A bizarre row involving UFO warnings, secret pastor gatherings and claims aboutinterdimensionalbeings has erupted online after a preacher was forced to apologise for comments that appeared to drag Congressman Eric Burlison into a sensational alien disclosure narrative.

The controversy exploded after Pastor Larry publicly claimed a Missouri congressman had phoned into a private pastors meeting and warned church leaders about shocking information allegedly set to emerge from future UFO disclosures.

According to Larry's original retelling, the congressman supposedly urged pastors to prepare believers for claims that aliens or non-human beings were humanity's true creators and thatChristianity itself would be challenged.

The comments spread rapidly online because many listeners believed the words had come directly from Congressman Eric Burlison himself.

But after backlash intensified, Pastor Larry released a public apology and admitted the explosive remarks were actually his own opinions, not statements made by the congressman.

He clarified that Burlison merely thanked pastors for their ministry work and encouraged them to continue pointing people towards Jesus rather than becoming distracted by worldly fears.

Larry admitted he failed to clearly separate his personal beliefs from what had genuinely been said during the call. He said: 'I should have stopped and paused and said, this part is my opinion.'

Theapologydramatically changed the story surrounding the meeting and raised serious questions about how much of the original UFO panic had been fuelled by speculation rather than verified facts.

The bizarre saga deepened after several Christian personalities confirmed thatprivate UFO-related gatheringsreally did take place during the 2026 National Religious Broadcasters convention in Tennessee.

Pastor Alan DiDio claimed there were actually two similar meetings organised by anonymous individuals said to have ties or experience connected to the US government. However, he stressed the meetings were not official government operations.

Source: International Business Times UK