I can accept inspiration comes from a variety of sources. It is not clear to me why the Holy Spirit should be given credit for, say, Einstein's ideas on relativity.Claire Evans wrote:
I don't know why people cannot appreciate that accepting the Holy Spirit means we can be taught as illustrated in the Bible.
"Ruins of a 4000-year-old observatory discovered on a mountain in Macedonia reveal that the ancients tracked celestial movements from on high with remarkable precision. And in Peru, the descendants of the Incans continue an ancient pilgrimage tradition in order to commune with mountain spirits known as Apu. Could these gods have been extraterrestrials? Did they use remote mountain peaks to interact with early man? Might this explain why humans have been drawn to mountains for thousands of years." [/quote]
I am not opposed to such propositions. I cannot possibly rule them out and they do go a little way towards explaining the odd structure of pyramids. But it is not clear to me why aliens would descend on mountains - from where? I grant that physical means of transportation across stellar distances are out of the question, and I know that science proposes other means of travelling great distances. If we are in our intellectual infancy, who is to say that beings don't exist who are like gods to us?
If these are your lines of possibility, I've no objections either way. I have an open mind. My only problem is with dogmatic assertions.