculation Channel because nothing resembling either evidence or
facts were offered in its essay aired yesterday on whether some of the
miraculous phenomena in the Bible might be explained by visits of alien life
forms to the world.
Coming on the second day of Passover week, the program provided plenty of
material that we might all have discussed at our seders on either of the two
nights before. For example, could the pillar of smoke that led the
Israelites through the desert by day, and the pillar of fire that led them by
night, in reality have been manifestations of an alien spacecraft? Did
that spacecraft provide the manna that sustained the Israelites through their 40
years of wandering? Perhaps while hovering over the Reed Sea, did it cause
the waters to part for the Israelites and to close over the Egyptians? And
when Moses went up Mount Sinai, could he in fact have entered a space ship for
his instruction in the law?
According to the History Channel, this is what people who
claim the reality of UFOs (unidentified flying objects) believe. Furthermore,
these" UFOlogists" believe that other events in Hebrew
Scriptures—and in Christian Scriptures as well—also may be reinterpreted
with the idea that highly intelligent aliens visited the Earth and interacted
with important biblical personages.
For example, we have been taught that when Abraham was
sitting in his tent on the plain of Mamre, that the three visitors who came to
see him were angels of the Lord, carrying God's message that Sarah would
bear a child despite her advanced age. According to the History Channel,
however, UFOlogists believe those were aliens demonstrating their abiding
interest in human reproductive processes. From the story about the angels
knowing that the aged Sarah laughed outside the tent when she overheard the
prediction of her impending motherhood, UFOlogists infer that these aliens had
telepathic powers and could hear what Sarah was thinking.
Aliens also might have been involved in the destruction of
Sodom and Gomorrah, according to UFOlogical speculation, although the program
was hazy on why aliens would want to destroy these twin cities—or for that
matter why they cared at all about simple little humans on a planet far away
from their home worlds.
The program offered speculation from such UFOlogists as the Rev. Barry Downing,
a Presbyterian minister; Patrick Cooke, Dr. Hugh Ross and Guy
Malone. The speculation was all the more remarkable in that these
commentators all appeared to assume that the events described in Scriptures
actually did occur, but that the people who wrote up the phenomena were too
technologically backward to recognize a space vehicle.
Thus, they suggest, Elijah, who was said to have ascended
from the earth to heaven in a fiery "chariot," may have gone up into
the sky in a spacecraft—similar to the experiences described by modern people
who believe they were abducted by aliens. Likewise, the UFOlogists believe the
Prophet Ezekiel clearly had a Close Encounter of Some Kind with aliens. As
translated from the Hebrew in the Stone edition of the Tanach (edited by Rabbi
Nosson Scherman), here is how Ezekiel described his vision:
I saw, and behold, there was a stormy wind coming form the north, a great
cloud with flashing fire and a brilliance surrounding it; and from its midst,
like the color of the Chashmal in the midst of the fire, and in its midst there
was a likeness of four Chayos...
Traditional biblical commentators were confounded by what
Ezekiel saw, but not the UFOlogists. Clearly, in their view, it was the
descent and landing of a spaceship and a visitation by extra-terrestrial
creatures.
There are learned professors in the field of Bible studies—Prof. William Propp
of UCSD being one scholar who comes to mind—who suggest that the Book of
Exodus may be nothing more than a mythic story which sought to explain the
origins of the people who became the Jews. I can recall visiting Egypt and
asking the knowledgeable guides who took us through pyramids and showed us other
tangible evidence of ancient Egyptian civilization what artifacts, or evidence,
might have been found to substantiate the Exodus story. My guide smiled
and responded that nothing in the historical record corroborates what we must
take on faith.
The UFOlogists not only take on faith the Exodus story and
other stories as told in the Bible, they then add another layer of
faith—their, dare-we-call-it "religious" belief in alien
spacecraft—and transform these stories into tales that others describe as
science fiction.
So what should any of us believe? We should believe whatever we want to,
so long as we cause no harm to others in the exercise of our beliefs. As
for myself, I'd like to be able to base my beliefs on some real, down-to-earth
evidence and facts. I'm waiting.
|