Religion has survived finding people separated from the original practitioners by great distances, I see no reason why making contact with alien life would be any different. Some religions would hold Vulcans, Romulans, Klingons, etc. to be demons. Others would simply go "Hey, new people to proselytize to!" Any that had stated there was no life outside that on our own planet would either pretend they never said that or go with the demon tactic.Eternal_Freedom wrote:I have a feeling that First Contact may have something to do with it. I often wonder how organised religion might account for alien life. Christianity especially.
I mean, if you go through life believing there is a God who looks out for you and yours and that's about it, how the hell can you suddenly explain these pointy-earred hobgoblins that have just landed from the stars? How do they fit in to your faith? Especially when they have no idea of God or angels or whatnot when you talk to them further.
I can see a lot of religions shattering in the face of alien contact. It's entirely possible the ideas and beliefs continue, but I think they would be in a word-of-mouth, parents to children kind of way. Certainly not organised.
For instance, has anyone in ST ever made reference to someone like the Pope?
People don't give up a life-long belief because of just one bit of evidence, usually. The evidence of a roughly spherical Earth didn't destroy Christianity, nor did the discovery that the geocentric model is wrong. Both were ignored by the Church until it could no longer do so, at which point they just sort of hand-waved that they were wrong on the subject.