The early chapters of Genesis put forth the creation of humans, male and female, by a God who calls them very good after making them the pinnacle of his creation (Genesis 1:26-31), with Genesis 5:1-2 reiterating that human men and women are specifically made in God's image and tasked with presiding over ("subdue") the land and rule over other animals. In Isaiah 45:12, God (Yahweh) says that he created Earth and humanity on it, and verse 18 soon adds that Earth was created not to be empty, but to be inhabited. Between these chapters of the Bible, though there is a definite emphasis on humans having a special status in relation to God and general metaphysics, nothing is said that touches one way or another on the issue of extraterrestrial life.
What do Genesis 1 and Isaiah 45 not say about this matter? Neither part of the Bible states nor in any way hints at something which requires the doctrine that life was not also created or permitted by God to come about from abiogenesis and/or evolution (abiogenesis and evolution do not logically necessitate the other, and there is a God either way [1]) on other planets. That Earth was created to be inhabited, which is consistent with the current lack of evidence for extraterrestrial life, has nothing to do with whether other planets were or were not also meant to be inhabited or wound up that way through one process or another.
Nothing about alien life forms, from microorganisms to humanoids to eldritch creatures, contradicts human exceptionalism over terrestrial animals or the concept of humans having the divine image. Even if God directly created life on Earth, with or without subsequent theistic evolution, it could have been allowed to evolve from abiogenesis on another world. There is no philosophical tenet of Christianity, whether directly articulated in the Bible itself or which follows logically from the ideas that are stated therein, that is incompatible with the existence of all sorts of extraterrestrial creatures.
Logical axioms and absolute certainties and so on are true by necessity, so they could only be true either way. There is still an uncaused cause, whether or not it is Yahweh, God's existence also being a logical necessity in light of the fact that anything exists at all besides logical truths and empty space [2]. Like evolution and a host of other biology-related issues, extraterrestrial life changes very little. It certainly cannot be more foundational than necessary truths, God's existence, and whatever moral obligations exist. Quite literally, the universe being inhabited in planets other than Earth is of little intrinsic consequence to the core nature of reality.
Either option is logically possible, so that whichever is the case, the cosmos could have been the other way. The same is true of whether this life takes the form of macroscopic organisms or microscopic ones, whether these creatures are peaceful or hostile, and whether the extraterrestrials, if humanoid or capable of serious intelligence (which is grasping the necessary truths of logic without assumptions and not having familiarity with scientific contingencies or living in a technologically advanced culture). If there are alien entities somewhere in the universe or hypothetical multiverse, there is no single type of anatomy or physiology they would have to possess, but the logical ramifications of their existence are relatively limited on their own.
[1]. See here:
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