
Nicholas Cage in "Knowing"
The new movie Knowing has some serious worldview implications. If the film was the only one like it, it may not be worth mentioning. However, the concepts in Knowing are common throughout science fiction tales of aliens. According to pro-evolutionary, agenda pushing filmmakers, aliens are a plausible explanation for the existence and meaning of life on earth.
What’s sad about those that believe aliens created us and guide us is they substitute the real significance of the human race with that of lab rats. Since God created us and gave us a purpose, we have importance and relevance in the universe—and the universe was created for us and God’s pleasure. If aliens created us, we’re just guinea pigs and slaves to our other-worldy makers that have less than our best interests at heart, and we truly loose all meaning to life and the world at large.
Why care for earth itself? If aliens made us and our habitat, isn’t the world the aliens’ problem? If the aliens want us to take care of earth, why should we obey them? We’re just rabbits in a cage(earth); we shouldn’t have to clean up after ourselves. Rabbits don’t. This is just another hole in the evolutionary theory. Yet, it has huge ramifications on popular “save the earth” activism. Storytellers that push “aliens are real” nullify their own convictions.
So which would you rather have? Which belief system makes more sense? It seems some filmmakers rather be slaves to an extraterrestrial than friends of God (their actual Maker).
If you’re interested in a good article on the matter, check out “Aliens as Cosmic Saviors” Gary DeMar published today.