A new controversy is swirling in religious and political circles after Tennessee evangelist Perry Stone claimed that U.S. officials quietly met with a group of prominent pastors to prepare them for upcoming government disclosures on UFOs and potential non-human life.
Stone says the alleged briefing was meant to help church leaders “get ready” for what could be a highly disruptive public release of classified material tied to unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs).
The claims have not been independently verified, but they have spread rapidly across multiple media outlets, faith-based commentary channels, and social media platforms.
The Core Claim: A Private Government Warning to Pastors
According to Stone, a pastor friend told him that a group of influential Christian leaders were invited to a closed-door meeting with U.S. government figures and intelligence-connected officials.
The alleged purpose: prepare congregations for what could be a seismic cultural and theological shock.
Stone described discussions that reportedly included:
- Possible release of government videos and reports involving unidentified craft
- Claims of “non-human intelligence” or technology not from Earth
- Warnings that disclosure could challenge traditional Christian teachings
He also suggested that the officials involved were concerned about how believers and non-believers might react differently once information becomes public.
Spiritual Shockwaves and “Biblical Implications”
Stone went further, arguing that the potential disclosure could trigger major religious consequences.
In his framing, the concern is not just scientific — it’s spiritual.
He warned that some believers might struggle to reconcile UFO-related revelations with core Christian doctrine, particularly the biblical creation account.
Others, he suggested, might interpret the news as validation of end-times prophecy or “spiritual deception,” depending on their worldview.
What Allegedly Was Said in the Briefings
Reports circulating describe the alleged briefing as including discussion points such as:
- Preparation for public reaction to UFO disclosure
- Concerns about potential panic or confusion among churchgoers
- The role of pastors as “stabilizers” for community response
- Claims involving unexplained craft and non-human origin theories
Government UFO Transparency Context
The backdrop to Stone’s claims is a broader wave of U.S. government interest in UAP transparency.
In recent years, federal agencies and congressional committees have acknowledged investigating unexplained aerial sightings, fueling ongoing public debate over what the government knows — and what it may eventually release.
That has created a vacuum where speculation often fills in the gaps.

Reaction: Faith Community Split
Reactions inside religious circles have been sharply divided.
Supporters of Stone argue:
- Churches should be prepared for disruptive cultural revelations
- Pastors have a role in helping communities process uncertainty
- Government secrecy on unexplained phenomena is plausible
Skeptics counter:
- No verified evidence supports the existence of such a briefing
- Claims rely heavily on unnamed sources and secondhand accounts
- The narrative risks fueling conspiracy thinking rather than clarity
Why the Story Gains Traction Quickly
Even without confirmation, stories like this tend to spread fast because they sit at the intersection of three high-interest themes:
- Government secrecy
- Extraterrestrial speculation
- Religious belief systems under pressure
That combination guarantees attention — especially in a media environment where UFO disclosures and congressional hearings are already part of the national conversation.
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