Difference between revisions of "prayer"
From Trekipedia
(Created page with "{{ImageInfoBox2|name=prayer|file=prayer-tos01.jpg|caption=Captain Kirk forced to pray (TOS Where No Man Has Gone...") |
m |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|}</div> | |}</div> | ||
In many religious doctrines, prayer was used to appeal to a deity or other higher power. On [[Stardate]] [[2266#SD1312|1314.2]], [[Starfleet Lieutenant Commander|Lieutenant Commander]] [[Mitchell, Gary|Gary Mitchell]], mutated and driven mad by exposure to the [[Galactic Barrier]], used his newfound powers to force [[Starfleet Captain|Captain]] [[Kirk, James T.|James T. Kirk]] to pray to him as a [[gods|god]].<ref name="TOS01"/> | In many religious doctrines, prayer was used to appeal to a deity or other higher power. On [[Stardate]] [[2266#SD1312|1314.2]], [[Starfleet Lieutenant Commander|Lieutenant Commander]] [[Mitchell, Gary|Gary Mitchell]], mutated and driven mad by exposure to the [[Galactic Barrier]], used his newfound powers to force [[Starfleet Captain|Captain]] [[Kirk, James T.|James T. Kirk]] to pray to him as a [[gods|god]].<ref name="TOS01"/> | ||
+ | <btn class="btn-primary">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer|Wikipedia</btn> | ||
{{References}} | {{References}} | ||
<references> | <references> |
Revision as of 10:11, 15 July 2021
In many religious doctrines, prayer was used to appeal to a deity or other higher power. On Stardate 1314.2, Lieutenant Commander Gary Mitchell, mutated and driven mad by exposure to the Galactic Barrier, used his newfound powers to force Captain James T. Kirk to pray to him as a god.[1]
Notes and References
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Cage". Star Trek, season 0, episode 0 (Production number 01). Directed by Robert Butler. Written by Gene Roddenberry. Released 1986. Desilu Productions. 1965.