Doctor Who: A Celebration at Evensong
Doctor Who at 50. A celebration at Evensong.
“It all started out as a mild curiosity in the junkyard, and
now it’s turned out to be quite a spirit of adventure.”[1] Such was the verdict of the First Doctor on
his travels. And the Doctor has
travelled a long way since then. On
Saturday 23rd November, 1963 a new television programme began. The first regular programming after the
disruptions to schedules caused by the assassination of President John F
Kennedy. Designed to fill the space
between the football results and the evening’s entertainment it tried to engage
the whole family. As such, although it
has always been written with children in mind, it has always been produced by
the BBC’s adult drama department. That
show is of course Doctor Who, and this week it marks its Golden anniversary
with a feature length story, simulcast around the world. The best place to
watch it in Derby will be at the cinema in 3D.
In celebrating Doctor Who from the pulpit, I want to be
clear that I am not claiming the Doctor for Christianity. Doctor Who has been written by some fairly
staunch atheists. Russell T Davies, who
brought the series back to television in 2005, has said that “I was born
atheist, me”. Richard Dawkins, the
high-priest of atheism (and married to an actress who played the second
incarnation of Romana, a companion of the Fourth Doctor), has featured as
himself, commenting on the Earth being hijacked to another part of the
universe.[2] Yet, as with much atheist story-telling, and
perhaps especially atheist science-fiction, religion keeps bleeding through. So
in the recent series alone, we find the Master mocking the 10th
Doctor and Martha’s plan to defeat him “is that your weapon, prayer?”[3]
In the mini-episode currently available on the red-button and BBC i-Player as a
prelude to the 50th Anniversary episode, the Eighth Doctor even
quotes scripture “Physician, heal thyself”[4]
before regenerating into the non-Doctor that we will find out all about on
Saturday. Even the Church of England
gets a look in, although it has changed a little. The army gathered to face the Eleventh Doctor
at Demon’s Run in the 52nd Century includes “the thin fat gay
married Anglican marines”.[5]
The Church of England has always had an element of time-lord in it, at least in
the service of BCP Evensong. If you
don’t know where to find it, I’ll tell you at the end of this sermon.
So for the next few minutes, I would like to offer you three
themes from Doctor Who that resonate with what it means to be a Christian. Three sets of ideas, drawn from that 50 year
history, that have something which Christians can learn from and to which they
can contribute. Those themes are:
monsters, the Doctor and his companions.
The right place from which to watch Doctor Who is, of
course, from behind the sofa. The series
has become famed for its monsters. This
nearly didn’t happen. One of the
creators of Doctor Who, Sydney Newman, was clear that ‘no bug-eyed monsters’
were to appear in the show, and was furious when the Daleks appeared in the
second ever story. We’ll come back to
the Daleks. But from behind the sofa,
one of the first things we learn about monsters is that they are not always
monstrous. There is a long standing rule
in Doctor Who that those who appear to be strange and odd, different to our
human form, can be helpful, good and wise.
The First Doctor encountered the beautiful human Drahvins and the very
alien Rills. Yet it is the Rills who are
peaceable and the human Drahvins who are ruthless and seek the destruction of
the Rills.[6] When a race of pre-historic reptiles, with
superior technology are discovered in the Derbyshire countryside, the Third Doctor
argues with both reptile and human that the other is worthy of respect and
life.[7] The so-called ‘monsters’ are often simply a
foil to demonstrate the monstrous side of humanity. The Second Doctor neatly encapsulates the
worst of human nature. “They’re human
beings, if that’s what you mean. Indulging their favourite pastime of trying to
destroy each other.”[8] The fear that takes us to watch from behind
the sofa must not be allowed to determine our response to that which is not
like us. Sometimes the real monsters are
human beings.
But sometimes monsters are really monsters. In Doctor Who, no monster is more monstrous
than the Daleks. Deliberately designed
to look utterly different to human beings, with their chilling cry of
‘Exterminate!’ they have been one of the roots of the success of the
series. But if we look carefully at the
Daleks, they have much to teach us about what our, very human, fears are at
different times. When they were first
introduced in 1963, they were the last survivors of a nuclear war.[9] Screened one year after the Cuban Missile
Crisis, the Daleks tap into the very human horror in the face of nuclear
war. By their next appearance, the
Daleks have taken on their more familiar role of Nazi’s in space. The Dalek Invasion of Earth is a kind of
re-enactment of the much feared but never realised Nazi invasion of Britain.[10] The Nazi theme is reinforced by the story of
the Daleks’ origins, but there is also a theme of genetic engineering that runs
through the story.[11] By the time of the series’ revival, the
Daleks have taken on the role of religious terrorists, with the Emperor
proclaiming himself a god and accusing the Doctor and Rose of blasphemy.[12] At each step, the Daleks act as a cipher for
our fears. The monstrous turns out to be
very human indeed.
If there is a single theme to Doctor Who that continues to
appear throughout its history, then it is about how to be human. The monsters show up the monstrous in us,
directly or indirectly. “Your species,”
the Seventh Doctor tells his companion, “has the most amazing capacity for self-deception, matched only by its
ingenuity when trying to destroy itself.”[13] But it is the (very alien) character
of the Doctor himself that has the most to tell us about being human. There has often been something of a
Christ-figure about the Doctor, and the newly-regenerated Eighth Doctor is
mistake for the second coming of Jesus by a hospital porter.[14] The Doctor, an unearthly figure, turns up to
sort things out at just the right moment.
Always seeking a peaceful solution, he will sacrifice himself to save
others, especially his friends. When he
dies, as well as those he has saved, he is given new life as he is resurrected
(or regenerated) into a new body. There
are some clear comparisons. But there is
a darker side to the Doctor. In the
first stories, the Doctor is portrayed as a grumpy and selfish anti-hero. He deliberately sabotages the TARDIS so that
he can explore a new planet, thereby bringing his companions into danger of
radiation poisoning and facing the Daleks.[15] And in the very first story, the Doctor has
to be restrained by his companions from killing a caveman who is holding them
back from returning to the TARDIS. Of
course, he quickly changes into the heroic figure that is better known to us
today. But this dark side does return,
not least in the damaged Ninth Doctor who is told “You would make a good Dalek”[16].
But when the Eighth Doctor says that he is “Half-human, on
my mothers side”[17]
(a claim that has been wisely ignored by subsequent writers of the series), he
is perhaps letting us into the secret that the Doctor, when not operating from
his darker side, is the best of humanity. In this way, he functions just as
Jesus does in some forms of theology.
That is not enough to account for the full significance of Jesus, but it
is a good way of accounting for the Doctor.
The Doctor is an exemplar for us, demonstrating what we could be like. The very choice of the name ‘Doctor’, recent
episodes emphasise, is an indication of the Doctor’s intent to be a healer, a
good man. The Doctor is the one person
the monsters fear, he can solve problems with the contents of his pockets and
anything else that comes to hand. He
refuses to carry weapons, choosing a sonic screwdriver over a gun, but nor will
he stand by in the face of injustice.
This has placed him in difficult situations, the Fourth Doctor held the
life and death of the whole Dalek race in his hands; the Tenth Doctor would
offer his opponents one chance to change their minds before he defeated them,
even if that meant destroying them. Like
the wisdom of God, and the pleas of the Psalmist, the Doctor uses the power and
hubris of his opponents against them.
The Fourth Doctor once said that “The very powerful and the very stupid
have one thing in common: they don’t alter their views to fit the facts, they
alter the facts to fit their views.”[18] In the gaps left by the failure to appreciate
the value of life and the truth of the underdog, the Doctor has fashioned many
a plan to defeat those who would wield power over others. But the Doctor is not always successful. At the end of one battle, standing amidst the
corpses which litter the room, the Fifth Doctor looks at the carnage and says
“there should have been a better way.”[19] That is what the Doctor stands for, a better
way. He and we don’t always find it, but
he always looks for it.
If the monsters show us the worst of human nature, and the
Doctor shows us the best we can be, then the Companions are like
ourselves. They struggle to keep up and are
learning to be better. The Ninth Doctor
may have insisted that “I only take the best”,[20]
but that hasn’t stopped the Doctor picking companions who grow as they travel
with him. This has been a big theme in
the series since its return, but was there too in the classic series. Leela, a companion of the Fourth Doctor, was
a sort of Eliza Doolittle figure. A
savage warrior brought under the Doctor’s tutelage and civilized. In very similar fashion, the Tenth Doctor
travels with Donna Noble, a brash and shallow person who matures and grows as
she travels with the Doctor. Donna’s
tragedy is that to save her life, he has to remove all knowledge of
himself. Donna reverts to her old self,
it is a death of sorts. “She was better
with you”[21]
is the sad verdict of her grandfather.
The Doctor needs his companions.
From the start they are the ones who have helped him to deal with his
darker side. Whether it is Ian
Chesterton preventing the First Doctor from killing a caveman, or Rose Tyler
bringing the Ninth Doctor through the trauma he has experienced in the Time
War. “My friends have always been the
best of me”[22]
is the Eleventh Doctor’s verdict.
Travelling with the Doctor is a sort of discipleship,
learning to follow and to become a force for good in the universe. This is not a distant study. Rather, as the Ninth Doctor tells a
short-lived companion who will ultimately fail the test, “time travel is like visiting Paris. You can't
just read the guidebook, you've got to throw yourself in! Eat the food, use the
wrong verbs, get charged double and end up kissing complete strangers! … Or is that just me?”[23]
This is a training in virtue, learning to take ways that do not simply turn to
violence, and facing up to the fear that monsters, human and alien,
provoke. “Courage,” the Third Doctor
tells his companion, “isn't just a matter of not being frightened, you know.
It's being afraid and doing what you have to do anyway.”[24]
There is
also a childlike quality to the Doctor, which he is keen to transmit to his
companions. When Amy Pond hesitates
before joining the Eleventh Doctor on the TARDIS, he asks her what has changed
since her seven year old self was so keen to come. “I grew up,” she tells him. “Don’t worry, we’ll soon change that”[25]
is the Doctor’s instant response. To
travel with the Doctor is to learn to follow his values, it is to grow as a
human being.
To travel
with the Doctor is to be changed. In
fact, to be the Doctor is to be
changed as the eleven, soon to be twelve, actors that have played the role
demonstrate. In the words of the Sixth Doctor, “Planets come and go. Stars perish.
Matter disperses, coalesces, forms into other patterns, other worlds. Nothing
can be eternal.”[26] Yet through it all there is a thread of
humanity, always striving against the odds for a better way. Doctor Who has been part of British culture
for 50 years this coming Saturday. It is
worth celebrating, worth thanking God, for the Doctor and his travels. The Doctor teaches us much about what it is
to be human, and that for Christians, is a great gift indeed.
I promised
that I would tell you of the reference to Time Lords in the service of
evensong. In the second collect, we pray
that “both our hearts may be set to obey thy commandments”. Clearly a prayer for a Time Lord, with two
hearts beating in their chest. But let
the final words be those of one of the Doctor’s longest serving companions, who
came across six of the first seven of the Doctor’s incarnations, Brigadier
Alastair Lethbridge-Stewart: “Splendid Fellow, all of you!”[27]
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