Chilli.
Maybe you missed it in my prior post. But its one thing to have a sci-fi show like Babylon 5 on for five seasons then out of the blue at the end write it all off to being "Gods influence." BSG had the "God factor" involved since DAY ONE. God was ALWAYS mentioned by the characters and heavily emphasized. I'm sorry, but you couldn't be more wrong. And I don't mean wrong in your beliefs. You don't think there is a God controlling fate, destiny or what have you, thats your opinion. But to think its "lame" story telling to have things turn out that way, when you have had it part of your story since the beginning? Thats just not fair in any stretch of the imagination.
I did read this .. and I think it's partially right - but only partially.
Yes, god has been an important part of the show from the very beginning. But as VL has said, it's been people's BELIEF in god, or gods, that's been an important piece of the plot. Just a few episodes ago, we had Ellen explaining why she felt a need to implant the 7 new Cylon models with a belief in one true god. Never till the very last episode did we have god himself as *visible* part of the plot.
It probably is coloured by my personal beliefs, but I don't think I'd have to be an atheist to be bugged by this. Most religious people among my circle of friends believe that god never intervenes in a way that humans understand as god. "The Lord moves in mysterious ways", and all that. They'll never try to prove the existence of god to me, or to themselves, as they see this as futile.
Which, IMO, is the only way you can believe in god without rejecting science, as science can't prove god (or disprove god, for that matter).
I've got less of a problem with god being part of the plot, and more a problem with god having revealed himself so freely, through a Bob Dylan song, and a rubbish Opera house vision. After having stayed nicely incognito throughout the destruction of the colonies, et cetera, et cetera.
But yeah, it was only a minor part of a generally excellent series final.