1) As a christian, I believe we are the only life forms that exist. On the other hand -- whos to say God did not create other things?
2) I think we will get there eventually. I mean way back when -- no one thought a human could fly but look at us now
3) What exactly do you mean by last frontier?
That's why christianity is retarded, we personally will never see anythingclose to space travel other than to the moon, and MAYBE mars, but likely not as it's something like 10 years away at our top speeds, and "last frontier" generally refers to the end of the universe, where there is nothing past a certain point.
I think that if anyone honestly thinks we're the ONLY planet out of the TRILLIONS out there with lifeforms, then they need to kill themselves. Seriously, there's trillions of planets. If you look in the sky in a farm in the middle of North Carolina with zero lights around (no city lights a few miles out, no lights anywhere near you) on a perfectly clear day, you can see maybe 300 stars. People seem to think that that's it, theres no more, but that's not true. In fact, the truth of it all is that there are nearly a limitless amount of stars, and a good majority of them have solar system like setups with a few planets here and there. To think that we're the ONLY ones out of ALL the space that is living is stupid.
Minus warping (which would be a good name for a band, btw), the fastest speed achievable is Light Speed, which even if we could travel at that we're still not going to get far. Until we find some kind of warp drive or warp object, we likely won't even get out of our own solar system. In fact, check this out.
http://www.news.wisc.edu/newsphotos/images/Milky_Way_galaxy_sun05.jpg (it's like a 2000x2000 image so I took the tag out)
See where it says "Sun"? That's us. All those little dots represent stars, likely with their own solar systems in them. And that's just the Milky Way Galaxy. In fact, here we go, let's look deeper shall we?
This is a map of all the major known superclusters within two billion light years plotted onto the supergalactic plane. Each point on this map is a rich cluster of galaxies containing hundreds of galaxies as listed in Abell's catalog of rich clusters of galaxies. This map does not show every rich cluster but only those which are grouped together into large supercluster formations. Each of these superclusters must also contain hundreds or maybe thousands of smaller groups of galaxies. This map is clearly not complete, the plane of our galaxy runs approximately down the centre of the map and most astronomers prefer to study galaxies that are far away from this plane where there is a lot less gas and dust obscuring our view of the universe. This explains why most of the known superclusters are on the left and right sides of the map.
The nearest closest other star to us is something like 13 light years away, and we're incredibly far away from being able to travel at that speed.
So what have I showed you? That's it pretty much theoretically impossible for us to be alone in the universe. Does that mean we're ever going to make contact with other lifeforms? No, it just means that the possibility is out there.
Also, the "last frontier" doesn't exist. Space if ever expanding, as seen here;
And yes, every one of the pictures above is either from new scientist magazine. or been featured in it. I'm a space nut, and the possibility of an endless universe out there amazes me so I spend a good portion of time on this kinda stuff on a daily basis.