Homebrewed Christianity

Flying Saucers, Deep Incarnation, and the Covered Dish Dinner: Astro Theology with Ted Peters

10 snips
Mar 6, 2026
Ted Peters, Lutheran theologian and astrotheology pioneer, explores theology at the edge of space science. He recounts UFO-influenced childhood roots and coins astrotheology. Conversation jumps from valuing microbial life on Europa to deep incarnation and whether Christ’s flesh ties redemption to the cosmos. Practical questions include hospitality for unexpected contact, ethical Mars colonization, and bridging ufologists with astrobiologists.
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ANECDOTE

Childhood Contactee Roots Shaped Astrotheology

  • Ted Peters grew up reading UFO books and his parents followed George Adamski, a Venus contactee who portrayed Venusians as Jesus-like figures.
  • That childhood shaped Peters' lifelong engagement with UFOs and led him to coin astrotheology as a field linking theology and space science.
INSIGHT

Astrobiology Splits Microbial Ethics From Intelligent Contact

  • Astrobiologists separate non-intelligent microbial life within our solar system from intelligent life likely to be found in the Milky Way, producing distinct ethical priorities.
  • This split drives debates like protecting Europa's ecosphere versus preparing for contact with intelligent civilizations.
INSIGHT

Copernican Principle Does Not Mandate Human Insignificance

  • The Copernican principle (geographic marginality implies philosophical insignificance) is a fallacy; science describes 'is' but cannot prescribe 'ought.'
  • Peters argues we must bracket anthropocentrism and wait for empirical evidence before assuming human insignificance.
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