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Airings

Who’s an atheist?
It’s begun. Series 5 of Doctor Who
began filming in Cardiff this summer, giving
the universe its first view of Matt Smith’s
Eleventh Doctor.
Dean
Braithwaite has been following the
action.
The Doctor’s changed and so has the man in
overall charge, but, hopefully, an air of
atheism will remain. Executive producers
Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat are both
atheists, and both have incorporated
nonreligious elements in their writings for
the show since its return in 2005,
culminating, in 2008, when Richard Dawkins
played himself in The Stolen Earth.
,%20Matt%20Smith%20(Eleventh%20Doctor).jpg) |
Amy
Pond (Karen Gillan) and the Doctor
(Matt Smith), about to conquer the
universe. |
That’s not
to say that there aren’t religious elements,
too. In Father’s Day, in 2005, it’s
writer, Paul Cornell, had Christopher
Eccleston’s Ninth Doctor seeking sanctuary
from the Reapers in a church. Presumably,
this was borne out of Cornell’s own
Christian beliefs.
In Davies’s own scripts, the Doctor has
often been portrayed as a Messiah-like
character; notably in the 2007 Christmas Day
special – Voyage of the Damned –
complete with murdering angels, the Host,
and, controversially, earlier in 2007, when
David Tennant’s Gotham-like Tenth Doctor was
“reborn” in Last of the Time Lords.
The day God went mad!
And it’s
not confined to 21st-century Doctor Who.
In the 1970s, in The Face of Evil,
Tom Baker’s Fourth Doctor was worshipped by
the Sevateem tribe as their god in a story
that, apparently, was originally called
The Day God Went Mad.
However, in Silence in the Library/Forest
of the Dead, in 2008, Moffat
resurrected the Doctor’s wife, River Song,
in a computer programme, and, according to a
piece on Noise to Signal, “[Moffat] was
untroubled by the issue of her earlier
death. The concept of a soul is simply not
part of this worldview, and so was not
present in the story.”
There’s an article –
Doctor
Who, Atheism, and God – on the blog,
The Christian Scribbler, which discusses
faith and the lack of it in the show. It’s
an interesting read, although completely
misses the point of why nonbelievers create
Godlike figures to “fill the gap”, as it
puts it. It’s not because there’s a God; the
only reason God (and other gods)
exist in the first place is because
religionists create them!
Some Christians often complain of an
“atheist agenda” in Doctor Who,
much the same as others complain of the “gay
agenda” in the show (for more on that, see
Doctor, who?, “Airings”, G&LH,
December 2008). In reality, however, there’s
no more an atheist agenda under Davies or
Moffat than there would be a religious one
under Cornell. Just as there has been no
more a gay agenda under Davies than there
will be a straight one under Moffat. Simply
put, a writer’s beliefs (or lack of them)
will inform their writing in the same way as
any of their other experiences in life.

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