I haven't watched the episodes pertaining to this topic in a while, but I was just wondering if it ever was established whether Sisko's Benny Russell experience was sent to him by the Prophets or the Pah-Wraiths. I know in Far Beyond the Stars" it ends very ambigiously with Sisko saying that there's no telling whether his reality was the dream or Benny's. It sort of gives the impression that the vision was possibly sent to him by the Prophets as sort of an encouragement to keep "fighting the good fight" after Sisko was discouraged towards the beginning of the episode by the number of casualties the war was claiming.
Then in "Shadows and Symbols" in season 7, I think Sarah tells Sisko that the Benny Russell vision was a "false vision" from the Pah-Wraiths. So, it only begs the question whether or not the Pah-Wraiths were the ones who created Benny Russell in the first place or if the Prophets created him and the the Pah-Wraiths used it to distract Sisko? Of course, the answer could be that Benny Russell is the one that is real and Sisko is the living embodiment of his dream like the end of FBtS suggests. I know that one of the options they were toying with was ending DS9 with Benny Russell standing outside the Paramount lot with a script for "Deep Space Nine," but I don't think that option was well-liked by the executives at Paramount nor would it have been well-received by the fans.
Then in "Shadows and Symbols" in season 7, I think Sarah tells Sisko that the Benny Russell vision was a "false vision" from the Pah-Wraiths. So, it only begs the question whether or not the Pah-Wraiths were the ones who created Benny Russell in the first place or if the Prophets created him and the the Pah-Wraiths used it to distract Sisko? Of course, the answer could be that Benny Russell is the one that is real and Sisko is the living embodiment of his dream like the end of FBtS suggests. I know that one of the options they were toying with was ending DS9 with Benny Russell standing outside the Paramount lot with a script for "Deep Space Nine," but I don't think that option was well-liked by the executives at Paramount nor would it have been well-received by the fans.