(from the link)
Quote:
?You see, the Bible makes it clear that Adam?s sin affected the whole universe. This means that any aliens would also be affected by Adam?s sin, but because they are not Adam?s descendants, they can?t have salvation,? he explained. ?Jesus did not become the ?GodKlingon? or the ?GodMartian?! Only descendants of Adam can be saved. God?s Son remains the ?Godman? as our Savior.?
By this logic all non-human animals would also be going to Hell. They are no more Adam's descendents than martian bacteria are.
These Christians that google found for me (by googling 'do animals go to heaven?') don't think that being a descendent of Adam is mandatory.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/201 ... paging=offQuote:
Yet the Bible teaches that God does save animals. For example, God brought Noah two of each kind of living creature in order to save them from the Flood. God chastised reluctant Jonah about the need to save not only the human inhabitants of Nineveh, but also its many animals. Such salvation is not, of course, quite the kind invited by the altar call. Even so, it should not be overlooked.
God not only saves animals. At times, his covenants include them. God's covenant with Noah included "every living thing of all flesh" (Gen. 6:18-19, KJV). In Hosea, God proclaimed a covenant "with the beasts of the field, the birds in the sky and the creatures that move along the ground" (2:18, niv).
That doesn't sound like damnation awaits all non-humans automatically.
In any case, why would this guy worship a God so cruel as to make damnation inevitable for some living beings due to a simple accident of planet of origin. The God in that Christianity Today link is much more compassionate.