As reported by David Sidman of
Israel 365 News,
December 24, 2021 (link in original):
In a rather bizarre move, NASA has recruited a British priest to prepare the religious for the discovery of alien life as space agencies claim to be getting closer to discovering evidence that life exists outside of planet earth reports The Times.
Reverend Dr. Andrew Davison, a priest and theology professor at the University of Cambridge, is among 24 theologians who participated in a program sponsored by NASA at the space agency’s Center for Theological Inquiry (CTI) at Princeton University. The theologians attempted to assess how major religions would react to news of alien life being found.
The appointment comes as NASA’s $10billion James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled to launch on Christmas day.
The vessel will implement cutting-edge technology to examine every phase of cosmic history inside the solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe.
The device, which features infrared capabilities, will study a wide array of scientific questions to help mankind better understand the “origins of the universe and humans’ place in it.”
A NASA expert said The Times: “We may not discover life for 100 years. Or we may discover it next week.”
Davidson seeks to answer theological questions such as whether or not God made life in other parts of the universe or if he sent a savior to die for the sins of aliens.
Another question the British priest seeks to tackle is if discovering extraterrestrial life demands religions to rewrite the entire story of creation in Genesis.
Davison applied for the role after debating these questions with his theology students.
Davison spent an academic year at Princeton University in 2016 in a $1,1 million program sponsored by Nasa, called: The Societal Implications of Astrobiology.
CTI head Will Storrar said that Nasa wanted to see “serious scholarship being published in books and journals” addressing the “profound wonder and mystery and implication of finding microbial life on another planet”.
According to Davison’s book, the world’s major religion would take the news of an alien discovery “in their stride.”
As reported by Kelly-Ann Mills of the London
Daily Mirror,
December 23, 2021:
...In Dr Davison's book Astrobiology and Christian Doctrine, he looks at the big questions:
Could God have created life elsewhere in the universe?
Could he have sent a saviour to die for the sins of an alien species?
Would the discovery of extraterrestrial life require religions to rewrite their creation stories? Or would it be accepted with ease by faiths?
If you believe that a God or gods created all creatures great and small, why not apply that across the universe?
The Bishop of Buckingham, the Right Rev Alan Wilson, Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain of Maidenhead Synagogue and Imam Qari Asim of the Makkah Mosque in Leeds told The Times that they agreed that Christian, Jewish and Islamic teaching would be untroubled by the discovery of alien life.
Carl Pilcher, head of Nasa’s Astrobiology Institute until 2016, said NASA wanted theologians to “consider the implications of applying the tools of late 20th [and early 21st]-century science to questions that had been considered in religious traditions for hundreds or thousands of years”.
He said it was “inconceivable” that Earth is the only place in the universe to harbour life.
“That’s just inconceivable when there are over 100 billion stars in this galaxy and over 100 billion galaxies in the universe.”
I wonder who the other religious "experts" were.
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