What do you guys think?
Despite several of Roddenberry's characters being distinctly atheist, as was Gene Roddenberry himself, my take on the concept has never been that religion doesn't exist in Star Trek's future, but merely that there are no longer disagreements over it. Ie, people are free to believe (or not believe) what they want, without other sides trying to impose their own viewpoint. Perhaps sonething in line with Thomas Jefferson's ideals about church and state being seperate entities, but on a much grander scale.
What got me thinking about this was that I recently rewatched "Where No Man Has Gone Before", the second pilot of Star Trek, and there comes a point where Gary Mitchell compares himself to a God and Elizabeth Dehner reacts, and Gary replies "Blasphemous?". It seems to me that the concept of blasphemy wouldn't exist if there weren't people who still practice a religious belief system.
Later shows tended to imply that humanity didn't really "do" religion anymore, but that other cultures with faith systems certainly still practice them (everybody from the Klingons to the Vulcans seem to have some kind of religious/faith based structure in their societies; and with the Bajorians it was made explicit). But even then, you'll get a character like Dr. McCoy, who in reverent tones replies to Kirk's inquisition of the God creature in Star Trek V with a curt "Jim, you don't ask the Almighty for his I.D!", as if Bones is certainly someone who believes in a God, even if James Kirk maybe is not.
So, I tend to look at religion in Star Trek's time as being not so much that it's been erradicated, but more that everybody who has faith, as well as those who don't, simply respect each other's own rights to believe whatever they like, and don't get in each other's faces about it. Seems like a very friendly, 'Star Trek' notion. I.D.I.C.

Despite several of Roddenberry's characters being distinctly atheist, as was Gene Roddenberry himself, my take on the concept has never been that religion doesn't exist in Star Trek's future, but merely that there are no longer disagreements over it. Ie, people are free to believe (or not believe) what they want, without other sides trying to impose their own viewpoint. Perhaps sonething in line with Thomas Jefferson's ideals about church and state being seperate entities, but on a much grander scale.
What got me thinking about this was that I recently rewatched "Where No Man Has Gone Before", the second pilot of Star Trek, and there comes a point where Gary Mitchell compares himself to a God and Elizabeth Dehner reacts, and Gary replies "Blasphemous?". It seems to me that the concept of blasphemy wouldn't exist if there weren't people who still practice a religious belief system.
Later shows tended to imply that humanity didn't really "do" religion anymore, but that other cultures with faith systems certainly still practice them (everybody from the Klingons to the Vulcans seem to have some kind of religious/faith based structure in their societies; and with the Bajorians it was made explicit). But even then, you'll get a character like Dr. McCoy, who in reverent tones replies to Kirk's inquisition of the God creature in Star Trek V with a curt "Jim, you don't ask the Almighty for his I.D!", as if Bones is certainly someone who believes in a God, even if James Kirk maybe is not.
So, I tend to look at religion in Star Trek's time as being not so much that it's been erradicated, but more that everybody who has faith, as well as those who don't, simply respect each other's own rights to believe whatever they like, and don't get in each other's faces about it. Seems like a very friendly, 'Star Trek' notion. I.D.I.C.
