Originally
published August 17, 1997 in Florida Today
"Spiritual Warfare?"
Some look to Bible for answers to alien abductions
By Rita Elkins : Florida Today
Big Stretch: Imagine that alien
abduction experiences and demons are equally real.
Hey, we said it'd be tough. But you
were halfway there watching the recent movie, "Fire in the Sky,"
right? One more step and you're in the strange and trendy world of
UFOlogy theology, where extraterrestrials could be even scarier than
you think.
Odd as it sounds, the spiritual life
of aliens is being taken seriously in wide-ranging discussions among
religious leaders. Magazine articles, books and even evangelists
are engaging in Bible-based speculations about the nature and
intention of entities that allegedly kidnap, paralyze, physically
abuse and sometimes sexually molest victims - many of whom, more
strangely still, come to believe the experience was worthwhile.
Religious leaders are alarmed about a
growing train of thought that "wants us to reject traditional
Judeo-Christian ideas about God" in favor of benign "Space Brothers"
who will save humanity from itself, writes journalist William M.
Alnor in his book, "UFOs in the New Age" (Baker, Grand Rapids,
Mich.)
Alnor concludes this new belief is a
set-up for apocalyptic deceptions predicted in the Bible's Book of
Revelation.
He's not alone.
"The similarity between the abduction
experience and demonic possession is very, very close," says Joe
Jordan of Cocoa, Brevard/Volusia state director for the Mutual UFO
Network (MUFON), a widely respected clearinghouse for UFO-related
research.
"These (alien contact) experiences
these people are having are real. It does exist. But you just
need to understand what's doing it."
Jordan and his partner, Wes Clark,
have begun a research group called CE-4 (close encounters of the
fourth kind, i.e. abductions), dedicated to studying alleged alien
abductions.
Its 15 members also belong to MUFON,
but "nothing we do is necessarily sanctioned by them," says Clark, a
quality control engineer at Kennedy Space Center.
MUFON principals did not respond to
inquiries about CE-4's unusual hypothesis, summarized by Jordan:
"This whole thing is spiritual
warfare. And the method the enemy's using is deception. Strong
deception."
In other words, entities really are
abducting people against their will. Only, they're not aliens from
other planets. They're demons from the pit of hell.
Joe Jordan is addressing a "New
Millennium Symposium" in Titusville. With his intense brown eyes
and shoulder-length hair, he mingles easily with New Age folks who
paid $44 to study pyramids, Mayan deamspells, Lakota prophesies, and
to hear Jordan talk about "UFO Abductions."
Jordan, who works in product
development and engineering for Sea Ray Boats, speaks calmly, his
voice firm, with good grammar and diction. Kooks don't get to be
state directors with science-orientated MUFON, for whom he has
chased lights for seven years.
Last year he focused on CE-4 research,
and encountered a Central Florida abductee whose otherwise-typical
experience had one unique aspect. "They had stopped the experience
while it was happenning. In all the time I've been researching, I'd
never heard that before."
Jordan punches buttons on a tape
recorder. A nameless, 30-something man with an intelligent-sounding
voice, slightly southern, tells his story. Calmly, at first.
There were strange lights in a nearby
woods at bedtime, barking dogs. He is up and down a few times,
yelling at the dogs while his wife sleeps soundly. Then, lying down
again...
"I couldn't move... gray fog. I
couldn't see anything, but it was like someone was there." He felt
himself lifted off the bed. I was terrified, so helpless...
screaming inside, but I couldn't get it out."
The voice is less calm now, but still
certain, not hesitant.
"I thought I was having a satanic
experience, that the devil had gotten hold of me and had shoved a
pole up my rectum and was holding me up in the air... so helpless.
I couldn't do anything."
A non-religious person, he'd been to
church with his wife a few times.
"I said, 'Jesus, Jesus, help me' or
Jesus, Jesus, Jesus!' And when I did, there was a feeling or a
sound or something. That either my words that I had thought, or the
words that I had tried to say or whatever, hurt whatever was holding
me up in the air on this pole.
"And I felt like it was withdrawn, and
I fell. I hit the bed, because it was like I was thrown back in the
bed. I really can't tell what it was. But when I did, my wife
woke up and asked why I was jumping on the bed."
Yeah, but...
Relentless anonymity is a given in
abduction research. Nobody in their right mind wants family,
friends and co-workers to know they've had their personal space
violated against their will by strange-looking creatures whose
existence isn't even proven.
So they can't give names. But Jordan
and Clark swear they have three verifiable cases in which apparent
abduction experiences were halted by believers who called on the
name of Jesus. And Jordan says as many as 400 cases may be
documentable nationwide.
"It makes you wonder: if these beings
are extra-terrestrial at all, why would they respond to that name?"
Jordan asks. "We think we found the answer in the Bible, in Mark
16:17 where Jesus said, 'In my name they shall cast out demons.'
That seems to be exactly what we came across."
Three major researchers told Jordan,
off the record, that they had similar cases. But "They were afraid
for their credibility," he says. "They felt they already had put
their credentials out far enough dealing with extra-terrestrials."
Other "so-called researchers (are)
sitting on this information," Jordan says. "There's something wrong
there. They're just as bad as the people they say have conspiracies
in other ways."
Why would anyone suppress such
research findings? Jordan, who became a Christian last year, says
most UFOlogists share his former New Age beliefs, which dismiss
Christianity and Judaism. "These people go from one thing to
another looking for development of a higher consciousness," he
says. Anyplace but in traditional religion.
Stranger still...
An estimated 40 percent of Americans
say they believe aliens have visited Earth. More than a million
people worldwide claim CE-4 experiences. Sitll, mainstream
Christianity mostly side-stepped the issue - until March's mass
suicide at Heaven's Gate showed just how misleading some alien
link-thinking could be.
Suddenly, the religious press is full
of articles about UFOs.
The May cover story in Central
Florida's discovery Christian newspaper focused on UFOlogy theology,
interviewing Berkley-trained scientist and Christian author, John
Weldon. That was reprinted from Rutherford Institute's
nationally-distributed October newsletter.
Even Jewish believers are connecting
UFO experiences with the Torah, or Jewish Bible. "Many serious
people who have been studying UFOs around the world have reached the
consensus that the Bible is a convincing UFO story," said journalist
Barry Charnish, quoted in a chapter titled, "UFOs in the Holy Land"
from sightings: UFOs, by television writer Susan Michaels (Simon and
Schuster, New York, due out in September).
July's Charisma magazine, a
200,000-plus circulation monthly, featured Christian evangelist and
author Paul McGuire's article, "Alien Invaders." McGuire cites the
evolution of popular New Age author Whitley Streiber's interests -
from his first alien contacts in Communion, Transformation and
Breakthrough to his latest titles, The Secret School: Preparations
for Contact and Evenings with Demons - as an example of a
progressive deception.
Indeed, Streiber fans often comment -
albeit positively - on their favorite author's change. From
experiencing his first alien encounters as terrifying and torturous,
he began to seek them out and welcome them, finally advocating them
as a religious experience.
That, say religious leaders, indicates
a deceptive entity is at work.
"Both the seemingly benign and hostile
entities... will play an increasing role in preparing a segment of
humanity for the reception of the Antichrist," writes best selling
author David Allen Lewis and Robert Shreckhise in UFO: End-Time
Delusion.
And the cover of The Agenda, The Real
Reason They're Here gives this premise: "In the near future, God
will evacuate millions of people from the horrors to follow.
Aliens will take the credit" for the Rapture (when Christians will
be supernaturally airlifted to heaven), writes B. Fox, a MUFON
researcher who resides in - of all places- Roswell, New Mexico.
(Webmaster note - visit that site at
www.uforanks.com)
Back in Titusville at the CE-4 office
in Wes Clark's home, Joe Jordan and Clark continue to study,
research and solicit abductees through the internet and with
classified ads in MUFON's UFO Journal.
"The one thing we can offer people in
this field, that nobody else elsewhere is offering, is hope. Hope
that they can stop this experience," Jordan says.
"We're still researchers. It's not
conclusive. But this is what we have so far."
** NOTE: Wes Clark is no longer a
member of CE4 Research Group, although he was a co-founder and major
part of our organization.