Wojcik - UFO Mythologies
Wojcik - UFO Mythologies
Wojcik - UFO Mythologies
DANIEL WOJCIK
The initial flying saucer mythology that arose in the 1950s Za mitologijo letečega krožnika, ki je nastala v 50. in 60.
and 1960s is characterized by explicitly religious and mystical letih prejšnjega stoletja, so značilne eksplicitne religiozne
narratives that describe contact with extraterrestrial savior in mistične pripovedi, ki opisujejo stik z nezemeljskimi
beings. These beliefs emerged in the Cold War era, in response rešitelji. Ta prepričanja so se pojavila v času hladne vojne
to widespread fears of nuclear apocalypse. This essay traces kot odgovor na razširjene strahove pred jedrsko apokalipso.
the origins and development of the early UFO mythos, and Esej sledi izvoru in razvoju zgodnjih mitov o NLP (neznanih
presents case studies of several well-known UFO religious letečih predmetih) in predstavlja študije primerov več znanih
groups, analyzing the mythic aspects of their belief systems with verskih skupin NLP, pri čemer analizira mitske vidike
particular focus on apocalyptic and millennialist scenarios. njihovih sistemov prepričanj s posebnim poudarkom na
Keywords: UFO religion, mythology, eschatology, apokaliptičnih in milenijskih scenarijih.
millennialism, nuclear apocalypse, ancient astronauts Keywords: religija NLP, mitologija, eshatologija,
milenarizem, jedrska apokalipsa, starodavni astronavti
Popular beliefs and narratives about encounters with extraterrestrials* have thrived in ver-
nacular culture for more than sixty years. The concept of the flying saucer has emerged as
one of the most evocative symbols in the world, a global icon imbued with mythological
and folkloric significance. A synthesis of science and religion, beliefs about Unidentified
Flying Objects (UFOs) and interplanetary beings are imbued with an aura of alterity and
numinous mystery, a manifestation of ultimate Otherness that offers alternative views of
the self, the cosmos, and reality. The mythologies associated with UFOs are protean and
shape-shifting, as are the aliens that have materialized in the extraterrestrial discourse
over the years—ranging from cosmically-evolved guardians and interstellar messengers
of salvation to agents of apocalypse, demonic reptilian invaders, and grey-skinned beings
abducting humans for multifarious purposes.
Appearing at the dawn of the atomic age, initial beliefs about flying saucers quickly
assumed religious meanings in response to the threat of nuclear annihilation and other
societal crises, offering the promise of otherworldly deliverance. As the UFO movement
* This essay is based on the paper, “Alien Encounters, Apocalyptic Anxiety, and Extraterrestrial
Alterity” presented at the conference Anthropology of Encounters: Frictions in the Past, Present and
Future, organized by the Hungarian Cultural Anthropological Association and the Department of
Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, University of Szeged, Hungary, November 4-5, 2016. I am
grateful to Michael Owen Jones and István Povedák for their comments and helpful suggestions for
this expanded version of that presentation.
broadened in the ensuing years, relatively obscure beliefs situating extraterrestrials (ETs)
within an historical context also increased in popularity, with aliens viewed as ancient
astronauts who seeded intelligent life on planet Earth, or who intervened throughout human
history as enlightened ones guiding the development of civilizations and human progress.
In contrast to these views, subsequent beliefs and narratives have cast aliens as amoral or
malevolent creatures, whether engaged in sinister conspiracies, conducting abductions and
performing invasive ET-human hybridization experiments, or enacting a doomsday plan
involving the destruction or enslavement of humanity.
Although many of those involved in the UFO community are interested primarily
in the scientific and empirical study of UFOs, much of the vast and divergent lore about
flying saucers and extraterrestrials nonetheless can be readily situated within the realms of
mythology and religion. As various researchers have observed, such beliefs resemble previous
religious traditions involving earthly origins and endings, otherworldly journeys, savior
beings from the skies, angels and demons, culture heroes, accounts of heavenly ascent,
and supernatural assault and kidnap narratives.1 In the words of religious studies scholar
Christopher Partridge, “the modern sacralization of the extraterrestrial has been a central
feature of UFO folklore from the outset” (Partridge, 2003b: 7). The ethnologist István
Povedák observes that the UFO phenomenon is a “natural (but supernatural), integral and
constantly enriched segment of contemporary folklore and religious culture, and its analysis
should be regarded as just as natural as the study of any other belief, faith or religion”
(Povedák, 2019: 364). As a vernacular religious phenomenon, the varied narratives and
ideas about UFOs and ETs have not been codified or promoted by mainstream religious
organizations; rather, they thrive as a non-institutionalized and fluid corpus of beliefs with
no formally systematized doctrines or sanctioned religious authorities to maintain or control
them. Such beliefs can be usefully understood within the framework of vernacular religion
proposed by folklorist Leonard Norman Primiano (1995) who emphasizes “lived religion”
and the dynamics of constructing belief systems, which are contextualized in terms of
continuities and innovations in human expressive behavior.2 Created at a grassroots level
apart from the channels of official religious authority, the flying saucer mythology was
initially formed and elaborated upon through contactee encounters, visions, hierophanous
1
Among the more significant and/or recent studies that focus on the religious, mythic, and folkloric
aspects of beliefs about UFOs and ETs are works by Bullard, 2010; Denzler, 2001; Flaherty, 1990;
Jung, 1978; Lewis, 1995, 2003; Partridge, 2003a; Peebles, 1994; Saler, Ziegler, and Moore, 1997;
Tumminia, 2007; and a special issue of the journal Nova Religio edited by Thomas, 2010. More recent
case studies about specific UFO religions include Tumminia, 2005 on the Unariuns, Palmer, 2004
on the Raëlians, and Zeller, 2014 on Heaven’s Gate. For a discussion of the lore of alien abduction
spiritualities and demonologies, see the edited anthologies above as well as Bullard, 1989; Flaherty,
2010; Pócs, 2012: 216-219, and Whitmore, 1995; for UFO and alien conspiracy theories, see Barkun,
2013 and Robertson, 2016.
2
Discussions of the concept of vernacular religion from the perspective of folklore studies can be found
in Primiano, 1995, Howard, 2011, and Bowman, Valk, 2012.
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DANIEL WOJCIK
events, and related narratives that were then interpreted and disseminated through informal
networks and developed into specific systems of belief. This nascent mythos of new gods
and superhuman technology was created from a bricolage of religious and secular ideas,
incorporating aspects of esoteric teachings, the Bible, Eastern religions, Theosophy, Guy
Ballard’s “I AM” Religious Activity, beliefs about Ascended Masters, the discourse of sci-
ence, advancements in space exploration, sci-fi pulp fiction, pseudoscience, and popular
imaginings of life on other planets.
Like earlier myths, UFO cosmologies are etiological knowledge systems that offer an
understanding of the world and explain the origin of human beings, the nature of good
and evil, the unfolding of human history, the meaning of human existence, the fate of
humanity, and the nature of the universe.3 To be clear, myth in this context is defined as a
profoundly significant or sacred narrative that embodies a societal worldview and expresses
the relationship of human beings to Earth and the universe. Mythologies address absolute
realities and issues of ultimate concern, providing a comprehensive view of the world and an
understanding of one’s relationship to it, as well as explanations of the role of otherworldly
beings in human life, the afterlife, and in the cosmos. Discussions of mythology often
emphasize origin myths set in a primordial time and focus on the creation of things and an
explanation of the world. But mythic narratives also describe endings, or eschatology—the
study of “the last things,” from the Greek eschatos, “last” or “furthest.” Eschatological myths
may address both individual endings and that of the cosmos, whether the judgment of the
dead, the destiny of the soul after death, the nature of afterlife, apocalypse and salvation,
and the ultimate fate of the world. UFO mythologies, developed in the midst of Cold War
apocalyptic fears, emerged as a modern manifestation of cosmic eschatology, with a focus
on the end of the world, the end of humanity, the fate of humanity after that ending, and
the creation of a perfect age. In cosmic eschatological frameworks, apocalyptic endings
are not necessarily considered to be negative events, as the end of the world is usually
regarded in terms of millennial salvation and deliverance. In the case of numerous flying
saucer myths, salvation may be offered through the promise of planetary evacuation prior
to worldly destruction, as well as the assurance of a coming golden age, whether on another
planet or on Earth after its catastrophic cleansing and renewal.
This essay initially explores the formation of the early flying saucer mythology that
arose in the 1950s and 1960s as expressed in the explicitly religious and mystical narrative
accounts that describe contact with extraterrestrial beings. Tracing the trajectory of the
flying saucer faith, I examine the features of such beliefs and chart the ways they were
simultaneously configured within existing esoteric traditions but also were innovative techno-
mythological expressions of long-standing beliefs about celestial savior beings interceding
during times of crisis. In the second portion of the essay I examine the relationship of these
3
For a sampling of approaches to the study of mythology, see Dundes 1984; Segal 1999; Doty 2000;
Ellwood 2008; Thompson, Schrempp, 2020.
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
For some flying saucer enthusiasts, UFOs and extraterrestrials have been visiting planet
Earth since the beginning of human history. Ufologists have interpreted hundreds of
instances of unusual aerial phenomena from antiquity to the early 1900s as possible UFO
sightings and these historical accounts of enigmatic objects in the sky and weird celestial
wonders have been incorporated into an explanatory paradigm of interplanetary visitations.5
However, the modern era of flying saucer belief began on June 24, 1947, the day private
pilot Kenneth Arnold (1918–1984) reported seeing nine shining objects flying in formation
in the sky near Mt. Rainer, Washington. When talking to a reporter about the erratic flight
of the objects (not their shape, which he described as resembling boomerangs or crescents),
Arnold said they moved like a saucer would if it was skipped across the water. His statement
was misinterpreted or creatively rephrased, and the term flying saucers was coined in media
4
For scholarly resources related to these topics, consult the sources listed in endnote number 1.
5
See Vallee, 1969; Vallee, Aubeck, 2010; Aubeck, Shough, 2015, for an overview of unexplained aerial
phenomena throughout human history.
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DANIEL WOJCIK
reports. News coverage of the story was extensive and captured the popular imagination.
The concept of a saucer-like disc flying through the sky soon became the dominant rep-
resentation of a UFO, the prototype that apparently spawned thousands of sightings of
saucer-shaped craft during the two week period after Arnold’s account was publicized.6
In addition to the plethora of saucer sightings, another event occurred shortly after
the Arnold account that needs mentioning: the report of the alleged crash of a flying disc
near Roswell, New Mexico on July 8, 1947, that was quickly re-identified by the U.S.
Air Force as a weather balloon. Although the Roswell incident has now become the most
famous event in UFO lore, generating an excess of conspiracy theories and a mythology
of its own, it was not until 1980 that a renewed interest in the Roswell crash occurred,
and it did not have much impact during the early years of UFO religiosity and mythology
(Partridge, 2003b: 5–6).7 While the Roswell incident may have been a blip on the radar of
saucer reportage at the time, the idea of flying saucers quickly permeated American culture
and consciousness, even if most people were not sure what they were or whether they had
extraterrestrial origins (Saler et al., 1997: 13). In a Gallup poll taken on August 19, 1947,
less than two months after the term flying saucers had been introduced, more than ninety
percent of Americans had heard about saucers. Such a level of awareness of a topic was
almost unprecedented in previous Gallup polls; notably, only a small percentage of the
population thought the objects were from outer space (Ziegler, 2003: 350–351).
During the next decade, mythologies and religious movements based on flying saucers
developed, as belief in the possible extraterrestrial origins of UFOs increased throughout
the 1950s. Although these emergent religious ideas about extraterrestrials were initiated
by the Arnold sighting, belief in communication with beings from outer space was not
entirely new. Among the most well-known were the encounters of the Swedish scientist and
Christian theologian Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772), who claimed to have journeyed
to other planets and witnessed advanced, utopian civilizations. In the 1890s, the French
Spiritualist Hélène Smith (1861–1932) provided accounts of her travels to Mars and depicted
what life was like there, transcribing the Martian language, illustrating Martian scenery,
and communicating Martian messages through automatic writing while in a mediumistic
trance.8 While other reports of interplanetary encounters and unusual aerial sightings
occurred over the years (the most famous being the airship wave of 1896–1897 and the “foo
fighters” of World War II), these earlier accounts did not become the basis for full-fledged
6
See Bloecher 1967: xiii, and Bullard 2010: 26–27. Prior to the Arnold sighting, saucer-shaped flying
machines occasionally had been depicted in science fiction magazines such as Science Wonder Stories,
Air Wonder Stories, and Amazing Stories, which also may have influenced the subsequent formation
of the flying saucer image so ubiquitous today.
7
For a thorough analysis of the rumors, legends, and mythology of the Roswell incident, see Saler et
al. 1997.
8
An extensive survey of contactee accounts from the 1750s to the 1980s is provided by Melton, 1995,
and Melton, Eberhart 1995.
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
religious belief systems like those inspired by the Arnold sighting and other UFO testimo-
nies in the decades that followed.
The religious meanings of flying saucers that arose in the 1950s were established by
the initial flying saucer prophets, such as George Adamski, Orfeo Angelucci, Daniel Fry,
Truman Bethurum, George Hunt Williamson, and George Van Tassel. These contactees
claimed to be in communication with the benevolent inhabitants of flying saucers and they
presented specific spiritual and mythic discourses that sacralized saucers and ETs. Their
emphasis on futuristic technology as vehicles of salvation was a contemporary development
in the history of religion that only could have occurred in the space age. Yet most of the
concepts that informed these early contactee cosmologies did not appear entirely out of
blue. As noted, the main influences on early UFO religions had their sources in occult and
esoteric traditions, particularly Theosophy and the “I AM” Religious Activity. An important
idea that materialized in varying guises in the formative UFO faiths involves the notion
of Ascended Masters (also referred to as Masters of the Ancient Wisdom), developed by
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891) who co-founded the Theosophical Society in 1875.
In Theosophical doctrines, the Ascended Masters are a hierarchy of enlightened beings who
were once human, and who through spiritual transformation have become immortal. It
is believed that these benevolent intermediary beings (including Jesus, Gautama Buddha,
the Virgin Mary, Confucius, and the Archangel Michael) now serve to guide the spiritual
evolution of humanity.
In Blavatsky’s writings, some of the Ascended Masters are actually said to be from
other planets; the most important of the celestial bodies is Venus where the Lords of the
Flame such as Sanat Kumara and the Lords of the Seven Rays reside (Melton, 1995: 6;
Flaherty, 2011: 591). The extraterrestrial abode of these and other Masters was not especially
emphasized by Blavatsky, but it was later elaborated upon by others in the Theosophical
tradition, particularly in the teachings of Guy Ballard (1878–1939) who formed the “I AM”
Religious Activity in the 1930s. While he was hiking on Mount Shasta (California) in 1930,
Ballard said he encountered the Ascended Master Saint Germain, who later introduced
him to twelve Venusians, the spiritually-advanced Lords of the Flame of the Theosophical
pantheon; subsequently, they shared scenes of their civilization on Venus and conveyed
ancient, universal wisdom in their effort to transform humanity (Melton, 1995: 6–7).
The Venusians described by Ballard appeared to him without use of a physical vehicle of
interplanetary transportation. The first alleged contact with an extraterrestrial visiting
Earth in a flying saucer is generally attributed to George Adamski (1891–1965), the most
famous of the early contactees and arguably the initial prophet of UFO religiosity. Adamski
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DANIEL WOJCIK
said his encounter occurred on November 20, 1952 in California’s Mohave Desert where
he met a beautiful humanoid from Venus named Orthon who was of medium height
with shoulder-length, sandy-colored hair. Through telepathy and hand gestures, Orthon
explained that he came in peace and to warn about the dangers of nuclear weapons which
were not only a threat to all life on earth but also would have harmful radioactive effects
on the universe and other planetary beings (Leslie, Adamski, 1953: 198–199). Depicted as
an angelic-like celestial being, Orthon’s message to earthlings was one of benevolent kind-
ness: “His expression was one of understanding, and great compassion; as one would have
toward a much loved child who had erred through ignorance and lack of understanding”
(ibid.: 198). In his account, Adamski revealed that Orthon and other Space Brothers (as
he referred to them) who were visiting Earth from various planets were highly sophisti-
cated beings, concerned with the future of humanity. Adamski emphasized that the Space
Brothers’ advanced saucer technologies were intertwined with their spiritual development
in a joining of science and religion that was necessary for interplanetary travel. In later
encounters Adamski said he had journeyed to numerous planets and met various “Masters,”
including a thousand-year-old philosopher of the planetary beings who imparted cosmic
wisdom. These spiritually and technologically evolved entities lived in harmony with the
universe in utopian societies and they offered guidance for the survival and enlightenment
of human beings in the midst of nuclear threat. Adamski learned that he was chosen by the
Masters to convey their messages to planet Earth and that Jesus also had been a previous
messenger sent by these higher beings to help earthlings.
At the time of his encounter, Adamski, who was born in Poland but lived most of his
life in the United States, staffed a small hamburger stand near the renowned Mt. Palomar
Observatory. He had been interested in outer space and science fiction since at least the
1940s. With the publication of his UFO encounters in the bestseller, Flying Saucers Have
Landed (Leslie, Adamski, 1953), Adamski became a celebrity. His messages from the space
people not only captivated a wide audience but established the template for subsequent
contactee accounts. The wisdom espoused by the Space Brothers may have seemed new or
futuristic in the flying saucer framework, but Adamski apparently had been teaching the
same basic concepts since the 1930s, devoid of references to saucers. In 1936, he founded
the Royal Order of Tibet in southern California, an occult lodge with Theosophical influ-
ences; his later flying-saucer infused “cosmic philosophy” was a reworking of these earlier
ideas, such as notions of spiritual evolution, reincarnation, and the ascension of the eternal
soul to higher realms (Leslie, Adamski, 1953: 201–204; Ellwood, 1995: 178; Partridge,
2003b: 14–17).
Even though many of Adamski’s claims have been easily refuted by skeptics and most
ufologists consider him a fraud and hindrance to the serious empirical study of UFOs,
whether hoaxer or not, he provided a religious context for the mythologizing of UFOs and
ETs. He gave a mythic meaning to the mystery of flying saucers and supplied a primary
narrative structure for the encounter experience by explaining that the saucers had come to
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
warn humanity of the dangers of atomic weapons and to save us from nuclear annihilation.
This narrative closely resembles the plot of the film The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951),
released one year before Adamski’s alleged encounter, in which a saucer lands near the White
House and the Christ-like alien Klaatu forewarns of the threat of atomic bombs. To what
extent that film and previous science fiction depictions of spacecraft visiting Earth influ-
enced parallel contactee accounts is speculative, but the concept of alien visitation clearly
existed in the popular imagination. Adamski and other early contactees embodied and
enacted this narrative of atomic threat, interplanetary intervention, and worldly salvation.
After Adamski, the UFO mythos and its emerging prophetic milieu was bolstered by
two celebrated contactees, Truman Bethurum (1898–1969) and Daniel Fry (1908–1992),
both of whom published books in 1954 that recounted their flying saucer experiences
and relayed the aliens’ concerns about nuclear testing and apocalyptic catastrophes while
offering a vision of the peaceful life on other planets. In Fry’s account, the extraterrestrial
visitors are descendents of the ancient civiliations of Altantis, Lemuria, and Mu, which were
destroyed in an escalating show of scientific power, resulting in a nuclear war (Fry, 1954:
63). The few space people who escaped the destruction now have returned to warn us of
the dangers of atomic weapons, in an ancient astronaut echo of Cold War apocalypticism.
George King (1919–1997), who founded the Aetherius Society (discussed in more
detail below), claimed contact with a cosmic master in 1954 named Aetherius, who also
communicated messages about coming atomic cataclysms while providing spiritual instruc-
tions for a return to cosmic principles to avert disasters. The book-length account by Orfeo
Angelucci (1912–1993) that was published in 1955 also included extensive spiritual themes,
prophetic overtones, and warnings about a coming “rain of fire” and the end of civilization
to be caused by human beings, with space beings returning to Earth to save humanity and
assist in its ongoing spiritual progress:9
Today the evolution of Earth both material and spiritual has reached its most
critical point. Thus chronologically speaking the hour has struck upon our planet
which has not only permitted, but demanded the influx of outer space entities
and their material manifestation in our sphere of consciousness. They have come
as harbingers of light to do everything possible to turn the tide of destruction
which threatens to engulf Earth and terminate in a new fall for man into greater
darkness and bondage in heavier chains of matter. (Angelucci, 1955: 165)
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DANIEL WOJCIK
center. It was, he writes, “the symbol of the hydrogen atom. I realized they had impressed
that mark upon my body to convince me beyond all doubt of the reality of my experiences
in the cold light of the coming days” (Angelucci, 1955: 36).
Prior to such revelatory accounts by contactees, flying saucer sightings were an enigma
that had no specific cultural meaning assigned to them. By explaining that the vehicles
came from outer space and were inhabited by benevolent beings interceding at a time of
crisis, contactees created a meaningful narrative, a techno-mythology that deified futur-
istic spacecraft, interplanetary communion, and otherworldly salvation. As these initial
contactee accounts shared similar elements, the general narrative framework that arose was
characterized by the following features: the space beings often make contact in an isolated
location with an ordinary person, a chosen one, who is drawn to the spot by an inexplicable
feeling or telepathic message. During this theophanic encounter, the beings may explain
their saucer technology, invite the contactee into the spaceship, and take the earthling on a
journey through space and to other planets. The alien visitors are not monstrous invaders
like the pre-World II space creatures often depicted in science fiction pulp magazines, but are
ineffably beautiful and human-like in appearance with superhuman abilities of cognition,
superior spiritual development, and the requisite technology which is highly advanced in
alignment with their spiritual attainment. Coming from utopian civilizations, these beings
bring messages of peace and brotherhood while warning of imminent disasters because of
the failures of human beings who are said to be less evolved spiritually. The space people are
intervening in human affairs because of an urgent concern with the condition of human-
ity and planet earth, especially the use of atomic bombs. The contactee is ultimately given
a crucial and prophetic mission: to warn others of impending catastrophe and spread the
ufonauts’ message of harmony and spiritual enlightenment in the hope of saving humanity.10
The prophetic role of the initial UFO contactees may be usefully contextualized in
terms of sociologist Max Weber’s typology of religious prophets—what he identified as
the “exemplary type” and the “emissary type.” According to Weber, the religious authority
of the exemplary type of prophet is based in the individual’s personal religious experience
which then serves as an example to devotees, such as Gautama the Buddha’s enlightenment
under the Bodhi tree becoming a model for the religious aspirations of others (Weber 1963:
46 ff.; Ellwood, Partin, 1988: 277–278). The emissary prophet is one who receives a divine
message and is obligated to communicate it to others, such as the prophets referred to in
biblical scriptures. UFO contactees are primarily prophets of the emissary type, as mediators
between humanity and superhuman beings, conveying important messages on behalf of
those beings. In addition to the prophetic aspects, contactee accounts also exhibit some of
the features of shamanic experiences, such as marvelous journeys to other worlds (whether
by soul travel or spaceship), communication with superior beings, initiatory experiences,
10
See Ellwood, Partin, 1988: 113, and Peebles, 1994: 105–107, for the formulaic aspects of the early
contactee mythology.
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
dissociative states, and mediumship. While contactees may not explicitly seem to be “soul
specialists,” psychopomps, or healers like traditional shamans (although a few allegedly
exhibited these abilities), there are shamanic similarities in that contactees claim to travel
between realms as intermediaries and they return from their journeys bringing otherworldly
wisdom and eschatological knowledge for the benefit of human beings. Like the shaman,
contactees have been “called” to convey such messages, though their function as healers
extends beyond a local community and usually is more broadly directed at saving humanity
from destruction and guiding the evolution of souls on Earth.
The foundational charisma of these initial contactees was situated primarily in the
recounting of memorates—personal experience narratives of first hand encounters of a super-
human kind, whether involving flying saucers, extraterrestrials, or interplanetary journeys.
While the early contactees had a subcultural following, most of these individuals did not
establish organized religious groups; they communicated their messages instead through
non-mainstream publications, public lectures, and conventions. The most significant early
venue that gathered together the major contactees (Adamski, Angelucci, Bethurum, Fry,
etc.) and those interested in flying saucers was the Giant Rock Interplanetary Spacecraft
Convention held annually from 1953 to 1977 in the Southern California desert approxi-
mately 50 miles north of Palm Springs. Organized by George Van Tassel (1910–1978), the
event regularly attracted an estimated 5,000–10,000 flying saucer enthusiasts at the height
of its popularity in the late 1950s and it established a meeting ground for the otherwise
scattered UFO subculture. At the conventions, contactees lectured and sold their publica-
tions, while those in attendance exchanged the latest UFO news and perused the related
metaphysical literature. Van Tassel, who lived in the dug-out chambers beneath Giant Rock
(a huge boulder in the desert seven stories in height), also claimed he communicated with
space beings by means of telepathically-channeled messages. In Van Tassel’s view, certain
people were especially attuned to receiving extraterrestrial information and he believed
specific techniques could be taught to allow such advanced forms of communication.
Regular channeling sessions and retreats were held at Giant Rock with the primary entity
who contacted Van Tassel identified as Ashtar, the Commander and Chief of the Ashtar
Galactic Command, a space fleet of thousands of saucers sent to assist and rescue human-
ity (Helland, 2003: 497–501).
Similar to the messages from other extraterrestrials delivered to the early contactees,
Ashtar’s missives to Van Tassel warned of the dangers of the nuclear weapons and an
imminent apocalyptic catastrophe that would “extinguish humanity and turn this planet
into a cinder.”11 Van Tassel’s channeled communications were soon embraced by others
who also claimed to transmit Ashtar’s teachings, resulting in schisms, competing chan-
nelers, and a network of believers connected to a diffuse Ashtar Command movement.
11
“First Message From Ashtar.” Galactic Federation of Light website (http://www.galacticfederation-
naplesfl.org/ ashtar-1952---first-message.html).
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DANIEL WOJCIK
The most influential in this circle include the channeler Tuella (Thelma B. Terrell) and
the messages circulated by Guardian Action International (renamed Guardian Activation
International) which have been promoted in recent years by Internet websites devoted to
Ashtar. Like other UFO faiths, the Ashtar Command is a syncretic religious phenomenon
that includes a diversity of deities from an assortment of religious traditions, resulting in a
complex mythology of cosmic beings and spiritual masters from diverse planets, including
Commander Ashtar, Jesus Christ (known as Sananda), Lady Master Athena, Koron and
Monka (both from Mars), Andromeda Rex, Hatonn, Soltec, and familiar Ascended Masters
from the Theosophical tradition (Beckley, 1992; Tuella, 1993). The communiqués from the
deities of the Ashtar Command exemplify the established saucerian paradigm, warning of
nuclear holocaust and other cataclysms, but offering salvation if humanity responds to their
intergalactic admonitions. Catastrophe is said to be imminent, but believers are reassured
that the Command, with its enormous fleet of starships, will descend from the skies and
rescue the chosen ones in an Endtime evacuation scenario referred to as the “Great Exodus
of Human Souls Off This Planet,” escorting the saved ones to a large mothership or to
specific planets in accordance with each person’s level of spiritual development (Beckley,
1980: 23–29; Tuella, 1993).
As is obvious by the themes expressed in the early contactee narratives, the sense of
catastrophe and apocalyptic foreboding that characterizes the initial flying saucer mythos
is directly related to the threat of the nuclear weapons, which is a persistent concern that
underlies the theology of numerous UFO religious groups that formed over time. As various
commentators have observed, the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
August, 1945, drastically altered contemporary culture and thought, fueling fears of global
annihilation. The Soviet Union’s first atomic bomb test in 1949 and the resulting prolifera-
tion of nuclear weapons further increased such fears and resulted in widespread feelings
of societal crisis and impending doom (Boyer 1985). It has been argued that the threat of
nuclear warfare formed the context of life during the Cold War period, with the image of
the Bomb casting an ominous shadow of death that intruded upon everyday culture and
individual consciousness (Thompson, 1981: 171; Linton, Falk, 1982: 3). These fears associ-
ated with nuclear war were characterized by a sense of helplessness and fatalism. Nuclear
catastrophe was often viewed as uncontrollable and inevitable, an ever present reality that
evoked images of imminent death and the demise of all humanity (Boyer, 1985: 278–281;
Lifton, 1987: 10–27; Wojcik, 1997: 133–147).
In the context of such apocalyptic anxieties, the narratives by contactees promising
extraterrestrial salvation provided an eschatological explanation with mythic resonance
that addressed Cold War apprehensions of nuclear annihilation. The benevolent aliens are
envisioned as intergalactic intercessors and savior beings who not only attempt to avert
nuclear war but who provide a vision of the idyllic life on other planets where advanced
humanoids live for thousands of years or are immortal, and where there is no warfare,
poverty, suffering, or unhappiness. As superior, celestial beings that descend from the
25
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
In concert with the angelic and eschatological themes that characterize the early flying
saucer mythologies, origin myths about UFOs also arose at the popular and vernacular
level, exemplified by beliefs about ancient astronauts and their role in human evolution.
These technologically-based creationist narratives, referred to collectively as the “ancient-
astronaut hypothesis,” are based on the assertion that extraterrestrials have visited the Earth
for millennia, profoundly influencing the development, culture, and technology of human
beings. In some scenarios the ancient astronauts have created the species of homo sapiens,
12
In the epilogue of his book, Jung actually discusses Orfeo Angelucci’s visionary saucer experiences
to support his theories.
26
DANIEL WOJCIK
whether scientifically or by mating with the Earth’s unevolved inhabitants. Within this
UFO cosmology, the references in earlier mythologies and religious traditions to deities
descending from the sky to the earthly realm are interpreted as evidence of extraterrestrial
visitations. From this perspective, creation mythologies cross-culturally originated in the
attempt by early humans to understand the advanced intelligence and apparently godlike
technology of alien astronaut encounters. Not only are the world’s religions explained in this
way, but also prehistoric archeological artifacts, from cave paintings, Egyptian hieroglyphs,
and ancient Mayan designs to Stonehenge and the statues on Easter Island.
The most influential exponent of the ancient astronaut hypothesis is Erich von Däniken
(1935–), who authored the best-selling book Chariots of the Gods? (1968) and numerous
sequels. Ancient astronaut ideas also have been promoted in more recent years by other pro-
ponents including Zecharia Sitchen, Robert Temple, David Hatcher Childress, and Giorgio
Tsoukalos, as well as by popular television programs such as the History Channel’s ongoing
series, “Ancient Aliens.” Although von Däniken’s books introduced ET astronaut beliefs to
millions of readers in the late 1960s and 1970s, such ideas had been percolating since the
early 1900s and had been expressed by various flying saucer contactees and authors in the
1950s and 1960s. The initial popularization of the ancient astronaut notion frequently is
attributed to Charles Fort (1874–1932), considered a proto-ufologist known for his books
on anomalous phenomena. In 1919, Fort not only presented examples of unexplained aerial
events in his Book of the Damned, but advanced the idea that the Earth may have been
colonized in the past and was somehow “the property” of extraterrestrial beings. In the
early 1920s he proposed that historical accounts of some supernatural occurrences were the
possible result of “beings and objects that visited this earth, not from a spiritual existence,
but from outer space” (Fort, 1967: 157–158; 1974: 419–420).
Less familiar writings on interplanetary visitors in the early 1900s include the works
of Theosophists who expanded upon Blavatsky’s ideas about the “Lords of the Flame”
(the Ascended Masters from Venus), said to have had visited Earth on occasion to assist in
the spiritual growth of human beings. For example, in the book The Lost Lemuria (1904),
Blavatsky’s student William Scott-Elliot describes evolved adepts and exalted beings from
Venus who visited Earth to impart their wisdom to the ancient Lemurians. The book Man:
Whence, How and Whither (1913), by Theosophists Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater,
also discusses the Venusian involvement in human history. These Theosophical works later
served as an inspiration for assorted fantasy and science fiction writers who further explored
the ancient alien concept, most notably H.P. Lovecraft (1890–1937) whose stories depict
the extraterrestrial “Great Old Ones” of the Cthulhu Mythos as the ancient colonizers and
rulers of Earth and creators of life on the planet. Lovecraft’s writings had a distinct influ-
ence on later ancient astronaut enthusiasts (Colavito, 2005: 20–26, 74–78).
As the belief in ascended space beings germinated within Theosophical circles and
ideas about ancient astronaut flourished in fantasy and science fiction genres throughout
the 1930s and 1940s, the publications by flying saucer contactees in the 1950s provided
27
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
further details about the role of aliens in the human project. For example, the books by
Adamski describe how the Space Brothers have lived on planet Earth at certain times
throughout human history, visiting Earth periodically to assist in human progress. In
Adamski’s co-authored book, Flying Saucers Have Landed (1953), the first section is
written by Irish-Anglo occultist Desmond Leslie (1921–2001) who provides an extensive
history of prehistoric saucer visitations, with chapters on the appearance of saucers in
ancient India, in Celtic prehistory, and “before the Flood,” as well as the relation of alien
contact to the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, the lost continents of Atlantis and Mu,
and further alien astronaut evidence in Aztec, Incan, and other ancient cultures. In a
reading offered repeatedly by ancient astronaut advocates, flying saucers are identified as
the vimanas referred to in Hindu texts and Sanskrit epics—flying vehicles and airborne
palaces used by Hindu deities as a means of travel. In Leslie’s account, the first landing
of a vimana is said to have occurred eighteen million years ago, piloted by the Lords of
the Flame from Venus who came to teach and spiritually guide primitive human beings.
Accordingly, the arrival of these enlightened beings from another planet in spectacular
airships was a momentous event that Leslie says is recorded in mythologies worldwide:
“these shining beings […] were the original Immortal Gods on which later pantheons
are based. Every legend, Greek, Roman, Egyptian, South American, Indian or Persian,
of the gods coming to Earth can be traced back as a race memory of this one tremendous
event” (Leslie, Adamski, 1953: 167).
A comparable ancient astronaut paradigm that offered a revisionist version of world
mythology was proposed by UFO contactee George Hunt Williamson (1926–1986), who
detailed the involvement of space beings in major historical events and the development
of civilization. Williamson obtained much of this information about the alien influences
in human history from cosmic beings he contacted through a home-made Ouija board.
These telepathic communications revealed the extraterrestrials’ role in the establishment of
major world religions; the ancient aliens’ visitations also were reflected in Native American
legends and archeological findings, such as the lines and figuration in the Nazca Desert
in Peru being prehistoric directional markers for spacecraft (e.g., Williamson, 1959). In
searching for mysterious phenomena and the key narratives of religions cross-culturally
for references to sky gods, fiery chariots, celestial disks, and other flying objects and then
refiguring these into an alien astronaut framework, Williamson, Leslie, and others trans-
formed these older world mythologies into an all-encompassing modern myth of human
origin and development.
This emergent space age mythology coalesced in von Däniken’s best-seller, Chariots of
the Gods? Published in 1968, the book drew upon previous writings about alien astronauts
and presented these ideas in an appealing and seemingly secularist, scientific style. Although
heavily criticized and debunked by scholarly experts who accused him of using pseudoscien-
tific evidence to support his theories (and for his apparent plagiarism of previous writings),
von Däniken’s books fueled a fascination with the topic and have sold an estimated 70
28
DANIEL WOJCIK
million copies, making him one of the best-selling authors of all time.13 Even though such
ideas may not be accepted by the scientific establishment, the enormous interest in ancient
astronaut speculation reveals the neo-mythic and religio-scientific appeal of such beliefs.
Like those before him, von Däniken finds evidence of space beings in the mythologies,
legends, and archeological artifacts of cultures throughout the world, with particular focus
on objects, accounts, and structures that seem anachronistic and somehow illustrative of
complex ET technologies deemed too sophisticated for prehistoric peoples. For example,
ancient astronauts are credited for the impressive architectural accomplishments of antiquity,
such as the construction of the pyramids, the Moai of Easter Island, Stonehenge, and the
Nazca lines, while ancient imagery worldwide is decoded as depictions of flying saucers,
astronauts and space suits, and advanced technology—such as the renowned stone carving
on a sarcophagus of a Maya ruler of Palenque and the ancient Japanese Dogū figurines,
said to look like astronauts. Von Däniken sums up his ancient astronaut theory in one of
his sequel publications as follows: “That in prehistoric and early historic times the Earth
was visited by unknown beings from the Cosmos; that these unknown beings created
human intelligence by a deliberate genetic mutation; that the extra-terrestrials ennobled
hominids ‘in their own image’; that these visits to Earth by alien beings from the Cosmos
were recorded and handed down in religions, mythologies and popular legends, and that in
some places the extra-terrestrials also deposited physical signs of their presence on Earth”
(von Däniken, 1977: back cover).
Unlike many of the initial flying saucer contactees who viewed the visitors from outer
space as ascended masters guiding humanity’s spiritual progression, von Däniken does
not necessarily consider these alien astronauts to be elevated religious beings. Instead, the
alleged evidence for his theories is presented as scientific, rationalist, and based on his-
torical evidence. For von Däniken, the gods of antiquity and earthly religions in general
originated in the attempt by early human beings to understand the seemingly supernatural
abilities of these ancient astronauts, and he draws a parallel with the phenomenon of the
“cargo cults” that arose among some indigenous peoples in Oceania after initial contact
with Westerners. Similar to the ways in which native Melanesian peoples created religious
rituals and beliefs in response to the advanced technologies and abundance of remarkable
material goods (the “cargo”) of the first Europeans they encountered, von Däniken argues
that early humans developed similar myths and rituals to explain their encounters with
13
“‘Aliens Will Return to Earth Within 20 Years,’” Chariots of the Gods Author Predicts. Yahoo UK website
(https://uk.news.yahoo.com/ aliens-will-return-to-earth-within-20-years-chariots-of-the-gods-author-pre-
dicts-141829853.html). Von Däniken’s ideas even infiltrated communist bloc countries, where UFO narra-
tives and discourses previously had been largely suppressed; see Povedák (2019) for an insightful discussion
of UFO culture and paleoastronaut theories that existed behind the Iron Curtain during the socialist era.
Von Däniken’s critics assert that he borrowed ideas directly from the writings of Desmond Leslie
(Leslie, Adamski, 1953), Louis Pauwels and Jacques Bergier’s The Morning of the Magicians (1960),
and the works of Robert Charroux, such as One Hundred Thousand Years of Man’s Unknown History
(1963). See Story, 1976, for a criticism of von Däniken’s initial writings.
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
30
DANIEL WOJCIK
references to modern and futuristic technologies (i.e., the genetic engineering of the human
race by extraterrestrials; Elijah’s ascent into heaven in a spaceship; the Hindu vimanas as
flying saucers). From this perspective, it is only because of recent advancements in human
technology, particularly space technology and travel, that humanity is finally capable of
comprehending the historical traces of the ancient astronaut influences that are embedded
in world mythology, religion, and archeological artifacts.
Despite the fact that alien astronaut theories are presented as scientific and secularized
interpretations of human history, they deny conventional scientific explanations of the history
of the world and propose instead an alternative scientized creation myth. Dismissed by the
established scientific community, ancient astronaut beliefs nevertheless appear to be more
credible or more appealing for many individuals than older religious explanations of human
origins. Such beliefs offer a view of human history imbued with a sense of the mysterious
and purposeful presence of extraterrestrial intervention—we are not alone in the universe
and our cosmic creators may return again someday, possibly to further guide us toward a
techno-utopian golden age. The attraction of such ideas is related to the ways that ancient
astronaut hypotheses reconcile religious and scientific explanations of human origins and
history by providing a mythic narrative that appears as an outwardly secularized counterpart
to creationism.14 As traditional myths are reconfigured into this technological paradigm of
the modern era, alien astronaut narratives fulfill the functions of myth by presenting an
overarching explanatory framework for understanding the world and the nature of reality.
The prehistoric astronauts are analogous to the gods and culture heroes of old, who created
human beings for a reason; they are the source of world religions and mythology, bringers
of culture and progressive technology, and interstellar benefactors intimately involved in
the unfolding of human history. Just as the early UFO contactee narratives are a synthesis
religious beliefs about heavenly savior beings with space age technology, ancient astronaut
theories are a fusion of traditional religious narratives and technological reinterpretation,
with UFOs as a seemingly scientific explanation for human development and history.
14
Andreas Grünschloß refers to ancient astronaut hypotheses as a “neo-mythic activity” that reflects
the modern worldview in which “technological explanations, projected back into the past, serve as
a disenchantment of old mythic accounts … [but] the myths are themselves retained as basically
‘true’—however only in the modern ‘Astronauts’ sense” (Grünschloß, 2004: 432). In this regard,
paleoastronaut mythologies are characterized by what István Povedák calls a “mythic openness,”
which does not reject previous mythologies, but explains and remythologizes them by incorporating
the older myths into its own UFO and ET interpretative framework (Povedák, 2019: 375).
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
Although ancient astronaut theories usually are presented as historically grounded and scien-
tific (regardless of the underlying mythic creationist features), the ancient alien discourse has
been spiritualized and integrated into the origin mythologies of numerous organized UFO
religious movements, as might be expected. Much like the earlier Theosophically-suffused
contactee accounts (and often influenced by them), the central tenet of many UFO religions
asserts that extraterrestrials, as spiritually superior beings, have been invested in the human
narrative from its beginning, visiting Earth throughout its history to offer evolutionary
spiritual guidance. A number of these UFO cosmologies assert that the creation of human
beings and the spiritual progression of humankind are part of a cosmic plan, with the Earth
considered a planetary classroom for universal teachings and the development of the soul.
In this familiar schema, our guardians from outer space are currently intervening at a time
of earthly emergency and they will continue to do so until the world is transformed and
spiritual enlightenment is attained or the until Earth is ultimately destroyed.
In this confluence of beliefs about origins and endings, UFO creation myths are
necessarily intertwined with UFO millennialist mythologies that explain the salvific role
of extraterrestrials in the last days: space beings have been here from the start and are
now appearing again for a specific reason at the end of time. The eschatological scenarios
involving extraterrestrial intervention are wide-ranging, whether involving the rescue of
human beings from apocalyptic catastrophes, the cataclysmic purification of the Earth and
its transformation into a golden age of peace and harmony, or the spiritual perfection of
human beings and the planet with alien guidance. These beliefs about the transformative
promise of extraterrestrial encounters exemplify the concept of millennialism (also referred
to as millenarianism), which is defined here as the expectation of imminent worldly trans-
formation and collective salvation, to be brought about by divine or superhuman agencies,
or by human beings working in accordance with a divine or superhuman plan.16 The UFO
eschatologies that emerged since the 1950s during a time of nuclear fear provide particular
insights into the formation of millennialist belief systems in their melding of science and
religion, while also illustrating three primary categories of Endtime thought: 1) catastrophic
millennialism; 2) progressive millennialism; and 3) avertive apocalypticism.17 In the pages that
15
Although the term “UFO religion” is generally used to characterize religious movements that are based
on some form of extraterrestrial contact, not all such movements involve direct contact with a UFO
but may be inspired by channeled communications, telepathic messages, etc. A more accurate term
for such movements might be “extraterrestrial contact religion”; the alternative term “ETI religion”
(extraterrestrial-inspired religion) has been proposed by Thomas (2011: 6) as a more inclusive label.
16
This definition is based on Catherine Wessinger’s (2011b: 4–5) characterization of millennialism,
which expands upon the earlier definitions offered by Cohn (1970: 15) and Talmon (1968: 349).
17
See Wessinger’s (2011a) edited volume on millennialism for a thorough discussion and application of
these categories.
32
DANIEL WOJCIK
follow, these differing forms of apocalyptic and millennialist mythmaking will be examined
as they are exemplified by the eschatological visions of several of the best-known UFO
religious movements—Heaven’s Gate, the Aetherius Society, the International Raëlian
Movement, and the Unarius Academy of Science.
UFO eschatologies, like other apocalyptic and millennialist mythologies, often appeal
to a sense of loss and crisis, inspiring a yearning for a future perfect world that is free from
suffering, evil, and injustice. In this way they resemble those creation myths that offer a
vision of a previous period of perfection that once existed in a primordial time. In millen-
nialist mythologies, the future golden age usually is envisioned as an entirely new world,
although often it is the symbolic equivalent of a paradise lost that is projected into the
future and occurring at the end of time. By comparison, in extraterrestrial eschatologies the
millennial new epoch occasionally evokes a return to a paradise on Earth “before the fall of
humankind,” an earlier era that is sometimes compared to the lost civilizations of Atlantis,
Lemuria, and other imagined earthly utopias said to have been destroyed by human igno-
rance, violence, or atomic weapons. More frequently, the paradigm of millennial perfection
involves a vision of spiritual and technological utopia as it exists on other, idyllic planets,
which will be implemented on Earth in the future or attained in another celestial sphere.
In the initial flying saucer contactee accounts the alien savior beings usually are depicted
as intervening in human history in order to avert nuclear catastrophe and other disasters.
However, in some scenarios the destruction of the world is believed to be inevitable, with
the chosen elect to be evacuated in spaceships before the apocalypse. UFO religions that
center around a theology of impending apocalypse and planetary escape illustrate the specific
pattern of belief recognized as catastrophic millennialism (also referred to as premillennial-
ism), which is characterized by the expectation that there will be a cataclysmic transition
to the millennial realm. Historically and cross-culturally, catastrophic millennialism has
been the most frequent form of millennial belief, expressing a pessimistic view of human-
ity that regards the world as fatally flawed and unredeemable by human effort. Earthly
or societal destruction is seen as imminent and inevitable, with the collective salvation of
the righteous occurring through the intervention of otherworldly beings.18 With regard
to UFO religions, in some scenarios the Earth will be destroyed and transformed into a
terrestrial paradise, which then will be repopulated with the chosen ones who were lifted
off the planet prior to apocalypse. In other cases, the millennial kingdom will be attained
on another planet or cosmic realm, as the Earth spins out of control.
One of the first UFO religions that overtly expressed catastrophic millennial beliefs
involved a small group of devotees led by Chicago housewife Dorothy Martin in the 1950s,
which became the subject of the well-known socio-psychological case study When Prophecy
18
Of the numerous religious movements that have embraced catastrophic millennialist beliefs, a few of
the best known are the Millerites, Peoples Temple, the Branch Davidians, Aum Shinrikyô, Melanesian
“cargo cults,” and various evangelical Christian denominations, particularly those influenced by pre-
millennial dispensationalism.
33
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
Fails. Martin conveyed channeled messages from the Space Brother Sananda (Jesus) and
other Guardians from the planet Clarion, who warned of a massive apocalyptic flood that
would destroy the world on December 21, 1954, and who promised to rescue believers and
transport them to another planet prior to the apocalyptic cleansing of the Earth (Festinger,
Riecken, Schachter, 1956).19
Relatively few subsequent UFO groups have specified exact doomsday dates, but
similar prophecies of imminent catastrophe, a mass landing of saucers, and the planetary
evacuation of believers have been a component in the development of various UFO religions,
such as the online Ground Crew (Planetary Evacuation Organization) movement, the
United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors, Fiat Lux, and Chen Tao (God’s Salvation Church/
God Saves the Earth Flying Saucer Association). As noted, the missives associated with the
Ashtar Command have consistently predicted approaching global destruction, with the
Command and its fleet of spaceships waiting in the wings to physically remove the chosen
ones from the planet before the devastation begins.
Similar to other catastrophic millenarian scenarios, the apocalypse anticipated within
these UFO religions often is conceptualized as a purification of the world, to be followed
by an earthly paradise of peace, fulfillment, and harmony. Such Endtime evacuation plans
resemble Christian Rapture beliefs about planetary escape prior to a period of worldly
tribulation, although with differing criteria regarding those who will be saved. In some
scenarios the selected ones will be members of a specific UFO group, or “star children”
and “cosmic blends”: people whose ancestors mated with ancient aliens eons ago. In other
eschatologies, the planetary evacuees will consist of those who are spiritually advanced or
individuals with special abilities that will be useful in the millennial future.
Among those UFO religions that have embraced a catastrophic millennialist worldview,
the Heaven’s Gate group has received the most attention, after thirty-nine of its members
poisoned themselves in March, 1997, in the belief that doing so would transport them to
a spacecraft that was traveling past the Earth. Their ritual suicide in a rented mansion in
the gated community of Rancho Santa Fe, California, was a media event. The group was
portrayed as a UFO “computer cult” of brainwashed devotees and sci-fi techno-millenarians
many of whom were fans of Star Trek and the X-Files. Although dismissed in the media as
mindless members of a “doomsday cult,” many of those involved were well-educated and
middle-aged professional people, and as researchers have observed, the movement reflected
aspects of broader American culture and religion, such as dissatisfaction with mainstream
religion, spiritual searching, evangelical notions of sin and pervasive evil in the world,
belief in conspiracies, and assault by demonic forces, among other things (Zeller, 2014).
19
In response to the failed prophecy, Keech explained that because of the group’s “spreading light”
through their religious faith, the catastrophe had been prevented; in the aftermath, the most devoted
members were said to have had a renewal of faith and worked zealously to further disseminate the
messages from the space beings, which was famously interpreted as exemplifying the cognitive dis-
sonance theory proposed by those researching the group (Festinger, Riecken, Schachter, 1956).
34
DANIEL WOJCIK
Marshall Herff Applewhite and Bonnie Lu Nettles started Heaven’s Gate in the 1970s;
they alternatively called themselves “Bo and Peep,” “Do and Ti,” and “the Two” (in reference to
the Two Witnesses in the Book of Revelation). The cosmology of Heaven’s Gate consisted of a
blend of ideas from the discourse of science and specific religious traditions, including American
Protestantism, New Age mysticism, and Theosophy, although the movement declared itself
to be scientific in orientation. The Two initially called the movement the Human Individual
Metamorphosis. One of its primary teachings was that by overcoming human attachments
and living an ascetic lifestyle a person may achieve an elevated evolutionary level “beyond
human” and transform the body into a genderless, extraterrestrial form and ultimately be
transported by a UFO to a higher realm to escape from a corrupt world (Wessinger, 2000:
233–234). Another central belief was related to the ancient astronaut hypothesis, for the crea-
tion mythology of the group maintained that extraterrestrials dwelling in the Kingdom of
Heaven had planted human beings on Earth millions of years ago as a gardening experiment
to grow souls (Balch, Taylor, 2003). On rare occasions representatives from this Kingdom
visit the planet in flying saucers to gather or “harvest” the few exceptional souls that are
spiritually evolved; and selected individuals have been “tagged” to receive “soul deposits” in
preparation for their transformation to a higher evolutionary level. Applewhite considered
himself an extraterrestrial messenger from this higher evolutionary level who was incarnated
into a human body (like Jesus who was an alien savior being as well), and whose mission was
to collect the chosen ones and facilitate their graduation from the human realm by teaching
them to overcome negative human instincts and attachments, ranging from sexual desires
and materialistic tendencies to ties with family and friends (Zeller, 2014: 97–99, 147–155).
In the late 1970s, the nomadic group largely disappeared from public view, as its mem-
bers embraced an ethos of austerity, social isolation, and spiritual perfection. Awareness
of Heaven’s Gate resurfaced in May, 1993, after it placed an advertisement in USA Today
which said this was the movement’s “final offer” to recruit the chosen ones before the end
of the world. The message declared that societal institutions and mainstream religions
were corrupted by adversarial Luciferian space aliens and that life on Earth was a failed
project soon to be destroyed and “spaded under” because of humanity’s inability to evolve
spiritually. Another attempt to recruit additional members through the Internet was unsuc-
cessful as well, and interpreted by the group that its efforts were now futile and that it was
time to leave an evil planet populated by people incapable of transcendence. This sense of
hopelessness for humanity was conveyed by one group member: “The human world is a
hideous hell due to all of the poor choices humans have made since the beginning of this
civilization. If this is all there is with nothing to look forward to beyond this, then why
choose to extend your time in this hell? […] there is no place for us here. It is time for us to
go home—to God’s Kingdom, to the Next Level. There is no place for us to go but up.”20
20
“Earth Exit Statement” by Glnody; Heavensgate.com website (http://www.heavensgate.com/misc/
exitgln.htm).
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UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
The passing of the Comet Hale-Bopp in late March, 1997, was viewed as a final
prophetic sign that believers had been waiting for, offering the opportunity for planetary
escape. Followers believed that the comet was being trailed by a spacecraft that would
transport them to the “Evolutionary Kingdom Level Above Human.” Collective suicide was
embraced as a means of evacuating a doomed world, a way to shed one’s physical body and
ascend spiritually onto this Next Level spacecraft and the Kingdom of Heaven. Heaven’s
Gate was not a typical UFO religious movement, yet its underlying Endtime mythos was
not entirely unique, for it expressed the main features of the catastrophic millennialist belief
system: a rigidly dualistic worldview, the belief that the world is irredeemably evil, that
earthly catastrophe is inevitable, and that salvation of the chosen ones and the transition
to a millennial kingdom will be facilitated by the intercession of superhuman beings.21
While some UFO religious groups have embraced the catastrophic millennialist
mythology of inevitable apocalypse and planetary escape, a more common eschatological
view holds that extraterrestrial beings will help humanity avert disaster and transform the
planet, healing societal crises, and ushering in a new age of peace and enlightenment. The
belief that apocalypse may be prevented through spiritual actions illustrates the concept
of avertive apocalypticism, a widespread yet infrequently studied pattern of millennial
thought. Avertive apocalyptic beliefs assert that the end of the world is imminent, but not
inevitable, and that worldly cataclysm may be avoided or forestalled if people respond to
prophetic warnings and engage in spiritual and apotropaic practices. In some instances,
these practices are believed not only to avert catastrophe, but are seen as redemptive actions
that will result in collective salvation and the creation of a millennial age (Wojcik, 2011).
Avertive apocalyptic ideas characterized the early contactee movement, with the Space
Brothers intervening in the attempt to prevent nuclear war. Among existing UFO religions,
this avertive mythology is exemplified by the beliefs of the Aetherius Society. Headquartered
in Hollywood, California, the Aetherius Society is one of the longest-lived organized UFO
groups, founded by George King in the mid-1950s. Originally from England, King was a
devoted practitioner of yoga who claimed to have achieved an enlightened state of Samadhi,
and who said that he was contacted telepathically in 1954 by the Cosmic Master Aetherius
from Venus who instructed him to be the voice of the “Interplanetary Parliament” and
the primary channel for extraterrestrial communications transmitted by various Cosmic
Intelligences. The messages from these Interplanetary Intelligences (also later referred to as
the “Gods from Space”) warned of the imminent destruction of the world, which could be
avoided if the menace of atomic weapons was eliminated and humanity could recognize its
destructive tendencies and recover the religious wisdom of the past (King, 1961, 1996). The
21
Wessinger identifies Heaven’s Gate as a “fragile millennial group” with features similar to other mil-
lennial groups with a dualistic worldview and authoritarian leadership, such as the Branch Davidians,
Peoples Temple, and Aum Shinrikyô. These groups engaged in violence in an effort to preserve the
religious ideals and ultimate concerns of the group, which were endangered by both internal stresses
and external opposition from the broader society (Wessinger, 2000: 264–270).
36
DANIEL WOJCIK
Earth was at a critical juncture, but salvation and worldly redemption was possible through
prayer, spiritual practices, and the guidance of Cosmic Masters and Adepts, including
Aetherius, Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, Count Saint-Germain, Mars Sector 6, Jupiter 92, and
numerous other extraterrestrial beings and technologies, including Satellite No. 3, a space-
craft said to orbit the Earth and transmit spiritual healing energies to help avert disasters.
The elaborate belief system associated with the Aetherius Society that has developed over
the years is based in a range of world religions and particularly the Theosophical tradition.
It includes notions of karmic evolution, spiritual progression, and guidance by enlightened
beings.22 A stated core value of the Society is selfless service to others by working “in direct
co-operation with the Gods from space to help bring about peace, healing and upliftment
on Earth,” with the space gods said to have visited the Earth throughout human history,
as ascended beings in the tradition of ancient astronaut beliefs. According to the group’s
website, “Many of the world’s great spiritual teachers are in fact Cosmic Masters who have
come to Earth from other planets. Examples include the Master Jesus, Sri Krishna, the
Lord Buddha, Lao Zi, Confucius and Sri Patanjali. These spiritually advanced individuals
have given of their otherworldly wisdom in different ways, at different times, in different
places to help us to progress in our evolutionary journey back to the Divine Source from
which we came.”23 In cooperation with these and other extraterrestrials, the Aetherians are
committed to saving the planet from annihilation and healing the “soul” of the world by
engaging in Cosmic Missions that require the performance of rituals and the use of specially
designed extraterrestrial technology. For example, Operation Prayer Power involves mem-
bers performing specific mudras and directing their prayers and mantras into a “Spiritual
Energy Battery,” an apparatus that stores concentrated spiritual power, which can then
be discharged, in collaboration with the Masters, as a form of amplified psychic healing
energy that is directed to specific locations in order to relieve human suffering and divert
planetary catastrophes.24 The Society asserts that its practices have prevented earthquakes
and various natural disasters, as well as terrorist attacks, deadly viruses, the outbreak of
war, and other calamities. The Aetherians have periodically engaged in specific avertive
and earth-healing missions in cooperation with the Masters, such as Operation Sunbeam,
performed to restore spiritual energy and karmic balance to Mother Earth, considered to
be a sentient goddess who is in a state of ecological crisis because of the exploitative actions
of humans (King, 1996: 124–126, 128).
The millennial views and avertive apocalyptic practices of the Aetherius Society also
are interconnected with the group’s mythological narrative of the past, in which human
22
See Wallis 1974; Ellwood, Partin, 1995: 126–133; Rothstein, 2003; Saliba, 2003; Smith, 2003, for
more extensive discussions of the Aetherius Society.
23
“Why the Aetherius Society?” Aetherius Society website (https://www.aetherius.org/why-the-
aetherius-society); and “Cosmic Avatars,” Aetherius Society website (https://www.aetherius.org/
the-extraterrestrial-message/cosmic-avatars).
24
“What Do We Do?” Aetherius Society website (https://www.aetherius.org/what-do-we-do).
37
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
failings, the misuse of technology, and nuclear war have resulted in the decimation of pre-
vious civilizations. The Aetherians’ cosmology traces the origins of human beings back to
the extinct planet Maldek that once existed between Jupiter and Mars (its remnants now
an asteroid belt), which was destroyed by the decline of its civilization into selfishness and
the “lust for greater power,” and the resulting explosion of a hydrogen bomb (King, 2001:
13–14). As part of karmic law, the souls of those killed on Maldek were reincarnated on
Earth, where they were to develop spiritually and technologically with the help of the planet’s
original inhabitants, an advanced race called Adamic Man. In this creation mythology, the
transplanted new earthlings progressed and eventually established the advanced civilization
of Lemuria, but it also was destroyed by humanity’s warlike behavior, atomic weapons,
and an eschatological battle between the benevolent Cosmic Masters and evil space beings.
This scenario was repeated again a thousand years later in the case of ancient Atlantis
which also was annihilated by a nuclear war, with some of its inhabitants rescued by flying
saucers (King, 2001: 15–19). According to the messages channeled by King, humanity is
once again on the verge of cataclysmic destruction, in a historical moment of decision that
will either result in another atomic war or the creation of a New Order of planetary peace,
prosperity, and enlightenment (ibid.: 17–19). The millennialist views of the Aetherians are
thus rooted in a previous mythology of humanity’s progression and destruction, a narrative
of the past that provides a mythic template for understanding contemporary crises while
reflecting the Cold War fears of nuclear annihilation that existed during the early years
of the movement.25
The cosmology of the Aetherius Society also reflects the dualistic view of the world
that characterizes most millennialist belief systems, with assorted accounts of the enduring
cosmic battle between the Forces of Light (in the form of the extraterrestrial Masters and
Adepts) and the powers of evil. These opposing evil forces that comprise the demonology
in the Aetherian mythos not only have been responsible for the destruction of previous
civilizations, but continue to attack the Earth in modern manifestations of earlier mytho-
logical demons, appearing in the science fiction-like forms of a malevolent alien android
(identified as Satan), an evil planetoid (a meteorite possessed by a sinister intelligence),
and an ant-like alien race, all of which have attempted to conquer Earth.26 The Aetherius
Society asserts that because of its avertive practices, the efforts of its leader George King,
and the intercession of the Interplanetary Masters, these evil assaults have been thwarted.
Again, the Aetherians emphasize that their rituals continue to be crucial in the fight against
such threats and in achieving the goal of saving every soul on the planet and creating a
millennial New Age. In this regard, the beliefs of the Aetherians also exhibit the features
25
See Rothstein, 2003, for a discussion of the relationship between the Aetherius Society’s account of
the past and its millenarian view of the present and the future.
26
For a description of the evil aliens and accounts of their defeat, see King, 1961: 42–67; Saliba, 2003:
132–134, and “A Victory for the Forces of Light,” American Headquarters of The Aetherius Society
Blog Site (https://aetheriusla.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/a-victory-for-the-forces-of-light).
38
DANIEL WOJCIK
27
Progressive millennialist views have been promoted in various contexts, exemplified by the nineteenth
century Christian postmillennialists who preached the Social Gospel and emphasized social reform
and the gradual transformation of the world into a millennial kingdom. Movements with progressive
millennialist views that interface with UFO religions include Theosophy and various groups associ-
ated with New Age beliefs.
28
Raël Press website (https://www.raelpress.org/news.php?item.399). See Palmer, 2004, for an in-depth
analysis of the first three decades of the Raëlian movement.
39
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
The movement was founded in 1973 by Raël (born Claude Vorilhon, 1946–) after his
encounter with a four-foot tall space being with greenish skin named Yahweh. The diminu-
tive humanoid gave Vorilhon a new name, Raël, and in this and subsequent encounters Raël
was told that he was chosen as the prophet to explain the alien origins of life on earth and
to inform humanity that it has entered into the “Age of Apocalypse” since the bombing of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. As with other avertive apocalyptic beliefs, the future of
humanity was said to be at a crossroads, with the extraterrestrials telling Raël that human
beings must decide whether to forbid the use of nuclear weapons and endeavor to make the
transition to a new planetary consciousness or destroy the world in a nuclear war: “Humanity
is now arriving at a turning point in its history, and its future depends only on itself. If you
can control your aggressiveness towards each other and your environment, then you will
reach a golden age of interplanetary civilization, in which universal happiness and fulfill-
ment will be realized. If, on the other hand, your civilization gives way to violence, then it
will destroy itself” (Raël, 2005: 150). Human technological development (e.g., space travel,
computers, biotechnology, advances in medical science) and especially the detonation of
atomic bombs alerted the extraterrestrials to the fact that humanity is now scientifically
sophisticated enough to learn about its origins, prompting the aliens to return and warn of
the dangers of atomic weapons, while offering the promise of planetary perfection.
In addition to their avertive apocalyptic admonitions, the most significant message
conveyed by the space beings, according to Raël, is that life on earth is not the result of
the process of evolution nor is it the creation of a supernatural god. In the tradition of
ancient astronaut hypotheses, Raël explains that human beings were created by extrater-
restrials (in this case, from the aliens’ own DNA) through cloning experiments in their
laboratory on Earth, a barren planet that the alien scientists also populated with flora
and fauna. The creation mythology of the Raëlians is thus based in genetic engineering,
a technology revered as the source of life and the origin of humanity, with the actions of
the aliens being the primary influence on the nature of human existence and the history
of humanity. As a self-proclaimed atheistic and “scientific religion,” Raëlianism does not
consider humanity’s alien creators to be gods, offering instead what is referred to as an
atheist Intelligent Design Theory:
Thousands of years ago, scientists from another planet came to Earth and created
all forms of life, including human beings, whom they created in their own image.
References to these scientists and their work can be found in the ancient texts of
many cultures. Due to their highly advanced technology, they were considered
as gods by our primitive ancestors and often referred to as ‘Elohim’ which in
ancient Hebrew meant ‘Those who came from the sky.’29
29
“Message from the Designers.” International Raëlian Movement website (https://www.rael.org/message).
40
DANIEL WOJCIK
In a familiar ancient alien exegesis of the Bible’s creation mythology, Raël says that the
Bible has been misunderstood in conventional Christian theology, and he systematically
reinterprets biblical references within the framework of flying saucer technology, advanced
science, and ET intervention, while also considering the world’s previous religious leaders
and prophets to be human-extraterrestrial hybrids created and sent to Earth to help guide
humanity.30
Raël also claims that he is the product of extraterrestrial interbreeding, and that his
father was Yahweh who created him and other prophets through artificial insemination
of an Earth woman taken aboard an Elohim spacecraft. Raël says he is the last of forty
earth prophets sent to our planet. He claims that he has been bestowed with the mission to
accomplish three things: spread the Elohim’s messages; initiate the building of an embassy
to officially welcome the arrival of Elohim; and organize the Raëlian movement to help
transform humanity thereby fulfilling the millennial promise offered by the space beings.
Initially, it was asserted that the Elohim embassy had to be built in Jerusalem by the year 2025,
in order for the Elohim and previous earth prophets (Jesus, Buddha, Moses, Muhammad,
et al.) to return and meet with the world’s political leaders in the effort to transform the
planet. If this deadline was not met, the Elohim would not return, and the planet would
be destroyed. More recent messages have moved this decisive date to 2035, and also have
stated that Jerusalem is no longer the only location being considered for the building of the
embassy, as the Raëlian millennial scenario has been extended in recent years.31
A distinctive aspect of Raëlian eschatology that exemplifies the movement’s rever-
ence for technology and science is its embracing of cloning as a way to achieve a type of
eternal life and bodily resurrection. According to Raël, when the Elohim arrive on Earth
they will share their advanced genetic engineering techniques, which will make possible
the cloning of new bodies and allow people to download their individual personalities
and memories into a computer and then transfer these directly into a new, young physi-
cal form. As Raël explains: “This process can be repeated indefinitely, moving from
one cloned body of ourselves to another new cloned body. That is how the Elohim live
for ever. That is why cloning is the key to eternal life” (Raël, 2001: 37). The centrality
of cloning and genetics in the Raëlian mythology also is illustrated by a ritual called
the Transmission of the Cellular Plan (also known as “Baptism”) which involves the
transmission of one’s DNA to the Elohim who will use the DNA to clone duplicates of
the faithful if they are worthy. This ceremony of immortality is performed during four
annual Raëlian festivals through a process in which DNA codes are ritually replicated
from the initiate’s forehead by a Raëlian bishop and then recorded by the advanced
technology of the Elohim for future cloning. In a related practice, Raëlians may sign a
30
Raël 1998: 26, 152, 2005: 164–165; “FAQ.” International Raëlian Movement website (https://www.
rael.org/faq). For further discussion of Raëlian creationism, cloning, and interpretations of the Bible,
see Chryssides 2003; Helland 2007; Gallagher 2010.
31
“Elohim Embassy.” Elohim Embassy website (http://elohimembassy.org/embassy).
41
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
contract permitting a mortician to cut out a piece of frontal bone from one’s forehead
(the so-called “third eye”) which is then frozen and can either be conveyed to the Elohim
in order to attain lasting life or used by future human scientists in cloning procedures
established in the coming millennial age.
In addition to saving themselves by being replicated through alien technology, the
Raëlians work to save humanity by spreading the messages of Raël and advocating for the
construction of the Elohim embassy that they believe will initiate the millennial transforma-
tion of the planet. Like the Aetherians, the Raëlian eschatological mythology thus expresses
a combination of progressive millennialist and avertive apocalyptic ideas, placing emphasis
on the gradual establishment of a utopian age on Earth with alien guidance while warning
of imminent nuclear catastrophe and humanity’s self-destruction that must be prevented.
As is the case with other UFO religions, this avertive millennial dynamic between worldly
cataclysm and the promise of salvation creates a sense of apocalyptic urgency which may
produce an increased commitment and activity among members to disseminate the Raëlian
messages for planetary transformation. Nonetheless, if nuclear apocalypse were to occur,
Raëlians are assured that the Elohim will save the righteous by recording their genetic
codes and cloning new physical bodies on another planet in a technological reincarnation
(Palmer, 2004: 93–96; Raël, 2005: 291–307).
In contrast to the eschatological visions of the Raëlians and Aetherians that combine
the threat of possible catastrophe with the plea to avert it in an effort to initiate a golden
era, a number of UFO religious movements embrace an overwhelmingly optimistic view of
the future, in which the imminence of apocalypse is not a primary aspect of the Endtime
scenario. Instead, these progressive millennialist beliefs emphasize notions of human progress
and spiritual evolution, asserting that if human beings follow a cosmic plan prescribed by
extraterrestrials, suffering and evil will be eliminated and a terrestrial paradise will be created.
Perhaps the best-known UFO religious group that has promoted progressive millennialist
views is the Unarius Academy of Science, located in El Cajon, California. The movement
is one of the earliest UFO religions, created in the mid-1950s, like the Aetherius Society,
during the formative years of the contactee movement. The group was founded by Ernest
Norman (1904–1971) and Ruth Norman (1900–1993) who were the main channels for
communications from various intergalactic beings as well as from deceased scientists from
Earth, including Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, and Nikola Tesla. The messages received
from the Space Brothers and cosmic scientists expressed concern about atomic weapons,
spoke of reincarnation on other planets, and conveyed assorted spiritual and scientific wisdom
to help transform humanity. While individual spiritual transformation and self-healing is
emphasized by the Unariuns, the larger millennial transformation of the world is central
to their belief system; it will be brought about by the arrival of enlightened extraterrestrial
beings with superior technologies.
The Unarius Academy of Science does not consider itself a religion, but instead a “sci-
ence of life” (as the name of the group implies), claiming to offer a “fourth-dimensional”
42
DANIEL WOJCIK
scientific belief system that explains the nature of the universe, the reality of past lives
and rebirth on other planets, and the universal laws that will help humanity progressively
evolve (Tumminia, 2005: 5–7). The rhetoric of science and technology infuses the Unariun
mythos. While Unariun publications contain criticisms of organized religion, the same pub-
lications include discussions of Unariun spiritual progression, healing, visions, paranormal
abilities, channeling, karma, and past life memories as these are related to specific energy
frequencies and “scientific principles” (see Norman, 1956, 1960: 4–6; Unarius Academy of
Science, N.d.: 4–7). Along with the references to science, physics, and energy systems that
pervade the Unariun cosmology (i.e., teachings about the “physics of reincarnation” and
the “psychodynamics of consciousness”), a mixture of ideas from the Spiritualist movement
and Theosophy are interlaced throughout the Unariun mythos as well, which also includes
matter-of-fact revelations about Ernest Norman being the reincarnation of Jesus and his
wife Ruth being Mary Magdalene incarnate (see Norman, 1956, 1960: 4–6).
In the same way that science and extraterrestrial technologies are said to offer a path
for future human progress and millennial perfection, Unariun creation mythology also is
rooted in alien science and ET intervention, with human history explained in scientific terms
within the ancient astronaut framework. For example, the Space Brothers from Unarius,
as scientifically superior beings, are believed to have periodically reincarnated on Earth to
assist in humanity’s evolution. The advanced civilization of Lemuria is said to have been
established on Earth 150,000 years ago by eleven extraterrestrial super-scientists to bring
further technological wisdom to the planet, the traces of which are reflected in ancient
monuments, pyramids, and the lore about the lost continent of Atlantis (Norman, 1956,
1960: 208–209; Tumminia, 2005: 72–73).
A major component in the Unariun millennialist mythology as it developed involves
the prediction of a mass space fleet of enlightened beings landing to help transform planet
Earth. This momentous event will involve thirty-three spacecraft from the planets of
the Interplanetary Confederation. Each spaceship will carry one thousand intellectu-
ally advanced beings. These starships will land one atop another, interlocking to form a
two-mile high tower of space vehicles referred to as The Star Center that will serve as a
university to teach humanity the science of Unarius (Unarius Academy of Science, N.d.:
13). Upon arrival, the Space Brothers will initiate a worldwide peace effort and their
intergalactic technologies will cure diseases and eliminate other social ills. A golden age
of peace and prosperity eventually will be established. With this progressive millennial
transformation of humanity, the Earth finally will be advanced enough to join the other
enlightened planets in the Interplanetary Confederation. In anticipation of this event,
the Unariuns purchased property in the desert in San Diego County as a landing site for
the spacecraft in order to welcome the interstellar beings. After several failed prophecies
about the landing of the spaceships, and the death of both its primary visionary Uriel
(Ruth Norman) in 1993 and her successor Antares (Charles Spiegel) in 1999, membership
in the group has declined and millennialist themes appear increasingly subordinate to the
43
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
44
DANIEL WOJCIK
beings, were responsible for the development of ancient civilizations, agriculture, and the
construction of the world’s architectural wonderments. In UFO eschatological scenarios,
the future of planet Earth is dependent upon the arrival or guidance of these advanced
beings. Furthermore, the salvation of humanity is possible only if human beings act in
ways prescribed by these superior entities.
The UFO religions and extraterrestrial spiritualities discussed above share the common
assertion that the universe is ordered, that a meaningful narrative underlies individual exist-
ence and human history, and that evil and suffering will be eliminated through the guidance
of superhuman beings and the implementation of a godlike plan. Directly addressing fears
of nuclear annihilation, environmental destruction, and other global threats, extraterrestrial
eschatologies offer the promise of salvation and a utopian realm where death and suffering
do not exist, and humans and other enlightened beings live in harmony and interplanetary
peace. While UFO cosmologies provide systems of meaning for understanding the world
and address issues of existential concern, the underlying core belief that humanity can be
saved only by otherworldly beings may contribute to a sense of helplessness and a passive
reliance on superhuman intervention to improve the world, and serve as a substitute for
human efforts to confront the crises that face humanity today. On the other hand, the
progressive millennialist emphasis of some UFO belief systems may encourage a degree of
social activism, with individuals working to overcome suffering and social injustice in the
tradition of the postmillennial social reformists of the nineteenth century.
While UFO belief systems share commonalities with previous world mythologies, they
are distinctive in their fusion of spirituality and science. Whether one examines the initial
contactee accounts, the theories about ancient astronauts, or the vernacular theologies of
UFO religions, ideas about technology and science are venerated and incorporated into
the broader belief systems. In some instances, traditional religions are explicitly rejected as
“superstition” or interpreted as a product of “primitive” human misunderstandings of the
technologies and wisdom of alien beings. Science, in contrast, is embraced as a superior
knowledge system of true wisdom and verifiable evidence that will transform humanity
and help usher in a golden age. In this privileging of science and the merging of mythology
and technology, the supernatural is supplanted by the extraterrestrial. The religious mys-
teries and sacred narratives of the past are reframed within the rhetoric of science and
the otherworldly becomes technologized: the aliens are superhuman genetic engineers
with omnipotent technology, a secularized counterpart to God; the Hindu vimanas,
Ezekiel’s vision, and the accounts of other wondrous events in religious texts are re-read
in terms of alien spacecraft and ET intervention; cloning is regarded as the source of the
human race as well as a technology of resurrection and immortality; teachings about the
fourth-dimensional science of life and the physics of reincarnation are modern updates of
religious doctrines; and Spiritual Energy Batteries and transmissions from Satellite No. 3
are embraced as ways to avert planetary disasters, among the many other manifestations
of UFO techno-mythologizing.
45
UFO MYTHOLOGIES: EXTRATERRESTRIAL COSMOLOGY AND INTERGALACTIC ESCHATOLOGY
UFO religions and related ET-inspired spiritualities have been dismissed by some
as idiosyncratic “cults” or an aberrant, irrational pseudoscientific phenomenon. Their
scientized beliefs concerning worldly creation, apocalypse, and salvation offer insights,
however, into the invention and development of contemporary mythologies as well as the
formation of new religious movements. Resembling the myths of origins and endings that
have existed historically and cross-culturally, UFO cosmogonies and eschatologies go fur-
ther to mediate and reconcile religious and scientific worldviews, with the sacralization of
the extraterrestrial providing a re-enchantment of the world within a seemingly scientific
framework.34 Emerging in the context of nuclear fear, technological advances, space explo-
ration, and the authoritative discourse of science, ideas about the role of extraterrestrials in
human history and in humanity’s future reflect the anxieties, hopes, and concerns of our
era. Extraterrestrial cosmologies illustrate how new belief systems are created in response
to societal concerns and technological changes, reflected and expressed at the level of
vernacular belief. The historical development of modern UFO mythologies, triggered by
Kenneth Arnold’s initial account and then launched into an ever-expanding multitude of
narratives and interpretative scenarios represents an extraordinary example of the power
of the mythological imagination and the synthesis of scientific discourses and religious
impulses in the twenty-first century.
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Za mitologijo letečega krožnika, ki je nastala v 50. in 60. letih prejšnjega stoletja, so značilne
eksplicitno religiozne in mistične pripovedi, ki opisujejo stik z nezemeljskimi rešitelji. Ta prepričanja
so se pojavila v času hladne vojne kot odgovor na razširjene strahove pred jedrsko apokalipso,
ideje pa so privrženci NLP (naznani leteči predmeti) oblikovali v okviru poznanih ezoteričnih in
folklornih tradicij, obenem pa so se opirali na t. i. tehnomitološke inovacije, ki vključujejo nebesna
bitja, posrednike v kriznih časih. Ob eshatoloških temah, povezanih z NLP, ki obljubljajo svetovno
rešitev ali planetarni pobeg, so se kmalu razvile mitologije o paleoastronavtičnem ustvarjanju.
Ponazarjala so jih priljubljena prepričanja o »starih astronavtih«, ki skozi celotno človeško
zgodovino usmerjajo napredek civilizacije na Zemlji. Starodavne tujerodne ideje na neki način
sintetizirajo diskurze znanosti in duhovnosti, reinterpretirajo nadnaravne zgodbe v svetovnih
mitologijah, ki so jim izhodišče posegi nezemljanov in njihovih naprednih tehnologij; na drugi
strani pa to priča o sekularizirani kreacionistični mitologiji človeškega izvora in zgodovine. V
razpravi avtor sledi izvoru in razvoju zgodnjih mitov o NLP ter predstavlja študije primerov
več dobro poznanih verskih skupin NLP. Analizira mitske vidike njihovih sistemov prepričanj
s posebnim poudarkom na apokaliptičnih, tisočletnih scenarijih. Različne eshatološke pripovedi,
značilne za religije NLP, ponujajo pogled v ustvarjanje tisočletnih tradicij kot tudi v primarne
oblike milenaristične misli.
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