Whether human beings will ever travel in space very far beyond our little bitty solar system is a mystery, but let's say we find a way to cross the unimaginable distances, do you think the life we encounter, if we should meet any, also believes in a Bronze Age god of murdering, illiterate, genocidal desert nomads on tiny Earth? And if they do not, god forbit, what will we do, burn them at the sake like we did reluctant "Indians" in South America? Not wonderfully friendly, eh?
2007-06-13
06:39:46
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12 answers
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asked by
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Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
God gave mankind what it needed to survive on this planet and to prepair for what is to come after... I am certain he has provided what is needed for the other seeds he has planted around the universe
2007-06-13 06:44:09
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answer #1
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answered by idahomike2 6
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Life on other planets would have some sort of belief system if they evolved, it's logical
Any being who didn't know how or why they exist would at first start worshiping things they didn't understand, starting with the elements, like rain, wind, sun, etc. They they would give them names and personalities and with that expectations to appease them.
This kind of thing has happened all over the universe.
So while it may not be the same god, I believe they all worship gods at some point.
Hopefully they and us get past it at some point
2007-06-13 06:55:16
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I get what you're saying, absolutely, but I have to pitch in my 2 cents anyhow.
Have you seen the latest theories about how maybe there are other formulas for life besides the ones uses on earth? Maybe there are creatures that flourish in ammonia and nitrogen, for example. (We're seeing that other planets, even in our own solar system, have weather patterns that ours just *don't*, like ice volcanoes.) What I'm saying is, I would be very surprised if any of their Gods were like any of ours, and would think that any religion they had would be at least a bit different in ritual and liturgy from ours.
2007-06-13 06:48:52
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answer #3
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answered by GreenEyedLilo 7
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Yes, G-Gm, the universe in inhabited. And it was created by the same God that became the Second Adam and died to redeem this one planet in rebellion.
There is a Bible code that proves Jesus is the Messiah and His substitutional death for you, and the plan to rule this planet as the new Heaven.
You can crack the code at http://abiblecode.tripod.com
Blessings, Balaam
2007-06-13 06:46:55
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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They very well may believe in the Christian God. If God created life elsewhere in the Universe, why wouldn't he send a message and his son to save them?
2007-06-13 06:56:42
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answer #5
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answered by chavito 5
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No because the bible is made up by man. They would have come to their own conclusions based on what they saw and how they experienced life. The Jewish people wrote the majority of the bible to serves their purposes
2007-06-13 06:47:20
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answer #6
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answered by NIHIL VERUM NISI MORS 2
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I'm sure the Christians will find some way to manipulate the data after they've exterminated or enslaved them.
2007-06-13 06:44:23
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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They'll probably believe in God, but they will have different theories about him than Christians do.
2007-06-14 07:45:51
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answer #8
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answered by Kyle B 4
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I doubt it.
Have you EVER heard of a religion that DIDN'T say that THEIR people was the "chosen people" and that their religion was the "one TRUE religion"?
Or that their god didn't want all the same things their worshippers wanted?
Have you ever heard of a theist who didn't smugly and self-satisfiedly insist that they KNEW that they were "saved"?
2007-06-13 06:43:38
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Most likely this other life, if it is sentient, believes in God.
2007-06-13 06:45:46
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answer #10
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answered by nom de paix 4
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