Hmm. You make an interesting case for some Biblical symbolism here, and I can't just dismiss it out of hand, since although I admit I hadn't considered it before, giving two main characters the names "Michael" and "Gabriel" seems unlikely to be just a coincidence.
However, IMHO such Biblical symbolism as there is to be found in the show is, frankly, superficial. Whatever the writers may have been trying to achieve, as
@jaime put it, they fumbled it. It doesn't convey any meaningful message.
Even if it did assert that, what of it? That's nothing new or insightful; Trek has
always taken it as a given that traditional religious lessons are wrong. I think it's safe to suppose that the population of people who regularly read or watch SF already contains a far higher proportion of atheists than the general population.
Hmm. I honestly don't see it, so I'm genuinely curious. How so? (To my eye, Michael's circumstances in S1 are so painfully contrived that they stand apart from
anything an ordinary person could relate to.)
Very well-put. While a story's plot should certainly be in service of a thought-provoking theme, it can't really accomplish that unless the plot
itself actually comes together in a sensible way. None of DSC's plots really managed that.