A Plea for Earth: Jesus, ET Intervention, Soul Evolution, and the Family of Creation
A Prayerful Appeal in Uncertain Times
In this episode of The Church of the Soul’s Evolution, host Reverend Blake Rubie opens from San Antonio on June 27 with concern about the state of the world, end-times fears, war, and humanity’s inability to police itself against tyrants and violence. He makes a direct plea to advanced extraterrestrial beings, saying he believes some may be listening, and asks them to help humanity if the planet is approaching a destructive turning point. Blake emphasizes that most people on Earth are good, family-oriented, loving, and desirous of raising children, living peacefully, and making the world better.
Jesus, Miracles, and the Survival of Humanity
Blake connects his plea for help to his Christian faith, saying that divine intervention has happened before through figures and events such as Moses, the Exodus, Jesus’ birth, Jesus’ miracles, the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension. He states his belief that humanity would not be alive today without Jesus and praises Jesus for the miracles described in scripture, including turning water into wine, raising Lazarus, healing the sick, driving out demons, feeding thousands, walking on water, calming the storm, and rising from the dead. For Blake, these events are not fantasy but reality, and he contrasts them with modern entertainment that focuses on fantasy and violence.
Advanced Worlds and Abduction to the Ninth Planet
A major portion of the episode centers on Blake’s favorite book, Abduction to the Ninth Planet, which he describes as the account of Michael Desmarquet, an Australian man allegedly taken by advanced extraterrestrials to a highly evolved planet. Blake summarizes the book’s depiction of category-nine worlds as peaceful, pristine, harmonious civilizations where beings love one another, animals do not eat each other, and there is no war or pollution. He also discusses the book’s descriptions of interdimensional travel, parallel universes, thought-powered movement, special spacecraft, and advanced beings who allegedly monitor Earth and intervene when appropriate.
Earth History, Human Origins, and Interstellar Migration
Blake then outlines the book’s version of Earth history, including claims that the first human beings arrived on Earth about 1.5 million years ago from a planet called Bakaratini or Bakaratiny after their world began cooling. He says two races came first, one Asian and one Black, settling in regions that became Asia and Australia, with later migration, interbreeding, and the development of other peoples. He also discusses Atlantis, Lemuria, Hebrew origins, and the idea that some groups came from higher-evolutionary planets but suffered because they were living on a lower-evolutionary world. Blake presents these ideas as beliefs drawn from the book and from his own spiritual interpretation.
The Creator, the Big Bang, and the Four Forces
The sermon shifts into Blake’s cosmology of creation. He describes the Creator as an infinite, intelligent, electric energy field that is both male and female, omniscient and omnipotent. According to Blake, the Creator visualized every detail of the universe before bringing it into being through the Big Bang. He describes four universal forces: one that created suns, planets, and moons; one that created plant and animal life; one that created sentient beings; and one that placed a spark of the Creator’s light inside each soul. He uses this framework to remind listeners that every human being carries divinity and should be treated with love, respect, and dignity.
Souls, Reincarnation, Guidance, and Accountability
Blake emphasizes that all souls are part of one soul family and that no soul is inherently greater than another, even if some are older or more experienced through reincarnation. He compares older and younger souls to siblings in different grades at school, saying younger souls need guidance rather than condemnation. He urges listeners to pray, journal, seek forgiveness, repent for wrongdoing, and ask for guidance in order to stay aligned with righteousness. He also warns that life is uncertain, that tomorrow is not guaranteed, and that each person will one day face accountability for whether they fulfilled the spiritual plan they made before birth.
Words, Co-Creation, and a Final Prayer
Near the close, Blake teaches that words are powerful and that advanced souls may eventually become co-creator gods who learn to command cosmic forces through the right use of speech. He discusses soul mates, reincarnation, karmic debt, planetary graduation, and the choice between returning to sorrowful worlds of war and evolving toward higher worlds of love and harmony. He ends by quoting ideas from Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs” to condemn political leaders and war-makers who send others to suffer. The episode closes with a prayer to the Creator, asking for love, blessing, protection, guidance, righteousness, and gratitude for the Creator’s greatness and mercy.
