Yeah, this one really didn't do it for me. It was so predictable to the point of being telegraphed. As soon as the spatial anomaly was established and Kelly used the dermal regenerator (yes, I'm using the Star Trek term, deal with it) to heal the child's wound, it all fell into place that each time the planet "phased" we would see jumps ahead in the timeline and a religion form around Kelly. And while I generally agree with the message of the episode, and its attitude towards religion, the truth is there is nothing covered here that MacFarlane hasn't already harped on a dozen times or more on Family Guy. And don't even get me started on the subplot regarding Ed and Kelly possibly rekindling their romance. I pointed out in another thread, that this idea was already toyed with when they were being kept in the alien zoo, and after a day or so living together again, they quickly got on each other's nerves, so I'm not really sure what there rekindle. They bring up the fact that Kelly was likely under Darulio's influence when she first slept with him, but again, it's a non-issue since the marriage between her and Ed was already deteriorating and they would likely have been divorced by now anyway even if Darulio never showed up.
Also, didn't MacFarlane say there is no Prime Directive on this show? Because it sure seemed like they were supposed to be following it, even to the point that it is more acceptable to let children die because saving their life will contaminate their culture. And okay, it did, but still to suddenly pull out the Prime Directive now after telling us there isn't one seems rather odd, to say the least.
Thankfully the show did have some nice jokes and character moments, mostly clustered around the beginning. I liked John scoring, and Bortus's game. Likewise, it was nice to see a friendlier scene between Bortus and Klyden. The best, though was when Ed began making fun of the Admiral, who hadn't yet disconnected the transmission. That had me laughing a lot more than it probably should have.