Wednesday, July 8, 2026

'Mother' Miriam Aliens Are Demons Hogwash

Refuting the Claim: Aliens Are Not Demons – A Catholic Perspective Rooted in Reason, Tradition, and Truth

In a widely circulated podcast discussion, Mother Miriam, a Catholic nun associated with Catholic Answers, made a striking assertion: purported UFO sightings and potential encounters with extraterrestrial beings are not evidence of life from distant planets but manifestations of "fallen angels" – demons – actively invading Earth to cast doubt on the existence of God and lure souls away from salvation. She draws on St. Thomas Aquinas to argue that angels represent the original extraterrestrial intelligence, originating from the spiritual realm rather than material galaxies. Some, she warns, are "ministers of deception and destruction," using fascination with the paranormal to distract humanity from faith, grace, and the cosmic spiritual battle in which we are all enlisted.

While vigilance against spiritual deception is a legitimate Christian concern—echoing St. Paul's warning that we wrestle not against flesh and blood but principalities and powers (Ephesians 6:12)—Mother Miriam's position overreaches. It imposes a private interpretation as near-certainty, contradicts key elements of Thomistic theology, creates insurmountable pastoral and evangelistic crises in the event of genuine contact, and risks a heretical narrowing of God's creative omnipotence. A deeper examination of Scripture, Aquinas, and Church tradition reveals why material extraterrestrial intelligences (ETIs), if they exist, cannot simply be classified as demons, and why preemptively labeling them as such harms the faith more than it protects it.


 Aquinas on the Nature of Angels and Demons: Pure Spirits, Not Technological Tricksters

Central to the refutation is St. Thomas Aquinas's profound treatise on angelic substances in the Summa Theologica (Prima Pars, Questions 50-64). Aquinas teaches that angels are incorporeal, pure intellectual forms subsisting without matter. They are not composed of body and soul as humans are; their essence is entirely spiritual, with intellect and will operating at a level far surpassing human abstraction from sensory data. Demons, as fallen angels, retain this purely spiritual nature but are fixed in malice after their irreversible choice against God.

In Question 51, Article 1, Aquinas addresses whether angels assume bodies. He affirms they can do so—not for their own need, but for ours, to communicate or signify intelligible truths through sensible signs. The assumed body is not a true union (as in the hypostatic union of Christ) but a temporary manipulation of matter, often air condensed by divine power, to appear visible. This is instrumental: the angel moves the body as an external tool, not as its informing soul. Crucially, angels and demons have no natural need for bodies. Their power exceeds all corporeal limitation; they act through intellect and will directly upon creation within the bounds God permits.

This directly undermines the "aliens as demons" thesis. Genuine extraterrestrials would be embodied rational creatures—composite of body and soul (or equivalent), subject to physical laws, requiring technology for interstellar travel, exhibiting biological processes, reproduction, and cultural development. Reports of UFOs often involve radar returns, physical traces, electromagnetic effects, and consistent aeronautical behavior—hallmarks of material craft, not spiritual apparitions. Demons, per Aquinas (ST I, Q. 110-111), can produce preternatural phenomena by accelerating natural processes or manipulating bodies, but they do not require or typically employ sustained technological artifice. Why pilot a saucer when one can delude the senses instantly or influence the imagination? The hypothesis demands demons engage in elaborate, detectable physical charades unnecessary for bodiless beings.

Aquinas further distinguishes angelic knowledge (innate, universal species) from human (discursive, sense-derived). ETIs, sharing our mode of knowing through abstraction, would align more closely with humanity than with angels. In discussions of celestial bodies (ST I, Q. 70), Aquinas allows for animated heavens but typically assigns such souls to the angelic order only if non-sensitive. Embodied ET rational souls would parallel humanity, created for beatitude through grace, not collapsed into demonic categories. Forcing all non-human intelligence into the angelic/demonic binary ignores Aquinas's emphasis on hierarchical diversity in creation (ST I, Q. 47, a.1): "The perfection of the universe consists in the diversity of creatures." God's goodness diffuses itself multiply; limiting possibilities to angels, humans, and demons arbitrarily constrains divine freedom.

Scripture supports openness. Genesis describes our world's creation but does not exhaustively catalog the cosmos. Psalm 19:1 ("The heavens declare the glory of God") and the vastness celebrated in Job imply a Creator unbound by one inhabited world. The 1277 Condemnations by Bishop Tempier of Paris explicitly rejected as erroneous the claim that God could not create multiple worlds, safeguarding divine omnipotence against Aristotelian necessity. Catholic tradition, from patristic speculation to modern theologians, has long permitted plurality of worlds without doctrinal alarm.


 The Evangelistic and Pastoral Catastrophe of Preemptive Demonization

Suppose confirmed contact occurs: advanced, peaceful material beings arrive, demonstrating biology, history, and ethics distinct from ours. They possess no fallen angelic traits—no horror at holy objects, no compulsion toward evil—but curiosity, science, and perhaps moral goodness. The Church, having amplified voices calling them demons, confronts disaster.

How does conversion proceed? Evangelization presupposes rational creatures capable of grace. If ETIs are unfallen (analogous to prelapsarian humanity or unfallen angels), they may enjoy natural beatitude or a tailored economy of salvation without needing the Incarnation as we do. Aquinas notes angels do not "convert" via sacraments suited to embodied, wounded human nature (ST III on sacraments). Imposing human redemption on aliens risks Christological error—suggesting multiple Incarnations or denying the uniqueness of the Word assuming human flesh for human sin. If fallen, God in His wisdom might redeem them differently; presuming demonic identity blocks dialogue entirely.

Practically, trust evaporates. Visitors learning the Church branded their civilization Satanic would see hostility, not universal charity. Ecumenism with separated brethren pales beside interstellar relations. The Great Commission ("Go and teach all nations," Matthew 28:19) extends to all rational creatures; preemptively demonizing them hinders it. Scandal follows: faithful Catholics, upon witnessing ET virtue or shared theism, may doubt the Church's discernment. Others, embracing contact, drift from a faith portrayed as paranoid. This echoes historical errors where the Church resisted scientific truths (e.g., heliocentrism), only to adapt—yet here the stakes involve souls across worlds.


 The Dangerous Equivalence: Marian Apparitions and Demonic Deception

The logic extends perilously. If demons orchestrate complex, multi-witness UFO events with technological verisimilitude to erode faith, nothing prevents skeptics—or future heretics—from labeling approved Marian apparitions demonic. Lourdes, Fatima, and Guadalupe feature luminous figures, physical healings, prophecies, and solar phenomena. These involve sensory perception, verifiable cures, and conversions—yet under the nun's framework, advanced demonic illusion could mimic them perfectly. Discernment criteria (orthodoxy, fruits, Church approval) become subjective when all extraordinary phenomena default to "demonic until proven otherwise."

This flattens Catholic sacramental realism. God acts through matter—Incarnation, Eucharist, water in baptism. Miracles confirm revelation; dismissing potential ETs as tricks invites dismissing miracles as tricks. It borders on Manichaean suspicion of the material cosmos, contrary to the goodness of creation (Genesis 1:31) and Thomistic hylomorphism. Authentic spiritual warfare discerns spirits by fruits and authority (1 John 4:1), not blanket categorization that erodes wonder at God's works.


 Theological Overreach: Private Opinion Elevated Toward Heresy

The Church has no definitive teaching forbidding ET life; it is scientifically open. Popes and theologians affirm compatibility: discovery would magnify God's glory, not diminish Christ's centrality for humanity. Mother Miriam's view, while not formal heresy, veers into material error by universalizing a speculative explanation against tradition's breadth. Insisting "sooner look at the demonic side" as default risks scandal and restricts inquiry God permits. True orthodoxy trusts providence: if ETs exist, they fit within divine order. Faith fears neither stars nor science.

Demons do deceive, and vigilance is needed. Yet equating unknowns with evil stifles the Gospel's cosmic scope. As Aquinas teaches, truth is one; grace builds on nature. Let Catholics embrace reasoned openness—discerning phenomena rigorously, proclaiming Christ boldly, and marveling at creation's diversity. God's universe dwarfs our categories. Preemptively demonizing the stars diminishes the Lord of all worlds, visible and invisible.


 

Sacerdotus TV LIveStream

Labels

Catholic Church (1527) Jesus (712) God (694) Bible (588) Atheism (387) Jesus Christ (378) Pope Francis (340) Liturgy of the Word (307) Atheist (268) Apologetics (237) Science (228) Christianity (196) LGBT (148) Theology (140) Liturgy (129) Blessed Virgin Mary (117) Abortion (97) Gay (95) Prayer (92) Pope Benedict XVI (91) Philosophy (88) Rosa Rubicondior (82) Traditionalists (75) Vatican (74) Psychology (72) Physics (69) Christmas (64) Holy Eucharist (60) Christian (59) New York City (59) President Obama (59) Protestant (52) Vatican II (47) Health (46) Politics (46) Biology (45) Women (44) Gospel (40) Racism (39) Supreme Court (35) Baseball (34) Illegal Immigrants (32) Pope John Paul II (32) Death (30) NYPD (30) priests (30) Astrophysics (27) Jewish (27) Religious Freedom (27) Space (27) Priesthood (26) Eucharist (25) Morality (25) Donald Trump (24) Evangelization (24) Christ (22) Evil (22) First Amendment (21) Pro Abortion (19) Child Abuse (17) Divine Mercy (17) Marriage (17) Pedophilia (17) Pro Choice (17) Easter Sunday (16) Holy Trinity (16) Police (16) Autism (14) Gender Theory (14) Pentecostals (14) Angels (13) Poverty (13) Sacraments (13) Blog (12) Cognitive Psychology (12) Muslims (12) September 11 (12) CUNY (11) Hispanics (11) academia (11) Pope Paul VI (10) Evidence (9) Massimo Pigliucci (9) Personhood (9) Podcast (9) Barack Obama (8) Big Bang Theory (8) Evangelicals (8) Hell (8) Human Rights (8) Humanism (8) Condoms (7) David Viviano (7) Eastern Orthodox (7) Ellif_dwulfe (7) NY Yankees (7) Spiritual Life (7) Encyclical (6) Gender Dysphoria Disorder (6) Babies (5) Baby Jesus (5) Catholic Bloggers (5) Cyber Bullying (5) Donations (5) Pope Pius XII (5) The Walking Dead (5) Ephebophilia (4) Plenary Indulgence (4) Pluto (4) Pope John XXIII (4) Death penalty (3) Founding Fathers (3) Dan Arel (2) Freeatheism (2) Oxfam (2) Penn Jillette (2) Pew Research Center (2) Cursillo (1) Dan Savage (1) Divine Providence (1) Fear The Walking Dead (1) Pentecostales (1)