The Trump administration on Friday released its first batch of declassified files documenting Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, opening a vault that previous administrations preferred to keep welded shut. The materials include never-before-seen Apollo mission photographs, transcripts of astronaut communications describing strange objects in space, and FBI imagery from a 1999 sighting alongside U.S. military aircraft.
The release is the first installment of President Trump’s Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters, or PURSUE, with more to follow.
The contrast with the recent past was the point. “While past administrations sought to discredit or dissuade the American people, President Trump is focused on providing maximum transparency to the public, who can ultimately make up their own minds about the information contained in these files,” the White House said in a statement.
The full archive is being staged at WAR.GOV/UFO, with Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, FBI Director Kash Patel, and NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman all signing on to the rolling declassification effort.
That a sitting administration is treating UAP transparency as a serious governance priority — rather than a punchline — is itself the news. But it is not the only news. Because while Washington pulls the curtain back, a quieter conversation has been gathering force in conservative and Christian circles about what, exactly, the curtain has been hiding. And it is not a conversation about little green men.
The Transparency Win Is Real
Conservatives and conspiracists have asked for sunlight on the federal national-security state for decades, and any honest accounting has to credit Trump for delivering more of it in his second term than his predecessors managed in eight. The JFK, RFK, and MLK files were unsealed in his first week back in office. Epstein records have been pried loose. Now PURSUE joins the list.
The political backstory matters here. The release was preceded by months of pressure from Rep. Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, who chairs the House Oversight Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets. Luna had demanded 46 specific UAP videos by April 14 and threatened subpoena authority when the Pentagon stonewalled. The administration’s eventual posture — coordinated, on-the-record, with the heads of DNI, the FBI, NASA, and the War Department all attaching their names — was a clear answer to the previous bureaucratic shrug.
It was also a clear answer to former President Barack Obama, who casually told a podcaster earlier this year that aliens “are real” before walking the comment back. Trump’s response — that Obama had let classified information slip and that the public deserved the same access the elite already had — set the table for what Friday delivered. The principle is sound. A self-governing people cannot give informed consent to a government that hides what it knows, and a population trained to assume their officials are lying about the sky will eventually stop trusting officials about the ground.
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But Sunlight Reveals What Was Already There
Here is where the story gets more interesting than a press release. The cultural runway being paved for UAP disclosure is not neutral. Steven Spielberg’s documentary “Disclosure Day” hits theaters June 12, with the director publicly stating he believes “we are not alone here on Earth right now.” Hollywood has spent half a century conditioning audiences to greet the visitors as wise older siblings — bearers of higher consciousness, healers of our primitive divisions, post-religious mentors arrived to nudge a benighted humanity into its next evolutionary phase.
That framing is not science. It is theology — and it is theology that contradicts every word of the Christian gospel. Reported “contactee” messages, going back decades, have carried a remarkably consistent script: every religion is the same religion, Jesus was a teacher and not a savior, sin is a misunderstanding, and salvation comes through cooperation with benevolent intelligences from elsewhere. That message is anti-biblical to its core. It does not deny the supernatural — it replaces it.
The Voice From Inside the Administration
It is worth pausing on the fact that the Vice President of the United States has already said, on the record, what most cable networks will not say. Asked by podcaster Benny Johnson last month whether he had peeked at the UFO files, JD Vance replied that he had not yet — but offered something more pointed about his own view of the phenomenon.
“I don’t think they’re aliens. I think they’re demons anyway, but that’s a longer discussion.”
Pressed for elaboration, Vance — a Catholic convert — went further. “I naturally go, when I hear about extra-natural phenomenon, that’s where I go to, to the Christian understanding that there’s a lot of good out there, but there’s also some evil out there. And I think that one of the devil’s great tricks is to convince people he never existed.”
Vance is not alone in his suspicion, and he is not the kookiest voice in the choir. Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke, the tenth human being to walk on the surface of the moon, has stated plainly that he believes UAPs are “demonic beings,” noting that “nothing human can make a 90-degree turn at 3,000 miles an hour and survive” and arguing that the purpose of such displays is “to draw people away from the real God.”
Tucker Carlson has said something similar. Christian researchers like L.A. Marzulli have spent careers arguing that what intelligence officials now call “non-human intelligence” is the same category of spiritual entity that Scripture has been describing the entire time, simply costumed for a scientific age.
Test the Spirits, Not Just the Sensors
None of this requires a Christian to deny the data. The Apollo 17 transcript released Friday, with operators describing “very jagged, angular fragments that are tumbling” past the spacecraft, is a real document. The FBI photo from New Year’s Eve 1999 is a real photo. Pilots have seen what they have seen. Sensors have recorded what they have recorded. The honest answer is that something is being observed, and that the federal government has known something is being observed for a very long time.
The Christian question is not whether the phenomena exist. The Christian question is what they are — and what they are telling us. Scripture is not silent on the subject of unseen powers operating in the heavenlies. Paul wrote to the church at Ephesus that “we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.” John warned the early church, in a verse that ought to be tattooed across every UAP enthusiast’s forehead before Disclosure Day arrives, to “believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God.”
That instruction was not written for the seventeenth century. It was written for any moment in which compelling unseen forces present themselves and ask to be trusted. This moment qualifies.
Two Things Can Be True
The Trump administration was right to release the files. A government that classifies its citizens out of their own history is a government that has forgotten whom it serves, and PURSUE is a meaningful course correction after decades of official condescension. Transparency is a virtue, not a threat, and the people running this rollout — Gabbard, Hegseth, Patel, Isaacman — deserve credit for treating Americans as adults capable of weighing evidence.
At the same time, Christians watching the sky should remember that not every revelation is a revelation from God. The lights in the Apollo footage may be exotic technology, atmospheric phenomena, or something else entirely. But the narrative being constructed around them — by Hollywood, by careerist mystics, by an emerging “UFO religion” that promises spiritual ascent without a Savior — is not new at all. It is the oldest pitch in the book, given a new costume. The serpent in Eden also offered a path to enlightenment from a higher being. He also promised that the rules did not really apply.
The files are open. That is good. What we do with them is the test. Watch the sky if you must. Watch the curtain more carefully.
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