The Book Depository Exo-Vaticana by Cris Putnam
908 ratings
TO EXPLORE MORE
Price: £16.84
Brand: The Book Depository
Description: Exo-Vaticana : Paperback : Defender Publishing : 9780984825639 : 0984825630 : 15 Apr 2013 : Authors Cris Putnam and Thomas Horn follow up their 2012 publication Petrus Romanus: the final Pope is here with new findings such as: the Vatican's plan for the arrival of an alien god, secret files in the Vatican library on the reality of the alien presence, Project L.U.C.I.F.E.R and the hidden quest for the Fallen Star, and more--Adapted from P. [4] of cover. The Book Depository Exo-Vaticana by Cris Putnam - shop the best deal online on thebookbug.co.uk
Category: Books
Merchant: The Book Depository
Product ID: 9780984825639
MPN: 0984825630
GTIN: 9780984825639
Author: Lazar Der Gregorian
Rating: 5
Review: This book is very well researched and referenced. The reader should be aware (as I was before I bought the book) that it expresseve the views of evangelical Christianity which I have no problems with. It is (at least for me) a refreshing alternative to the non-faith-based explanations of the whole gamut of 'extra terrestrial' phenomena.The contents of the book naturally reveal the writers' stance based on their particular religious convictions which will not necessarily coincide with those of others, even broadly under the 'evangelical' umbrella. However, I found those close enough to my own and know of no other book which has tackled the subject better.
Author: J. McGregor
Rating: 2
Review: Great title, for sure, but don’t be fooled by what is here. A cursory skim of some of the chapters have left me feeling somewhat frustrated with the level of research shown. There is definitely an evangelical agenda, mixed in with the authors’ “poorly-arrived-at-conclusions.” A glance of the first two chapters and the chapter on apparitions of Mary at Fatima, with reference to Bernadette of Lourdes and the apparaitions of Mary to her, show minimal research. One example is the relationship of the priest who dealt with Bernadette at the start of the apparitions at Lourdes, in France, in 1858. The authors’ suggestion that the priest used Bernadette to promote Mariology is completely false from the historical sources, which these authors have simply not read. Very disappointing. Further, a Catholic Priest called Malachy Martin is cited as being an authoritative source on “inside knowledge” of the Catholic Church’s attitude to aliens etc, but then in a comment following shortly after they quote from Guy Consolmagno, a Vatican astronomer, who made it quite clear that Martin had no contact with astronomical Catholic sources whatsoever. Putnam and Horn then assume the Jesuit brother is lying as part of a cover-up by the Jesuit order, and so on.... bad logic and totally unprovable. As a number of reviews also say on here there is repetition of sources from paragraph to paragraph. This is really noticeable, and I have only delved into three chapters at random! What will I find in the rest, I wonder? These guys needed to have re-read their scripts (or at least the publishers needed to to!). The authors also critique Zecharia Sitchin using one source from the internet. One source? That’s it? I was so looking forward to this book, and I will continue with it because some topics are interesting, but in terms of their conclusions on the data, you’d best keep your mind more than open, because what is here is rushed and academically amateurish. With this book I feel I am constantly having to sift through skewed personal agendas, which are clearly effecting the sources and putting them in wrongly concluding contexts which are just silly. The Catholic branch of Christianity is a “UFO based religion” because it is “based on apparitional events?” For sure, the Catholic Church has acknowledged apparitions in history, but only after years and years of deliberation etc. I am baffled by conclusions like this. I am quite worried about what else I am going to find.