David Grusch interview on Judicial Watch channel on YouTube:
“I want to address that really quickly, both as an intelligence officer, a physicist, and a practicing Roman Catholic like Senator Rubio and Vice President Vance. I respect those views regarding spirituality and demonic deception, and I think we should be concerned about that. However, I believe it is theologically premature to equate everything to demons without knowing the full picture. God has created a wonderful visible and invisible order that includes humans, animals, angels, and other types of non-human intelligence. As humans, we don’t yet fully understand all of God’s creation well enough to apply a definitive theological framework to it, and I think everyone needs to remain respectful of that.
The Catholic Church has a long history in this area, and theologians like the late Dr. Paul Thigpen, Dr. Diana Pasulka at the University of North Carolina, and Dr. Brent Robinson at Notre Dame have provided significant analysis on how people can interpret this. I see the current commentary as a major impasse because the language being used is very dangerous. We need to be much more thoughtful about how we categorize these phenomena.
I’m glad I can highlight this because not many advocates in the disclosure movement are addressing it. It is a very dangerous mindset to preconceive all of this as some sort of malevolence. This angle doesn’t get enough exposure, and when it does, it often leads to a fear-based decision-making process. Making decisions based on fear is never a winning strategy; it simply doesn’t work out well.”
swordofra on
Why are we even talking about biblical fairytail creatures from hell? Come on people, this is not the 19th century anymore!
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David Grusch interview on Judicial Watch channel on YouTube:
“I want to address that really quickly, both as an intelligence officer, a physicist, and a practicing Roman Catholic like Senator Rubio and Vice President Vance. I respect those views regarding spirituality and demonic deception, and I think we should be concerned about that. However, I believe it is theologically premature to equate everything to demons without knowing the full picture. God has created a wonderful visible and invisible order that includes humans, animals, angels, and other types of non-human intelligence. As humans, we don’t yet fully understand all of God’s creation well enough to apply a definitive theological framework to it, and I think everyone needs to remain respectful of that.
The Catholic Church has a long history in this area, and theologians like the late Dr. Paul Thigpen, Dr. Diana Pasulka at the University of North Carolina, and Dr. Brent Robinson at Notre Dame have provided significant analysis on how people can interpret this. I see the current commentary as a major impasse because the language being used is very dangerous. We need to be much more thoughtful about how we categorize these phenomena.
I’m glad I can highlight this because not many advocates in the disclosure movement are addressing it. It is a very dangerous mindset to preconceive all of this as some sort of malevolence. This angle doesn’t get enough exposure, and when it does, it often leads to a fear-based decision-making process. Making decisions based on fear is never a winning strategy; it simply doesn’t work out well.”
Why are we even talking about biblical fairytail creatures from hell? Come on people, this is not the 19th century anymore!