I would add that where we've ended up so far is pretty well telegraphed from the start of the season.
The very first scene of the season was all about Michael losing her parents, and that's exactly where we find ourselves eleven episodes later.
The final scene of the third episode mentioned Control, and that too is where we've ended up.
The theme of faith entered the picture in the first episode, when Burnham asked Pike to trust Discovery as they plummeted toward an asteroid. The initial concept of faith was about trusting in people (which is also how Kurtzman has defined faith in interviews). That notion of faith is still alive in the ninth episode, when Spock suggests that Stamets's issue is a lack of faith, and visible again in Spock's conviction in the Red Angel in the tenth episode.
We do seem to have lost the idea of faith in a sublime other and its accompanying sense of wonder, which does make me a bit sad--but I guess I'd argue that it was never necessarily the key form of faith the season offered, and that it's made good on faith as initially promised in "Brother."
The very first scene of the season was all about Michael losing her parents, and that's exactly where we find ourselves eleven episodes later.
The final scene of the third episode mentioned Control, and that too is where we've ended up.
The theme of faith entered the picture in the first episode, when Burnham asked Pike to trust Discovery as they plummeted toward an asteroid. The initial concept of faith was about trusting in people (which is also how Kurtzman has defined faith in interviews). That notion of faith is still alive in the ninth episode, when Spock suggests that Stamets's issue is a lack of faith, and visible again in Spock's conviction in the Red Angel in the tenth episode.
We do seem to have lost the idea of faith in a sublime other and its accompanying sense of wonder, which does make me a bit sad--but I guess I'd argue that it was never necessarily the key form of faith the season offered, and that it's made good on faith as initially promised in "Brother."