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Fallen Angels? Congresswoman Sparks Debate Linking UFOs To The Nephilim

News Image By PNW Staff May 12, 2026
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The recent release of long-awaited UFO-related government documents has once again pulled the public imagination toward one of the most persistent and controversial questions of modern times: what exactly are unidentified anomalous phenomena, and how should they be interpreted?

The latest batch of files--released following a directive associated with former President Donald Trump--includes historical State Department cables, FBI records, and NASA mission transcripts now made available through a newly launched Pentagon portal. Officials have framed the release as part of a broader push for transparency, encouraging the public to examine the material and draw their own conclusions.

Yet even as government agencies continue to emphasize caution and scientific restraint, the cultural conversation surrounding UFOs has taken a sharply different turn in some political and religious circles.

Among the most striking responses came from Rep. Lauren Boebert, who suggested that some of the phenomena described in these records may not be extraterrestrial at all--but spiritual in nature. Speaking in the context of renewed interest in UFO disclosures, she framed the issue through a biblical worldview, pointing to Old Testament references to fallen angels and the Nephilim.

"God is the creator of the universe," Boebert said. "He's never not going to create. So it's always been something in my mind to say, 'how can we be the only ones?'" She went on to connect modern unexplained sightings to ancient scripture, stating that "the Old Testament... tells us about fallen angels and Nephilim. I mean, this is in the Bible."


Her comments extended further into speculative territory, suggesting that some encounters might involve "portals" or spiritual dimensions rather than physical spacecraft. "I wouldn't put it as Marvin the Martian kind of thing," she added, "but I do believe that this is more spiritual, and if you really want to go there, demonic."

These remarks have reignited a long-running tension in the UFO debate: whether unexplained aerial phenomena should be understood strictly through the lens of aerospace technology and misidentification--or whether they intersect with deeper metaphysical or theological interpretations.

From a scientific standpoint, the Pentagon's most recent public assessment has remained consistent. Investigators have stated they have found no verified evidence of recovered alien craft or confirmed extraterrestrial life. Many sightings, according to defense analysts, can be attributed to experimental military systems, atmospheric conditions, sensor errors, or misidentified conventional aircraft.

Still, the persistence of unexplained cases leaves space for interpretation--and in that space, theological frameworks have increasingly resurfaced.


Central to Boebert's comments is the biblical concept of the Nephilim, a mysterious group mentioned briefly in Genesis 6:1-4. The passage describes a time when "the sons of God" and "the daughters of men" produced offspring known as Nephilim, often translated as "giants" or "mighty men of old."

Interpretations of this passage have varied for centuries. One traditional view holds that the "sons of God" were fallen angels who interacted with humans, producing hybrid offspring--an idea later echoed in some ancient Jewish writings such as the Book of Enoch. In this interpretation, the Nephilim are seen as powerful, corrupt beings associated with violence and moral decay in the pre-flood world.

Other scholars argue the text is more symbolic or genealogical in nature, suggesting the "sons of God" may have been human rulers or descendants of Seth, with the Nephilim representing powerful or "giant-like" humans rather than supernatural hybrids. The Bible itself offers limited detail, and later passages--such as Numbers 13:33--refer again to Nephilim-like figures, describing them as unusually large and formidable inhabitants of Canaan.

What makes the Nephilim narrative particularly compelling in modern UFO discourse is not consensus, but ambiguity. The ancient text leaves room for interpretation, and in moments of cultural uncertainty, that ambiguity often becomes a canvas onto which contemporary anxieties and curiosities are projected.


This is where the UFO debate and biblical speculation begin to overlap. For some believers, unexplained aerial phenomena feel like a continuation of ancient spiritual warfare narratives--unseen forces interacting with the human world in ways that defy scientific classification. For others, such interpretations risk conflating myth, metaphor, and modern aerospace mystery in ways that obscure more grounded explanations.

Still, the cultural power of these ideas is undeniable. UFO disclosures, particularly when tied to secrecy and government classification, tend to create interpretive gaps. Into those gaps flow everything from advanced foreign surveillance theories to spiritual warfare frameworks.

What is emerging is not a single explanation, but a layered landscape of belief systems attempting to make sense of the unknown.

The release of additional UFO-related documents is expected in the coming months, and with each new disclosure, the debate is likely to intensify. Whether viewed as classified technology, atmospheric misidentification, or something more metaphysical, the phenomenon continues to resist easy categorization.

In the end, the most important question may not be what the files contain--but why humanity is so quick to reach beyond the visible world in search of meaning. For some, the answer is found in physics and defense analysis. For others, in ancient texts and spiritual frameworks like the Nephilim narrative.

And for many in the middle, the tension itself remains unresolved: a reminder that the boundary between mystery and belief is often thinner than we assume.



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